miércoles, marzo 14, 2007

 

Y EL PP PERDIÓ EL PODER
































Hoy hace tres años que el PP perdió las elecciones porque la mayoría de l@ s ciudadan@ s ya no soportabamos más a exaznar en el poder y con nuestros votos , echamos al fascio de la Moncloa.


Durante el aznarato olía a rancio, todo se estaba volviendo gris, mientras las sotanas , el Opus Dei y los Legionarios de Cristo recibían millones de euros de nuestros impuestos, se reducían las prestaciones sociales y las ayudas del estado para la investigación, privatizaban la sanidad pública y permitieron que la vivienda subiera hasta que el aumento del precio de la vivienda la hizo inasequible para una gran parte de l@ s ciudadan@ s.


Miles de viviendas vacias porque han sido compradas por esPPeculadores, mientrás la mayoría no pdían, y se sigue sin poder, acceder a una vivienda digna.





EL 14 DE MARZO, ECHAMOS AL FASCIO PORQUE NOS METIÓ EN LA INVASIÓN DE IRAK MINTIENDO AL DECIR QUE HABÍA ARMAS DE DESTRUCCIÓN MASIVA, CONTRA LA VOLUNTAD DE LA MAYORÍA DE L@ S CIUDADAN@ S, Y PORQUE EL PP TAMBIÉN NOS MINTIÓ Y MANIPULÓ LA INFORMACIÓN TRAS EL 11M , PARA INTENTAR INFLUIR A SU FAVOR EN LAS ELECCIONES GENERALES.TRES AÑOS DESPUÉS Y EN LA OPOSICIÓN EL PP SIGUE MINTIENDO, DEBE SER LO ÚNICO QUE SABE HACER.


DURANTE EL AZNARATO DEMASIADOS CIUDADAN@ S FUERON ASESINAD@ S , EN ACTOS TERRORISTAS, 68 CIUDADAN@ S EN ATENTADOS DE ETA Y 192 EN EL ATENTADO DE AL QUAEDA DEL 11M.


Y EL PP QUE FRACASÓ ABSOLUTAMENTE EN SU POLÍTICA ANTITERRORISTA CUANDO ESTABA EN EL PODER , AHORA QUIERE DAR LECCIONES AL GOBIERNO.


NUNCA JAMÁS EL FASCIO EN EL PODER !


PP NUNCA MÁS !!!





DESDE ESTE BLOG , TODO MI APOYO A ZP Y SU GOBIERNO.


Como dije en el foro "Los genoveses" hace días me parece muy valiente, respetuoso, humilde, justo, sincero.


Tuvo la valentia de cumplir su promesa electoral y sacar las tropas de Irak.


Le hubiera sido muy facil dejarlo todo como siempre, hacer un PParipe para aparentar y que no cambiara nada.


ZP no le gusta al fascio, pero la mayoría de l@ s ciudadan@ s estamos con él.





ZP ME PARECE EL MEJOR PRESIDENTE DE LA DEMOCRACIA


QUE MALA ES LA ENVIDIA , ASÍ ESTÁ EL FASCIO


GRACIAS ZP !!!

LO QUE TIENEN L@ S PPRINGAOS ES UN ATAQUE DE CUERNOS !

Por eso crispan tanto, han perdido tanto la cabeza que ya no se la encuentran ni para insultar !Hacer tanto el ridiculo como lo está haciendo el PP es muy dificil. Lo que están haciendo no les va a salir gratis !, para eso estan las elecciones para "echar" a voto limpio a los que no aportan nada y solo saben provocar crispación, insultar, mentir y manipular

"ZAPATERO ES UN LIDER PODEROSO"
dice The Times, periódico de Murdock“
En los dos últimos años ha emergido sorprendentemente como un líder poderoso”.

Es uno de los comentarios con los que el periódico británico The Times, acompañaba unas declaraciones del presidente del Gobierno español, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero.
El rotativo londinense, perteneciente al grupo News Corporation de Rupert Murdock -el mismo en el que ha sido contratado José Maria Aznar como consejero- repasa con Zapatero los principales ejes de la política de su Gobierno y subraya el “amplio respaldo social” de su política.
El reportaje de The Times destaca que “Zapatero mantiene una tasa de aprobación en torno a un 60 por ciento, mientras que algunas de sus medidas cuentan con un amplio respaldo social: "·Más del 90 por ciento de la población se opuso a la guerra de Irak y aplaudió de manera abrumadora su decisión de retirar las tropas" y "dos tercios de los españoles aprobó la legalización de los matrimonios homosexuales".


Elected as Spain's leader three days after the Madrid bombings and pursuing a liberal agenda, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero sleeps well


