ACN
Coalición Canaria (CC) stated yesterday that the president of the Popular Party (PP) in the Canary Islands, José Manuel Soria, "is beginning to be a victim of his erratic strategy, since his particular Holy War is doomed to failure, as Canarian society is tired of enlightened people who stir up insular disputes."
The nationalist formation indicates, in a statement, that it is up to Soria "to give an account to his organization and his voters on the way he understands how to build the Canary Islands."
"It is useless to demonstrate to him with unquestionable data that unity of action must prevail in the Canary Islands and that we must bet on a united Archipelago," continues the CC statement, in which it affirms that "entrenching oneself on an island because it is apparently very cold outside is the order given to his close associates."
The nationalist formation affirms that "there are more and more voices within the PP from other islands that question the path of no return undertaken by Soria, who a few weeks ago did not include the word imbalance in his vocabulary, now takes refuge in a bunker where the water level rises and he cannot cope with bailing it out."
According to CC "it is Soria's problem to gauge the forces at his disposal and whether that is the course he should maintain. The PP is losing steam for not having assimilated what happened on 14-M and instead of betting on a responsible opposition, it goes into the mountains." "In the Peninsula, betting on the fracture of Spain, and in the Islands, fueling the dispute," adds the nationalist formation.
Likewise, they point to the situation of some PP leaders, such as Josep Piqué, "who have launched the message that this cannot continue and we have already seen how the leader of the Catalan populars has been laminated." Likewise, CC considers it "significant" that the PP spokesperson in the Senate, Pío García Escudero, affirms that he subscribes to his party's strategy in the Canary Islands. "It is evident that in the dossiers that arrive in Genoa, the pages that include statements by the former popular president in Lanzarote, Alejandro Díaz, are torn out," CC considers.
Despite this, the nationalist formation believes that all political formations "have the freedom to carry out their own strategies and the success or failure of these, accompanied by facts, is corroborated every four years."








