Rosa Díez: "Sánchez is not a typical guy. We are facing a psychopath, Machiavellian and narcissistic"
In the presentation of a book written to “unmask the character with combat prose”, the former UPyD spokeswoman, Rosa Díez, began by declaring that Caudillo Sánchez: In the place of History that corresponds to him must “get this guy, that you think is going to go down in history, don't go down in history for having destroyed it”. In relation to this, Díez has justified all his disapprovals since “this is not about left or right, it is about democratic survival.”
In a symposium where criticism of the Prime Minister has been continuous, Díez has stressed the “psychopath” aspect of Sánchez. In this sense, the one who was a national deputy until 2016 has mentioned that the leader of the Executive “is not a typical guy”. “We are facing a guy who has a personality of a dark triad, made up of psychopathy, Machiavellianism and narcissism,” he has sentenced.
In addition, Díez has defended that his book aims to “understand why he makes certain decisions”, which he has branded as “caudillos”. One of the references has been the variation in the government's position on the problem of Western Sahara: “A country can change its position. But a country governed by someone normal makes the decision by taking the necessary steps, not without meeting the Council of Ministers and without taking the matter to the Congress of Deputies”. To this he added that “only a psychopath who doesn't give a damn could do it like that.”
In relation to the partisan aspect, the former politician has confessed that “the PSOE does not exist as a democratic party. It is a private company owned by Pedro Sánchez that he shares with his wife.”. What he has pointed out, confessing that “if Sánchez does not throw out Page or Lambán, it is because people will continue to vote for them under the acronym of the PSOE.”
The journalist Pepe Albert de Pablo also participated in the talk, who declared that “the book is a direct blow to Sánchez's chin that imitates the imagery of Lenin”, referring, above all, to the cover. In addition to adding that “the comparison is valid because he is an autocrat.”
“An impostor”
Díez has not forgotten to remember Sánchez's past, very present in the book: “He has been the first discontinuous fixed in history. They put him in political positions from which he had to wait for others to resign to fill a position”. In this more historical analysis of Sánchez, the writer has stressed that at the time of the 2014 primaries, Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba confessed to her that the current secretary general of the PSOE “is an impostor”.
In ligation with that past time, the former deputy has mentioned that “what Sanchez is doing in Spanish society he did twice in the PSOE”, in reference to the “coup d’état he made on October 1, 2016, when he placed a ballot box behind the curtains in which his henchmen put ballots with his name.”