The People's Party (PP) intensifies its strategy of opposition to the Government by preparing an exhaustive interrogation for President Pedro Sánchez in the Senate. The attack is framed within the context of the Koldo case, where the party led by Alberto Núñez Feijóo seeks answers in light of the lack of clarity surrounding a UCO report, which suggests that former minister José Luis Ábalos used 95,000 euros of unknown origin to finance various personal expenses. Feijóo's announcement that 'the escape is over' comes after several weeks of pressure on the Government, intensifying after Sánchez's recent statements about possible 'legal' cash incomes for the PSOE.
The Senate's investigative committee becomes the stage where the PP poses direct questions about the party's finances. Feijóo and his team plan to interrogate Sánchez about the legitimacy of cash payments, seeking to justify with bank statements the alleged irregular transactions related to the party. The PP's strategy includes summoning other people implicated in the case, such as Carmen Pano, who has stated that she transported large sums of cash to the PSOE's headquarters. All of this is part of a broader attempt to dismantle what the PP describes as a web of corruption affecting the current government and drawing a parallel with illegal practices in the realm of the party's finances.
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