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Abascal demands "permanent mobilization" in the streets against Sánchez and Vox will go "with all the consequences"

"We are willing to fight in the courts, in the institutions and in the streets," he proclaims.

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Abascal demands "permanent mobilization" in the streets against Sánchez and Vox will go "with all the consequences"

"We are willing to fight in the courts, in the institutions and in the streets," he proclaims.

MADRID, 2 Oct. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The president of Vox, Santiago Abascal, has persisted this Monday in the call for a "permanent mobilization" in favor of "national unity" and against the negotiations of the president, Pedro Sánchez, and the independence parties, emphasizing that his formation " will lead with all the consequences."

In the investiture debate of Alberto Núñez Feijóo in Congress, Abascal assured on the platform of the chamber that in the event that an amnesty is agreed for the Catalan independence leaders in exchange for Junts' support for Sánchez "the Spanish people will defend themselves" .

During this day, the general secretary of Vox, Ignacio Garriga, has reaffirmed this statement and has asked Spaniards to "take to the streets to defend their homeland" and has assured that Vox "will be at the side of the Spanish people and will do so if Pedro Sánchez leads to this situation."

In a press conference from Congress after his audience with King Felipe VI, the Vox leader emphasized this idea, issuing the "alert" to the Spanish people that "the enemies of Spain and the constitutional order are at the doors." to be able to take over the central institutions of the State".

For this reason, he has spoken out in favor of "mobilization", highlighting Vox's "commitment" to a "permanent" one. "We are willing to lead and convene when necessary" and "we are willing to fight in the courts, in the institutions and in the streets," he added, before warning that they will do so "with all the consequences." Along these lines, he has encouraged Spaniards to attend the Sunday demonstration called by the Catalan Civil Society, to which he himself will go.

Next, he stressed that Vox is inclined to "illegalize" the "separatist" parties, "tolerated despite the fact that they try to attack the very foundation of the Constitution in every way."

The meeting between Abascal and Felipe VI lasted 35 minutes, according to Vox, and the statement by the leader of the party in the Lower House was brief and without questions to protect the "discretion" of the meeting, as he said. Even so, the president of Vox has reported that he has conveyed to Her Majesty his "resounding no" to an investiture of Sánchez "in any of his circumstances."

Furthermore, he spoke to Felipe VI about Vox's "concern" about "the collective price" that a new investiture of the acting head of the Executive would entail, in addition to pointing out that the self-determination of Catalonia or a referendum for independence are not "possible." ".

Likewise, he has repeated that a possible amnesty would mean an "aggression" towards the Spaniards who assume the laws, "it leaves the rule of law without defenses, delegitimizes 40 years of constitutional democracy and delegitimizes the crown and especially its actions" in 2017 .

"We have been alerted that the 2017 coup d'état now intends to move to Moncloa under the guise of legality once the socialists have carried out their assault on the Constitutional Court," Abascal concluded.