SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, Jan. 27 (EUROPA PRESS) –
The island group Sí Podemos Canarias in the Cabildo de Tenerife has warned this Thursday that it will break the government pact with the PSOE if the socialists support the motion presented by Cs to continue promoting the South train.
“It is a red line that we are not willing to exceed,” they point out from the purple coalition, which criticizes “the particular insistence of Vice President Enrique Arriaga with the train projects for the island, being willing to create a possible crisis with the PSOE, which is your partner in government, and opening the door to political instability in this institution”.
Sí Podemos Canarias recalls that in the programmatic agreements signed with the PSOE at the beginning of the mandate, by which the motion of censure against CC was supported, “the commitment was agreed not to start up the projects of the train of the South and the north of the island.
However, the insular group denounces that “Enrique Arriaga does not seem to care about the fulfillment of these agreements that allow there to be a government team between the PSOE and Cs supported by Sí Podemos from the opposition, since the opposition has been reiterated on numerous occasions red line that this measure represents”.
The political group analyzes this as “a rupture of the commitments that have allowed him to be vice president of this corporation, something that speaks of the lack of scruples to betray the socialist party, with whom he has been governing, as well as his interest in continuing to become a place in island politics as of 2023, even though he has no party with which to continue his career”.
CONTINUISTIC POLICY WITH CC
For Sí Podemos Canarias it is “evident” that “Vice President Arriaga continues to work to carry out CC projects, in this case one led by Ricardo Melchior during his time at the head of the Cabildo, which is contradictory since Cs came to the island government with the promise of guaranteeing a change of political course for this island, and finally its commitment to easy, continuous politics is being demonstrated, which also allows it to access the same patronage network based on the economic sectors that backed CC”.
Likewise, he criticizes his recent statements in a media outlet informing that the Sustainable Mobility Plan in which the Cabildo continues to work contemplates the inclusion of the South train.
“Mr. Arriaga is making known the results and conclusions of the Insular Plan for Sustainable Mobility without the rest of the political forces having this information, especially when the development of this plan is an achievement of our political group in the Cabildo,” they point out.
And at the moment, they continue, “a citizen consultation is being carried out precisely on the Insular Plan for Sustainable Mobility of the island, in which it is asked if the population considers that the train projects in Tenerife should be carried out”.
In this regard, the insular group highlights that “it seems that Mr. Arriaga is becoming an expert in paripés, using surveys even without waiting for them to end to justify his decisions taken unilaterally.”
In his opinion, “the opinion of the citizens of Tenerife is not important for those who manage the area of Mobility and Roads in the institution, giving continuity to the forms of the most stale and old politics.”
ARRIAGA IGNORES CITIZENSHIP
Sí Podemos Canarias also criticizes that “it seems that the Cabildo could have spared both the Island Plan for Sustainable Mobility and this citizen survey, since it gives the impression that Enrique Arriaga, as head of the Roads area, chooses to ignore the opinion of the citizenry and does what it wants”.
All this shows that the citizen consultation, they indicate, “is being carried out facing the gallery, with the intention of transmitting to the population the false sensation that decisions on mobility take into account the opinion of the people of Tenerife” .
The insular group also points out the “inconsistency” of Cs in wanting to carry out “ultra-developmental macroprojects that involve destroying our fragile territory, with kilometers of expropriations, works and inconvenience for years, without previously betting on improving the bus service and other measures not invasive, such as the development of the guagua-HOV lanes, since none have been established on the island and they want to build a train”.
In addition, the insular group highlights that “there is no certainty that these trains could have a high occupancy, rather the opposite, especially if there were an efficient, cheap, punctual and reliable bus service.”
Sí Podemos Canarias also declares that “it is incomprehensible to invest more than 2,000 million in this infrastructure that will destroy the territory and whose maintenance will have to be paid for by the islanders, since it will not be able to maintain itself with the occupation that is foreseen”.
In his opinion, “this is throwing public money from the European Union and the State into the same bag, mortgaging our future for the benefit of those who have shared the wealth on this island and have contributed to making us the community with the highest rate of state poverty.