SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, March 2 (EUROPA PRESS) –
The president of the Socialist Group, Nira Fierro, has reproached the Canary Islands Coalition this Thursday for deciding to send some of its positions to the Senate in order to make up for it – in reference to the former mayor of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Miguel Zerolo, and the current secretary general, Fernando Clavijo– when the Socialists “withdraw minutes” from deputies, in reference to Juan Bernardo Fuentes, investigated for the ‘Mediator case’.
“Man now, that’s fine, the fair lessons”, he indicated in the last day of the ‘Debate on the State of Nationality’ in which he stressed that “no person” from the Government of the Canary Islands is being investigated for cases of corruption.
“Are we talking about Las Teresitas, Lanzarote, what do they want, what drift does CC have?”, he asked.
He has asked the PP to offer “the same explanations” that they demand of the Socialists with the ‘Meditor case’ and defended the exemplarity of the PSOE in the face of corruption.
“We do not tolerate a despicable or corrupt attitude, we have legislated to combat corruption, we are firm, our pulse will not tremble,” he added.
Fierro has highlighted the “cohesion” of the regional government and its coherence and credibility because it has done the things it said it was going to do and has “changed the political dynamics”, and stressed that Torres represents “the best” of the PSOE, facing “without wavers” reality.
He has insisted that the Canary Islands “is better than four years ago”, with more people than ever working, free schools from zero to three years and a “pioneering” law on the environment and territory of the Canary Islands.
Fierro has announced that they are going to continue “turning around” the archipelago in the face of “sad and catastrophic”, with an “indisputable” social balance and the beginning of a path “that has no turning back”.
He has indicated that the resolution proposals keep “the heart” of the electoral program of the Socialists and ugly the “funny speech” of the deputy Rosa Dávila (CC-PNC), loaded with “political histrionics”.
He has defended the islands as a “welcoming land” and a society that aspires to be “healthy” and that continues the “push” to continue opening sanitary beds and that there are mental health plans throughout the archipelago.
He has also valued the “indisputable steps” in employment and that there be more “dignity” for the working population with more rights and more salaries.