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The Canarian Coalition maintains the veto against Vox and Sumar but considers itself further from Abascal than from Díaz

Supports contacts by phone with PSOE and PP.

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The Canarian Coalition maintains the veto against Vox and Sumar but considers itself further from Abascal than from Díaz

Supports contacts by phone with PSOE and PP

MADRID, 31 Jul. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The elected deputy of the Canary Coalition, Cristina Valido, has maintained that her party will not reach a legislature agreement with the PSOE or PP at the national level if "the extreme right or the extreme left" participates in the Government, although she has considered that with " the extreme right" keep a "much greater distance".

Valido recalled this Monday in interviews on Cadena Ser and Antena 3, collected by Europa Press, that the Canary Islands Coalition has supported the PP and the PSOE in the past, so they do not have a "prefigured" idea and are willing to talk to the two candidates, Alberto Núñez Feijóo and Pedro Sánchez, respectively.

And he has recognized that they have held "specific meetings by telephone" with the PSOE and the PP, but that "there have still been no further contacts and there is no open negotiation."

"We are willing to talk, we will talk about both one side and the other. There has not been any conversation that goes further. I understand that for it to happen, one of the two will have to add enough to be able to start negotiating the vote of this deputy", he added.

When asked if Vox and Sumar are the same for her, she stated that "it is not a personal matter" and recalled that in the last legislature the Canarian Coalition has supported initiatives born from the vice president and leader of Sumar, Yolanda Díaz.

With "the extreme right we maintain a much greater distance, we have never voted for anything with Vox", he has qualified, for which he has recognized that they are further "from one (Abascal) than from the other (Díaz)".

The deputy has affirmed that "certain positions of the extremes are not good in any case" and has stressed that the Canary Islands Coalition moves "in centrality and balance".