The vice-second should consult with her to explain how she goes from a radical Catalan independence activist like her ex-husband to a financial investor who has gone through Harvard

There they are, thrown and shackled like Amazons (not Amazonian) in the central ring of the circus. Yolanda Diaz, Mónica Oltra, Mónica García and Ada Colau ride together in the beautiful number of the platform led by the vice-second. Titled Rocío Esteban in La Razón: “Yolanda Díaz accelerates in her coming-out”.

It is not clear to me if she will wear Chanel or Gucci, if she will wear a tailored suit, puffed sleeves, a paper bag waist, an informal bow or loose hair blowing in the wind. These details say a lot in a self-respecting debut, they are signs that are now studied as carefully as words or gestures.

They say that it intends to seduce the space of change, that it seeks a transversal alliance in which it is not satisfied with bringing together only its own “because the left is small”, and that he wants to go beyond the parties, “because there are more people outside of them than inside.” I suspect that Yolanda and her platform are going to end up in the center, like everyone else, and seducing Garamendi.

To get out of the small left and seek cross-cutting alliances, Yolanda should speak with Susanna Griso, who now comes and goes, they say, with Joaquín Güell, formerly of Cayetana Álvarez de Toledo.

In other words, if the brave and seductive Susanna knows as much about empowerment and transversal alliances as I imagine, I think that the vice second you should consult with her to explain how does one go from a radical Catalan independence fighter like her ex-husband to a financial investor who went through Harvard?, heir to one of the richest families in Catalonia. From the small left to the London Stock Exchange.

Take and change and transversality. Without platforms and without lengths.

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