The Delegate of the Government, Sabrina Moh, has pointed out that the Executive of Pedro Sánchez will continue to work to “protect rights that have been achieved with a lot of effort” in the Constitution such as Public Health, the revaluation of pensions, or Public Education, among other rights of citizens.
The head of the Government Delegation, in statements to the media, after the institutional act on the occasion of the 46th anniversary of the Spanish Constitution that took place this noon, regretted that those rights in many communities governed by the PP based on the far-right of Vox “are being seen to wobble”.
“The Government must continue to appeal for this consensus, we must continue working to achieve rights that our country continues to promote as a free country, as an egalitarian country, as a diverse country, because in diversity there is wealth and we will continue to work for it, from the consensus, from all those parties that want to join to continue arming rights that have been achieved,” he said.
“We cannot allow only the people who have the most to achieve these rights, but we must continue to promote and make available to citizens tools that make us all equal,” he said.
Sabrina Moh regretted that the First Vice-President of the Government of Melilla, Miguel Marín, used an institutional act such as today to launch partisan messages.
Thus, he pointed out that Marín, in his address, referred to the consensus that was necessary for our Magna Carta, to then carry out “on such an important day as today that partisan message”. Instead of “continuing to appeal for that union or that unity, what it does is separate in that partisan interest,” he has censored.
In addition, the Delegate pointed out that Marín talked about equality and made reference to the parents of the Constitution but she forgot “those 26 women, who in such a difficult time, gave everything to contribute their grain of sand”. “I think it is acceptable that yesterday they could have that well-deserved tribute in Congress,” he added.
Right and far-right crispation
In her speech, the highest representative of the Government of Spain in our city has stressed that the Magna Carta “shields rights and lays the foundations to continue working in that achievement of rights that make us all equal.”
One line, he said, in which “we have to remain ambitious” and continue defending, given that they have been consolidated “with the work and consensus of so many people.” A consensus, he said, to which “now we see that we cannot appeal because whenever it is in the opposition, the right and the far right that do nothing but sift and make a destructive opposition.”
The Delegate stressed that democracy “is threatened”, but not by the issues referred to by the Vice President of the City in his speech, but “by these parties that emerge with a hate speech, with a crispation speech, with a discourse of separation, that yearns for a bygone era that is supposed to have been dealt a blow with the transition, but rediscover that tortuous past to put the worst era of our history back on the table.”
Moh has made it clear that the Government of Spain “will continue to reject speeches like those of today, on days as important and as significant as today’s”, while, along with the Constitution, it has also defended the Statute of Autonomy of Melilla “that makes us an autonomous city with our particularities”.
Finally, the Delegate has sent a message of congratulations to all the Melillense citizens for the 46th anniversary of the Constitution and has shown the commitment of the Government of Spain “to continue working on all those public policies that make us all equal”.