THERE is more than a little bit of Blair about José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, a Socialist who has cut corporate taxes and a charmer whose presentational and glad-handing skills are so pronounced that his opponents insist that he is the embodiment of Spanish spin without substance.
Yet this almost accidental prime minister, elected three days after the Madrid bombings, has emerged in the past two years as a surprisingly powerful leader, and he sits comfortably in an office that itself is a political statement: the floors are stripped bare, the desk is more architect than politician and a Miró stares confusedly down at him — it is Ikea meets Tate Modern.
He is one of a generation of European politicians of the Left who has drawn inspiration from the electoral successes of Tony Blair, but foreign policy differences have put distance between them. Señor Zapatero’s first political act was to withdraw Spanish troops from Iraq and the disagreements have proliferated as quickly as issues have arisen. While, in public, Mr Blair has been sympathetic to Israel’s policy in Lebanon, Señor Zapatero has been openly critical, describing the Israeli offensive as an abuse of force.
Where he does depart from the more predictable positions of the European Left is over the fate of Mexico, a country whose democratic future still hangs in the balance after an election two weeks ago whose results are still disputed.
Señor Zapatero has already called to congratulate the centre-right candidate (Felipe Calderón), who has officially won that election. Now he says that he is “absolutely” ready to ring the left-winger (Andrés Manuel López Obrador), who is taking his case to the streets, unnerving a Spanish leader whose own country returned to democracy only three decades ago.
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“I’m convinced that the PRD [López Obrador’s party] will accept the final constitutional ruling,” Señor Zapatero says. “The essence of democracy is accepting the rules of the game, even if you lose by a very small margin. You can always win the next elections. And you can always do a lot for your country from the opposition. A good opposition paves the way for a good government.” Mindful of the rise of the Conservative Party in Britain, he quips: “This has nothing to do with the Opposition in Britain. It’s just a general comment."
Like Mr Blair in his early years of government, Señor Zapatero is putting his energies into tackling one of the most intractable conflicts in the country’s history. After the announcement of a permanent ceasefire, his Government has begun controversial talks with Eta, the Basque terrorist group responsible for about 800 deaths in more than three decades and sometime partner of the Irish Republican Army.
“In my opinion we have the best opportunity to see the end of [Eta’s] violence and terrorism,” he says. “We will be working very cautiously and discreetly. They were two pieces of advice that Tony Blair gave me. And I’m trying to be very disciplined. But it will take time. The history has been one of a great deal of pain.”
The Prime Minister is also vigorously promoting the devolution of powers to Spain’s regions. He gambled in campaigning for greater autonomy for Catalonia, the region around Barcelona, and set a precedent for Spain’s other “autonomous communities”.
The conservative Opposition accuses the Prime Minister of presiding over the break-up of the nation, a possibility he dismisses. “I’m a firm believer . . . of bringing power closer to citizens,” he says. “Those who criticise me in Spain say that the State has very little power. Nevertheless, they are still very intent on recovering it. It’s a total contradiction — they know it’s not true. There is no risk of fragmentation.”
The Prime Minister has also angered the Roman Catholic Church in Spain by introducing liberal social measures, including fast-track divorces and same-sex marriage, and he has scrapped a measure by the previous conservative Government to make religious instruction in schools compulsory. Hence, for the Church, Señor Zapatero has become the patron saint of secularism, but the Prime Minister suggests that the priests should not blame the Government if Spaniards are increasingly turning away from institutional religion.
“It is the people who decide whether they have more or less religious vocation. It is religious denominations who have to analyse why they have more or less followers,” he says. “I believe that spiritual values are not only religious values. I think that modern-day democracy has very ingrained values, very spiritual values, such as peace, solidarity towards those who need it the most.”
Both his language and his frenetic legislative activity have infuriated conservatives, who had expected to win the 2004 election and remain convinced that the explosions which took 192 lives just before the election were too sophisticated to have been the work of a motley collection of Islamic extremists, and so must have been, in some unspecified way, the handiwork of Eta.

The conspiracy theory debate rumbles on in the Spanish press, but there is little doubt that Señor Zapatero’s policies have been popular — his approval rating stands at about 60 per cent and his main opponent is languishing at less than half that level.
More than 90 per cent of Spaniards had opposed Spain’s involvement in the war in Iraq and overwhelmingly applauded his decision to bring their troops home. Two thirds approved of his move to legalise homosexual unions.
As for the economy, he argues that opposition to liberalism is virtually dead and the core issue for political debate is more what you do with the proceeds of growth. Instead of increasing the tax burden, he is cutting five percentage points off the corporate rate and two percentage points off the top rate of individual tax. So far the results have been good.
Spain is enjoying its eleventh consecutive year of expansion, and the economy grew at an annualised rate of 3.5 per cent in the first quarter of the year, far outpacing the eurozone’s modest 1.9 per cent. In the past year the country has created 60 per cent of the eurozone’s new jobs, but there is increasing concern about a hyperactive construction sector and a housing market characterised by rampant speculation.

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Spain could provide a significant challenge for the European Central Bank (ECB), which is trying to cope with sluggish growth in much of the Continent and does not have the tools to deal with a Spanish inflation rate of 4 per cent, the highest in the eurozone.
Señor Zapatero said that it was not his responsibility to offer advice to the ECB, whose independence he respects, but his Government will inevitably be taking an increasing interest in the bank’s announcements.
The even-tempered, easy-smiling and camera-friendly Prime Minister insists that individual issues are not keeping him awake at night and that there should be a punishment for any individual in public office who does not appreciate the privilege or complains about the pressure.
“I sleep very well,” he says, explaining that he normally gets seven hours regardless of the stresses of the job. “It’s clearly one of the things I’m most lucky about. I think that’s thanks to my daughters.”
The 45-year-old Prime Minister could go on for a long time — his grandmothers have lived beyond 100 years of age — but he insists that political leaders should not stay too long in office because democracy needs frequent change to stay fresh.
Unlike Mr Blair, however, he won’t give a specific indication of when he will bid farewell to his minimalist office and his responsibilities as a leader of the Spanish-speaking world.
“One should never make the mistake of announcing how long you’re going to be in power,” he says with a grin. “That would be giving your adversary an advantage.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article691019.ece





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