36-year-old Filipa sees from the window of the building the retinue of Pedro Nuno Santos, who have arrived to visit the new hospital in Sintra. “The work is endless. I can’t stand it anymore,” he says. CM, half surrounded by a department that will include an examination area, a surgical suite and a primary emergency service capable of handling approximately 60,000 incidents. “This is due to the lack of specialized labor,” explains the mayor of Sintra, Basilio Horta, stressing that everything will be up and running by the summer.
Once again, with a helmet on his head and a vest, Pedro Nuno Santos continues to balance between what he has done and what he is going to do. “He’s not abandoning social media, he’s investing in it to respond to more users,” he says. While visiting the area, which will have 60 beds, he hears the mayor request: “Build a university hospital here.” Pedro Nuno does not accept any obligations. Analysis is for “experts”.
In political days, the PS insists on the difference between “them,” AD, and “us,” the PS. In Lisbon, a candidate says they “don’t believe” in the minimum wage and consider it an “obstacle.” Labor legislation raises the issue of reducing working hours. Starting with “fathers and mothers with children under three years old”, with negotiations with social partners. On the streets of Setubal, Pedro Nuno says he doesn’t feel alone and that the campaign “has been crazy.”
António Costa was again present at the rally, and for the candidate his presence is “good.” The former secretary general is also due to accompany Pedro Nuno to Lisbon at the end of the election campaign on Friday.