The former president of the Government Mariano Rajoy has contrasted this Wednesday his rectifications at the head of the Executive when meeting reality and to avoid the bankruptcy of spain with the changes in criteria of Pedro Sánchez throughout the legislature.
“It is one thing to adapt to reality and another is not to tell the truth,” he stated at Cope, and considered that the proliferation of interviews with Pedro Sánchez responds to the fact that he has been a bad student “who has not given a stick to the water ” in recent years and intends to recover at the last minute what it has not done.
The former leader of the PP has assumed that, when he came to the Government, he had to do things that were not in his electoral program, such as raising taxes or nationalizing banks, and he has explained that he had to act in this way to prevent Spain from going bankrupt.
“I had to change my mind because reality imposed it on me”, he added before differentiating that rectification at a specific moment to “do the opposite of what you have announced and that reality does not force you to do so”, like the pacts with Bildu or the independentistas.
It was then that he differentiated his attitude with that of “not telling the truth” by Sánchez.