A review of their political speeches and the differences between them

The things that the PP should learn from Milei but that only Vox does in Spain

This Friday, the president of Argentina arrived in Spain on a visit that he took advantage of, once again, to present his defense of Freedom.

Javier Milei's brave statement on abortion without any euphemism
Milei's great speech in Davos against the socialism and the 'bloody abortion agenda'

This time, Milei has come to Spain to collect the International Medal of the Community of Madrid. At the ceremony to present this distinction, the Argentine president made a brave speech in which he stated: "We come from the future to tell you a story that is desirable to avoid. It is the story of the damage and decadence caused by socialism." You can listen to his full speech here:

I must congratulate Isabel Díaz Ayuso for granting that distinction to Milei and for bringing Spain back to Spain, but I am not naive and the reasons that she and the party to which she belongs, the Popular Party, do not escape me. (PP), may have to want to get close to an international leader who has become very loved among many Spaniards for his firmness when it comes to denouncing socialism and for his criticism of Pedro Sánchez. And I cannot forget that, just like Sánchez did, the president of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, did not congratulate Milei when He won the presidential election in his country in November.

There are some things that the PP should learn from Milei before rushing to take the photos with him now that he did not want to take before. To begin with, Milei makes a direct and clear criticism of socialism, exposing its devastating effects (which Argentines have had the misfortune of suffering even more than the Spanish), and does not buy the ideological framework of the left, completely rejecting the nonsense of gender ideology and showing his opposition to abortion: "it is a murder aggravated by the bond", he said in March.

On the contrary, and as Álvaro Díaz-Mella pointed out a few days ago. the Popular Party always personalizes its criticism of the left (it did it with Felipe González, it did it again with José Luís Rodríguez Zapatero and now it does it with Pedro Sánchez), speaking of "sanchismo" to avoid criticizing socialism, because at the end of the day the PP has largely assumed socialist theses, and not only in economics: the PP supports gender ideology and abortion as any socialist party does it. It insists on assuming the ideological dogmas of the left and at the same time continues to pretend that it is a center-right party, asking for votes from the right and then keeping the laws of the left intact, which is an absolute political scam.

This double standard of the PP explains another aspect of Milei's speech that Feijóo and his people do not want to assume: his courage and clarity when saying things. The PP has been making a speech for decades based on ambiguity, lukewarmness, ideological emptiness and the refusal to wage the battle of ideas against the left. If politically Milei is a Lion, the PP behaves like a parrot that repeats what the left says, for fear of being accused of being "fascist" if it does not bow down to the socialists.

The PP may play at taking photos with the Argentine president, but the only Spanish party that makes a speech like Milei's is Vox. Of all the parties with parliamentary representation in Spain, only Vox makes a firm and clear criticism of socialism, in its economic aspects and in other issues such as abortion, gender ideology, climate fanaticism or illegal immigration. The courage that Milei exhibits when it comes to denouncing socialism is the same as that exhibited by Abascal and his people from the ranks of Vox, as anyone who goes to a public event of this party can see.

In fact, Vox was the only Spanish party that expressly supported Milei in his race for the Argentine presidency, when the PP treated him like a weirdo with whom it did not want to associate. That is why yesterday we saw Milei again hugging Abascal like the good friends they are, as shown by Hermann Tertsch in the photos you see above these lines. It is a hug that expresses the noble gratitude of the one who received the support of Vox when no one else supported him, and also the harmony between two political leaders who represent the last hope of millions of Argentines and Spaniards to escape the nightmare of socialism.

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Main photo: @IdiazAyuso.

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