Coalición Canaria Lanzarote Criticises PSOE’s Actions
Coalición Canaria Lanzarote has warned the public about the extreme seriousness of the Socialist Party’s actions regarding the management of the Cabildo and the distribution of seeds from the Agricultural Experimental Farm.
As highlighted by the party’s Secretary General, Pedro San Ginés, this is not an isolated incident but rather a reflection of an organisation that seems to lack ethical and moral boundaries in its attempts at political erosion.
Once again, the PSOE has been involved in a troubling incident, creating unnecessary alarm among the populace by falsely accusing the Cabildo of Lanzarote of jeopardising public health due to a simple administrative error in seed distribution at the Agricultural Experimental Farm. This error was promptly detected and corrected by the responsible technicians, ensuring the safety of both citizens and farmers at all times.
However, the current Socialist leadership, always quick to raise alarms, declared that “the island is in a situation of extreme gravity concerning public health.”
Pedro San Ginés has been unequivocal: “This is not the first time the Socialist Party has been willing to compromise the honour, honesty, and integrity of public workers to construct a partisan narrative. What the PSOE has done is very serious; it has crossed all red lines, and we cannot allow politics in Lanzarote to sink to this level of unscrupulousness.”
San Ginés asserts that politics should be something else entirely: a space for building solutions, not sowing fear. “Enough is enough. What awaits us by 2027, if this continues, is a scenario where every human error will be weaponised for political gain, trampling over officials and technicians to manufacture headlines, regardless of the harm caused to citizens and the professionals who work diligently. We will not tolerate that. I urge the responsible members of the PSOE to put a stop to this nonsense,” stressed the leader of CC.
Coalición Canaria Lanzarote emphasises that the recent incident is just one more example of the practices this PSOE has habituated the public to, warning that such behaviours undermine trust in institutions and those who work within them with rigour and professionalism.
“Politics must embody responsibility, respect, and work for the common good. We cannot keep wasting our energy on absurdities like this,” concluded San Ginés.