During a rally held in Leganés, alongside the mayor of the municipality, Miguel Ángel Recuenco, and the national president of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, Serrano attacked the PSOE's explanations regarding an office near its central headquarters. According to the popular leader, this office, paid for by the party and used by former President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, was allegedly connected to the Ferraz computers and used for private activities of socialist members.
Serrano ironically questioned the attempt to dissociate the PSOE from this office, emphasizing that its connection to the socialist headquarters and the use of its computers for private purposes is undeniable. "There are those who try to make us believe that an office paid for by the Socialist Party, on the same street as the PSOE headquarters in Ferraz, with computers connected to the PSOE headquarters' computers in Ferraz, has nothing to do with the Socialist Party," he stated.
The Secretary General of the Madrid PP placed Pedro Sánchez as the ultimate political responsible for the cases implicating the PSOE, mentioning investigations related to José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero in the Plus Ultra case, former Organization Secretary Santos Cerdán, and former militant Leire Díez for an alleged plot to destabilize judicial proceedings against the party. "He has allowed all this to be encouraged, if not known," Serrano asserted, urging the People's Party to be prepared for any national political scenario.
On the regional front, Serrano reaffirmed the Madrid PP's readiness for the upcoming municipal and regional elections in 2027, and its commitment to supporting Alberto Núñez Feijóo in reaching La Moncloa. He highlighted the work of popular mayors in the Community of Madrid, predicting an increase in councilors and defending their ambition to improve their constituents' lives. He backed the mayor of Leganés, Miguel Ángel Recuenco, ahead of a second confidence vote to approve the municipal budgets, accusing the opposition of obstruction.
Finally, Serrano criticized ministers such as Mónica García and Óscar Puente, accusing them of intervening in Madrid's politics at the behest of the central government, especially as regional elections approach. He contrasted the PP's management with the "nothingness" that, in his opinion, the regional left represents, focused on "launching the harshest criticism" against the party and the regional president, Isabel Díaz Ayuso.




