The coordinator of the Bloc de Esquerda believes that the “no is no” of Luis Montenegro regarding Chega happened this Saturday with Miguel Albuquerque in Madeira, in a speech in which he criticized the “theory of three fields” of Livre.
These positions were defended by Mariana Mortagua at the end of the conference against the far right called “No passana!”, held at ISCTE in Lisbon, in which the President of the European Left Walter Bayer and Miguel Duarte rescued civil activists in the central Mediterranean and the head of the list of the Left Bloc in the European elections, Catarina Martins.
According to the newspaper Expresso, PSD/Madeira leader Miguel Albuquerque, speaking on post-election scenarios, “opened the door to an agreement with Chega” for the executive branch of the autonomous region, without following the line of the party president, Luis Montenegro.
For Mariana Mortagua, “no is no.” [do primeiro-ministro, Luís Montenegro] It only lasts as long as it lasts – and that’s what Miguel Albuquerque just proved when he said he ends up making deals with Chega.”
“Yesterday’s red lines are now a leftist invention,” he later commented, resorting to irony.
After this remark, the coordinator of the Left Bloc rejected the ideological path followed by the current that caused dissent in the German party Die Linke, which “involved xenophobic nationalist discourse,” considering this path “unacceptable.” But Mariana Mortagua also criticized the “three camps” theory advocated by Livre representative Ruy Tavares:
“There will also be those who call for moderation, for an ideological and programmatic dilution that reduces everything to an anti-fascist identity, which in fact allows any ambiguity. In Portugal, this strategy was called the theory of three camps. is wrong because it ends up with the left supporting right-wing governments and programs,” he said, receiving prolonged applause.
In her speech, the Bloco de Esquerda coordinator then defended a measure also proposed by Livre: a four-day work week.
“With all the advances that have been made in the economy, we could make serious progress towards working four days a week and free ourselves from coercion, time colonized by obligations, exhaustion. In other words, get a little closer to freedom,” he said. .
Author: Lusa
Source: CM Jornal

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