Post by zannatikhatu1546 on Feb 24, 2024 23:41:35 GMT -5
Rodrigo Rato José Luis Ayllón met with around twenty informants. . Image of the arrest of Rodrigo Rato upon leaving his home. A small group of national media reporters were summoned this Monday at the Moncloa Palace for a reserved meeting. There, attendees received the Government's version of the scandal that fills the front pages of newspapers and radio and television talk shows these days: the leaks from the investigation into Rodrigo Rato and the search of his home. Following a personal call, one by one, the 'briefing', as defined by the Government, was held in the middle of the afternoon, in one of the rooms of the presidential complex. Begoña Fuentes, advisor to the Secretary of State for Communication, Carmen Martínez Castro, stood on one side of the table. On the other, the Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes, José Luis Ayllón, who assumed all the protagonism.
On the journalists' side, around twenty professionals from national newspapers, radios and televisions were present. The Rato affair As El Confidencial Digital has learned, through some of the attendees, the 'briefing' was called at the initiative of the Government. The Secretary of State for Communication contacted, one by one, the designated newspapers and television stations to summon them to that meeting. Ayllón usually meets with journalists every week, for approximately three months, to discuss the president's agenda for the next seven days. However C Level Contact List Monday's call was different. According to one of the attendees, one of the attendees told ECD, “never had so many journalists been summoned. Furthermore, the Rato issue monopolized the meeting.”[OBJECT] The Government distances itself from the leak The Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes took the reins, and these were the issues that were discussed in the briefing meeting distanced the Government from any leak regarding the investigation into Rodrigo Rato: he gave guarantees that “no one from the Government” had leaked that the former vice president had taken advantage of the tax amnesty.
He also distanced the Executive from the advance notice to the media so that, on Thursday, they would go to the former minister's home and broadcast live the registration and departure of Rodrigo Rato detained by Customs Surveillance agents. “The journalists have not been sent to Rato's house. At least, no member of the Government has done so,” Rato insisted. This version contrasts, however, with the complaint made that same afternoon by Rato to people he trusted most. He assured that around thirty envoys and reporters from the media, and very prominently the television cameras, were already at the doors of his home an hour before the search began. That intense media coverage, and with so much advance notice, seemed suspicious. He had no doubt that the warning was given from La Moncloa.
The incredible bond between Pablo and Iñaki Urdangarín The Secretary of State also insisted that the Executive takes a position against the public lynching of a person who finds himself in that situation. He argued that the Government had precisely tried to minimize the scope of the case, considering from the first moment that it was “a private matter.” Ministers and Secretaries of State deny having leaked José Luis Ayllón seemed especially confident, explains one of the attendees, when he stated that the leaks, about Rodrigo Rato's amnesty and the notice to television stations, did not come from “any member of the Government".
On the journalists' side, around twenty professionals from national newspapers, radios and televisions were present. The Rato affair As El Confidencial Digital has learned, through some of the attendees, the 'briefing' was called at the initiative of the Government. The Secretary of State for Communication contacted, one by one, the designated newspapers and television stations to summon them to that meeting. Ayllón usually meets with journalists every week, for approximately three months, to discuss the president's agenda for the next seven days. However C Level Contact List Monday's call was different. According to one of the attendees, one of the attendees told ECD, “never had so many journalists been summoned. Furthermore, the Rato issue monopolized the meeting.”[OBJECT] The Government distances itself from the leak The Secretary of State for Relations with the Cortes took the reins, and these were the issues that were discussed in the briefing meeting distanced the Government from any leak regarding the investigation into Rodrigo Rato: he gave guarantees that “no one from the Government” had leaked that the former vice president had taken advantage of the tax amnesty.
He also distanced the Executive from the advance notice to the media so that, on Thursday, they would go to the former minister's home and broadcast live the registration and departure of Rodrigo Rato detained by Customs Surveillance agents. “The journalists have not been sent to Rato's house. At least, no member of the Government has done so,” Rato insisted. This version contrasts, however, with the complaint made that same afternoon by Rato to people he trusted most. He assured that around thirty envoys and reporters from the media, and very prominently the television cameras, were already at the doors of his home an hour before the search began. That intense media coverage, and with so much advance notice, seemed suspicious. He had no doubt that the warning was given from La Moncloa.
The incredible bond between Pablo and Iñaki Urdangarín The Secretary of State also insisted that the Executive takes a position against the public lynching of a person who finds himself in that situation. He argued that the Government had precisely tried to minimize the scope of the case, considering from the first moment that it was “a private matter.” Ministers and Secretaries of State deny having leaked José Luis Ayllón seemed especially confident, explains one of the attendees, when he stated that the leaks, about Rodrigo Rato's amnesty and the notice to television stations, did not come from “any member of the Government".