What planet are you from, Mariano Rajoy? | Spain

Mariano Rajoy arrived The anthill and said of his book, “It’s funny. Otherwise I wouldn’t come.” These were not the first applause of the evening, dedicated to the host of the program, who appeared blowing kisses in the wind, stretching out his t-shirt that seemed to have been washed with very hot water and announcing visits to next week’s program. There will be Mario Vaquerizo, Los Morancos and Marta Sánchez, among others. Martha was given Hanging in your handsthe song he sang with Carlos Baute, and he could have chosen the great song that it is desperate or remind us when he wrote the lyrics to the Spanish anthem.

Rajoy was Rajoy. Elusive, so to speak Tiredat low rpm. And he was about to present his book, The art of governingedited by Almuzara. Motos gave him the power of the sea to have pace, but there was no way. Do they ask you the title? Rajoy says he didn’t put it in – “That” isn’t his genre – but rather the publisher’s, so we should ask him. Let’s do another one, President.

“I like to follow the law, even if it’s not very fashionable now,” the former prime minister said. Very dramatic tenths of a second, silence on the set, until the palms of two hands decide to come together. The rest of the audience repeats the gesture. Fortunately.

Motos insisted and asked him to put himself in a truly realistic situation. If Pedro Sánchez was among the signatures of your book, what would you say? “I’m happy you’re here. I hope it helps you learn some things,” the author responded. What if the person asking for an autograph was Alberto Núñez Feijóo? “I would tell him the same thing, even if he already knows,” he added.

The presenter began to replicate fragments from the book. “Since there are a lot of short sentences, it’s easy to choose,” he said. First it was a phrase from Ortega y Gasset, then Ábalos’ name came up and Rajoy became a gentleman, saying gentlemanly things: “To give lessons it’s better to be confident. Otherwise you have to know how to keep quiet.” Since there was no mirror in front of him to see himself, he continued to talk about what, in his opinion, are the biggest problems facing Spain. The government cannot govern, justice is not respected, polarization is a normal thing that tends to be negative and “good education comes in dribs and drabs”. This kind of rankings They are perfect for detecting privileges and which planet each person lives on.

He continues to believe in the PP, a party to which he still belongs and which according to him is in his place. He talks a lot about common sense and common sense, who knows what they mean in his head. “That’s not what I say, that’s what everyone thinks,” he said. Of course yes, in heaven with you.

Until you are touched by the fiber, the marrow and the wound.

“Did Mazón know how to leave?” asked Motos, born in the Valencian municipality of Requena. “Well yes,” Rajoy replied. The presenter’s expression changed immediately. “A year later,” he replied, visibly uncomfortable. And that’s when Rajoy stopped being all the fun in the world, if he ever had any. When he thought it appropriate to say in front of many people that “it hurts a little to see that there are people who demonstrate every day to see what they get. Hey, what do they want? What more do they want? He submitted his resignation.” Let’s see what they get.

This Thursday, November 13, is the day of kindness and empathy.

But Rajoy must have understood it and immediately remedied it, telling the presenter The anthill a phrase to frame when it comes to talking about enemies: “You have a colorful past. The government’s institutional propaganda was used to deal you a monumental blow.” “Yes,” Motos replied.

“To lie it is better to remain silent,” Rajoy had said at another point in the interview in which there were no mirrors in which to look at oneself on the set. Compassion.