Aznar calls for national majority to halt system change

Published on 2026-07-02 | Translated from Spanish

Former Prime Minister José María Aznar has called for the formation of a national and centrist majority to remove Pedro Sánchez from government. In his speech, he criticized the current president for governing with the support of secessionists and demanded that the PP present a political program capable of achieving mass support among citizens. Decisive elections for the constitutional model are approaching. 🇪🇸

Spanish parliamentary chamber from dramatic low angle, empty government benches facing opposition seats, a single microphone stand casting long shadow across the central podium, fractured constitutional document pages floating in midair, political party logos dissolving into fragments, abstract map of Spain splitting along regional borders, cinematic political thriller visual style, cold blue and crimson lighting, dust particles suspended in the air, tension and division atmosphere, photorealistic architectural render with dramatic chiaroscuro

Artificial intelligence as an electoral analysis tool 🤖

Political parties are already using AI systems to segment the electorate and predict voting trends. These algorithms process data from social media, surveys, and censuses to identify blocks of undecided voters. However, the reliability of these models depends on data quality and the ability to avoid biases. In a scenario of polarization like the current one, technology can amplify fragmentation if not applied with transparent criteria.

The PP seeks mass support, but its affiliate app fails 📱

While Aznar calls for a program that generates mass support, the PP's official app for affiliates continues to error out every time you try to pay the membership fee. Militants report that the application freezes just when the message for a voluntary donation to the cause appears. Some joke that the real system change would be for the app to work without asking for the account number three times. The digital revolution, for now, waits.