The plenary session of the Madrid Assembly coincides this Thursday, for the third time in a row, with a topical issue in Spain that will certainly dominate the discussion between the parties. Although the first two sessions of November focused on the trial against the Attorney General for revealing secrets, the face-to-face meeting between Isabel Díaz Ayuso and opposition spokesmen comes in the same week in which the UCO released a report revealing documents, photographs and intercepted communications from former socialist leader Santos Cerdán, released from prison on Wednesday, and former minister José Luis Ábalos, which increase suspicions about their acts of corruption.
The president will also speak a few hours after EL PAÍS announced that her boyfriend, Alberto González Amador, bought the penthouse that they both rented for 5,000 euros a month and which has been the subject of controversy for a year and a half due to the lack of details on the operation. The entrepreneur purchased the property, on the seventh floor, worth over one million euros from his landlord with the help of a mortgage of 600,000 euros. Amador also owns another apartment on the sixth floor, purchased in July 2022, after committing the alleged 350,000 euro tax fraud for which he will have to sit on the bench. The state attorney general, Álvaro García Ortiz, was put on trial on suspicion of having leaked to the press an email in which González Amador’s lawyer acknowledged that his client had committed two tax crimes.
As regards purely regional issues, the spokespersons of PSOE, Más Madrid and Vox, in addition to the turning point of the PP (in progress), will question the president of the Community of Madrid on the contentious-administrative appeal that her administration has presented against the central government’s royal decree regulating the creation of universities, arguing that it violates regional competences; Questions about the return of the Ayuso healthcare model; and they will ask you, among other things, why you do not comply with the Historical Memory Law.
