| PP: "it is someone else's shame" | These things so characteristic of Mr.
Mateos are childish, unfair and unnecessary.
A mayor who boasts of being one has to set an example both to his colleagues in the Corporation and to the rest of the citizens, and the one he is offering is lousy. The current mayor of Lorca, Diego José Mateos, has excluded and hidden from the municipal political groups the institutional act of delivery of the study of modification of the general plan, which in its day promoted the Popular Party and whose commission was supported by all political groups , through an agreement with the Polytechnic University of Cartagena. The councilors of the rest of the municipal political groups have had to find out from the press of the accomplishment of this act, to which exclusively the councilors of the PSOE had been invited.
These things so characteristic of Mr.
Mateos are ashamed of others, they are childish, unfair and unnecessary. Mr.
Mateos does not miss any opportunity to show his lack of respect for the municipal institution, his lack of level to occupy the office of the mayor, and the disdain with which he treats the councilors of the rest of the political formations.
Neither he is the town hall, nor is the town hall his farmhouse.
With this type of "Caesarist" attitudes, he shows his lack of political stature, and exposes to all citizens the serious shortcomings of his behavior. A mayor who boasts of being one has to set an example both to his colleagues in the Corporation and to the rest of the citizens, and the one he is offering is lousy.
It was an institutional act, held in the Council Hall of the City Council itself, from which, by order of Mr Mateos, the municipal political groups have been left out.
He does not take advantage of any opportunity to show institutional courtesy for the position he should properly perform. Mr.
Mateos does not measure up to the institutional respect that the performance of the functions of a mayor of Lorca requires.
It is not the first time that we have to publicly and privately denounce their authoritarian and disrespectful attitudes.
This is a tic of "Caesarism" that perfectly portrays the politician who, time and again, falls into the same temptation to cover up the brightness of others so that his perpetual darkness goes unnoticed. Faced with these events that have been repeated continuously over the last few months, we must remind Mr.
Mateos of a very wise phrase from our popular proverb: "hands that you do not give, what do you expect?".
Source: PP Lorca