
U203-F Display
Features:
8 digits volume,8 digits sales,6 digits price per unit
1.2”LCD yellow backlight
running normally on the condition of -40 C to 55 C
broad sight scope from all directions
Current:600 mA
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight:
Dimension :
300g/case of 1 120×253×26mm/case of 1
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Spain s bickering opposition
Popular peevishness
Dec 7th 2006 | MADRID
From The Economist print edition
The People s Party loses its way
LIFE could hardly be better for Spain s former prime minister, José María Aznar he travels the globe, sits
on the board of Rupert Murdoch s News Corp, and lectures happily to Washington think-tanks. The same
cannot be said of the conservative People s Party that he led until March 2004, just before it lost an
election. Almost three years on, the PP has also lost its way. Internal bickering fills the newspapers; senior
figures jostle to succeed the present leader, Mariano Rajoy, if he stands down after the next election in
early 2008.
National politics in Spain is a two-party affair. If the PP is to oust the AFP
Socialist prime minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, it needs
voters in the centre. But it shows no sign of wooing them. Instead, it
angrily opposes all government initiatives, from gay marriage to
Catalan devolution, to peace talks with the Basque terrorist group,
ETA. Like Britain s Conservative Party in the past, it risks seeming to
be a “nasty?party. A recent video attacking Mr Zapatero fuel dispenser s record on
crime, which included pictures of violence from the time when the PP
was in power, has not helped.
Yet at the root of the PP s troubles is its inability to shake off the
trauma of its loss of power. This came three days after Muslim
terrorists killed 191 people on Madrid trains. The day before the vote,
angry protesters came out on the streets demanding to know who Some still ask whodunnit
was to blame. Was it ETA, as Mr Aznar insisted, or Islamists? As the
evidence leant towards the second, voters who had been ready to vote for the PP shifted.
Prosecutors and p fuel dispenser olice are now convinced that only radical Muslims were involved. Seven blew t fuel dispenser hemselves
up in a mass suicide three weeks later, as they were ab