Twitter sanchez castejon

President of spain 2021

Nowadays it is unimaginable for a candidate to dispense with having an online presence carefully regulated by community managers, aware of being the object of constant scrutiny by millions of users. The tweet that inaugurated Pedro Sánchez’s account is a document from another era, from an experimental, almost intimate network, where one could express oneself spontaneously, even with a touch of naivety.

Fortunately, to achieve that goal, he has abandoned another one that may seem juvenile but is actually careless: abbreviations. We still remember with a shudder when he wanted to be Pdro Snchz.

… or confusing approaches that would have required a second reading. It’s good to have online participation initiatives, but what are we talking about, an SMS or a tweet?  In general, one senses more haste than caution when it comes to expressing oneself.

In general, Pedro Sánchez has been improving the way he expresses his political ideas, which in the early days were rushed and lacked the right references – if not punctuation -.

Ainhoa sánchez gómez

Nowadays it is unimaginable for a candidate to dispense with having an online presence carefully regulated by community managers, aware of being the object of constant scrutiny by millions of users. The tweet that inaugurated Pedro Sánchez’s account is a document from another era, from an experimental, almost intimate network, in which one could express oneself spontaneously, even with a touch of naivety.

Fortunately, to achieve that goal, he has abandoned another one that may seem juvenile but is actually careless: abbreviations. We still remember with a shudder when he wanted to be Pdro Snchz.

… or confusing approaches that would have required a second reading. It’s good to have online participation initiatives, but what are we talking about, an SMS or a tweet?  In general, one senses more haste than caution when it comes to expressing oneself.

In general, Pedro Sánchez has been improving the way he expresses his political ideas, which in the early days were rushed and lacked the right references – if not punctuation -.

María begoña gómez fernández

@justme #12CloseWrite your comment here Hahaha that Mr. Trump believeme, sounds like he is kneeling, please believe me!!! haha in English that sounds pathetic when someone wants to like lecture someone else. Mr. Trump doesn’t think so. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAiv83yU9_8 Note to moderator: the link contains a video in which Trump constantly repeats “believe me”, I hope it’s allowed.

@matias.jeremias #6CloseThe other day P. Sanchez sent a twit to say “I book on Monday” and it read “I book on monday” Well thank goodness he didn’t want to ask her for the quote…Anda que si va a una camarera a preguntararle cuando libras?…le diría “Cuando pounds?”

Carlota sánchez gómez

The temptation to position oneself politically with more or less obvious tweets is tempting, especially if politics is one’s main dedication, of course. No less greedy is the temptation to join the masses, especially when it comes to hate. If the object of hatred is the tweeter in chief, resisting the sweetness of notoriety becomes practically impossible.

Our protagonist of the day, Pedro Sánchez -yes, the one with the “cojonuda pizza” that regularly returns to everyone’s timelines- has decided to fully and unequivocally criticize the policies of the newly inaugurated president of the United States. Or Mr. Trump, as he calls him. At noon this Tuesday, the candidate to lead the PSOE decided to sing the 40 to the American leader with three sentences in proper English.

If there is someone to whom to apply this maxim is the spokesman of Ciudadanos in the Congress of Deputies, Juan Carlos Girauta, who, fed up with receiving rejonazos decided to move from the word to the act… to the act of showing where the criticisms were coming from, of course.