Ventura: “Anyone still thinking about voting for the Socialist Party should take medicine.”
Chiga President Andre Ventura said on Wednesday night that he saw “no reason” for voters to vote for the Socialist Party on Sunday, and suggested that anyone considering doing so “should take their medicine.”
“Anyone who is still thinking about voting for the Socialist Party needs to take medicine, because things are not going well,” Andre Ventura said during a rally in Olhão (Faro Province), in which the leader of the Spanish Vox party participated.
After a comment from one of his supporters, the Chiga leader said he had “the explanation he was looking for,” noting that “there was news a few months ago saying that 94% of hospitals did not have medicines” and that this might be possible. It is “an explanation for many people who vote for the Socialist Party.”
“You're watching tomorrow's news, Andre Ventura is attacking the mentally ill. Commentators are talking about this and saying this is a disgrace. Ana Gomez will say it should have been illegal by now, and Marquez Mendes will say I told you so, and of course – I don't know whether to say that now or “No, and Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa will say we have to find out, we have to know if it's true.”
Andre Ventura also said that he is trying to understand why people vote for the Socialist Party and cannot, calling the Socialist government a “disappointment” and criticizing the difference between the amounts allocated in the budget for each region and what was implemented.
“It's just that I don't see a reason. The only ones I thought would vote for the Socialist Party were those who cling to…” he said, then paused, and continued, after another interjection from the audience, “clinging to the pot” and “state handouts.”
He considered that “there is no other reason” to vote for those who left “the country in this state.”
“PS is a scam and a scam,” he criticized.
The Shiga president also said that if he wins the election, Brazil's president “will not enter Portugal” for the April 25 celebrations, and Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez “will only enter when necessary.”
But what is planned is that the heads of Portuguese-speaking African countries will be invited to attend the 50th anniversary celebrations on April 25, which does not include the President of Brazil. Lula da Silva spoke last year at the Assembly of the Republic at a ceremony held on April 25.
Noting that if he were prime minister, his government “would not allow all these corrupt foreigners to enter” Portugal, he left a warning: “Of all those who are about to come on April 25, I advise caution when purchasing flights.” “.
“I'm not kidding, they won't really come in, and I guarantee that if he becomes prime minister, Mr. Lula da Silva will stay at the airport,” he said, noting that “if he insists, he will leave.” “To prison, but he already knows what it is too, and there won't be much news.”
In his 30-minute speech, the Chiga leader once again commented on former Social Democratic Party leader Rui Riu's entry into the anti-terrorism campaign, considering Luis Montenegro and his predecessor “indulgent in corruption and crutches of the Socialist Party.”
Shortly thereafter, André Ventura responded that Chiga was “the only opposition to the Socialist Party.”
The President of Chiga also stated that on Sunday in Lisbon there will be “the biggest earthquake in European politics” that did not happen in Madrid, in the July elections in which the Vox party lost its deputies.
He defended, “All of Europe will hear that Portugal stood up to say no to corruption, no to nepotism, no to Brussels' hegemony, and no to international hegemony. We will take charge of our destiny.”
Speaking earlier, the parliamentary leader and head of the Faro district list, Pedro Pinto, agreed that “the Socialist Party does not deserve to win the elections” and considered that the alternative was Chiga “and no one else.”