Gonzalo Caballero reviewed a survey to criticize Formoso's management after succeeding him as head of the PSdeG

In the internal turmoil of Galician socialism, the struggles between mayors to host the headquarters of the artificial intelligence supervision agency are just one chapter. At the management level, the current one, led by Valentín González Formoso, has an obvious problem with the protruding cup. It was recently tracked that he studied the opening of a file on the 'Gonzalist' deputy Martín Seco for openly affirming in Parliament that he supported a law only because he had been ordered to do so by the party leadership. Yesterday it was Gonzalo Caballero himself, general secretary until he was displaced by Formoso, who shook the tree using a survey published last weekend.

"Concerned". This is how Sensse Caballero stated, through his social networks, when sharing the Sondaxe sampling, which indicates that the Socialists would lose a seat and worsen the bad result of 2020 even more; one of the factors that ultimately cost Caballero his job.

Worried.
In the last general elections of 2019, the PSdeG tied with the PP in Galicia: now the PSdeG would drop 6 points and the PP would win by 12 according to @isondaxe.
In autonomous communities, the PSdeG would fall from the 19,4% that we obtained in 2020 to 15,7%
We can do better to keep moving forward pic.twitter.com/8hQGTHBpMw

– Gonzalo Caballero (@G_Caballero_M) October 24, 2022

“In the last general elections of 2019, the PSdeG tied with the PP in Galicia: now the PSdeG would drop 6 points and the PP would win by 12”, reflects Caballero on Twitter. “In the autonomous regions, the PSdeG would fall from the 19,4% that we obtained in 2020 to 15,7%,” he added. And here came the second volley from him to Formoso and his team: "We can do better to keep moving forward."

Demonstrations due to the fact that the current spokesman for the Socialist Group in O Hórreo, Luis Álvarez —who also occupied a position previously held by the nephew of the mayor of Vigo— was interrogated. "We are all worried, not just Mr. Gonzalo Caballero," Álvarez interjected, uncomfortable before the darts of his fellow rank-and-file and parliamentary group, during an appearance, precisely, in the Chamber. "What you have to do," he added, "is work with everyone to change this situation."

He was referring to the "trend" traced by the survey, to which he did not want to give excessive relevance. The PSdeG leadership, he apologized, "has been working for 10 months" and "that provides a space for improvement and an incentive." “We have to do better”, he conceded, to add, as a way of taunting back towards Caballero, that “if there is something different” in the “way of acting for 10 months, it is that the interests of Galicia always come first”.