About 600 people protest on Ferraz Street demanding Sánchez's resignation.

Some 600 people summoned via social media, according to data from the Government Delegation, gathered this Thursday afternoon around the PSOE headquarters on Ferraz Street after the press conference called by the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, regarding the resignation of the Secretary of Organization, Santos Cerdán , once the secrecy of the UCO report that implicates him in the collection of illegal commissions was lifted.
This protest, which forced the National Police to close traffic on Ferraz Street, was attended by Vox leaders, including the spokesperson for Madrid City Council, Javier Ortega Smith; the spokesperson for the Madrid Assembly, Isabel Pérez Moñino; MP Rocío de Meer; and the national spokesperson for Vox, José Antonio Fúster. Luis 'Alvise' Pérez, MEP and leader of the Se Acabó la Fiesta party, also attended.
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The arrival of protesters throughout the afternoon forced the demonstrators to be cornered at the intersection of Ferraz Street, Marqués de Urquijo Street, and Buen Suceso Street.
Chants denouncing the corruption of Pedro Sánchez's government and demanding the resignation of the executive branch were heard at the rally, along with other shouts insulting the socialist leader. "It's a mafia, it's not a party" and "this tyrant's days are numbered" were some of the slogans at the rally. They also carried flags, some pro-Franco, as well as the emblems of 'Revuelta', the youth association affiliated with Vox, and some pro-Franco flags.
Vox demands a motion of censure from FeijóoSpeaking to the media from Ferraz, Vox's national spokesperson, José Antonio Fúster, once again called on opposition leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo to present a motion of no confidence to exert "pressure" on Pedro Sánchez's administration.
He also recalled that Vox presented two motions of no confidence, with Santiago Abascal and Ramón Tamames, and that if the other parties had supported it, "we wouldn't have the criminal gang now," referring to the Sánchez government. "Let no Spaniard forget that," he said.
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