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Vox anticipates that it will not be an obstacle for "the alternative" but warns that it will not "give away" its votes

MADRID, 23 Jul.

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Vox anticipates that it will not be an obstacle for "the alternative" but warns that it will not "give away" its votes

MADRID, 23 Jul. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The general secretary of Vox, Ignacio Garriga, has called for "prudence" in the face of the data revealed by the polls on the general elections this Sunday, although he has advanced that his party will not be an obstacle to forming an "alternative" to Pedro Sánchez but he is not going to "give away" his votes.

The 'number two' of Vox has made a first assessment at the closing of the polling stations from the party's national headquarters on Bambú street in Madrid, where Santiago Abascal is already waiting for the first data from the scrutiny accompanied by his closest circle and first candidates on the list for Madrid.

Garriga has avoided assessing the polls and has assured that Vox, "whatever the result", will "continue working" committed to "returning the voice of the Spanish people, being the alternative that the people deserve and a future of prosperity".

At this point, he has recovered the message that Vox has repeated throughout the electoral campaign about the polls as a means of "manipulating" the vote. "We are convinced that the Spanish people will respond to us at a decisive moment; from then on, let us be prudent," he claimed.

In any case, he has advanced that Vox in any negotiation will make its votes "valid" "with the fair force" that the voters give it. Of course, without "giving away" their votes and "defending" their voters. "For Vox it will never be to shape that alternative and that change of course that our beloved nation deserves," he has advanced about a possible sum of absolute majority with the PP.

Garriga has also taken the opportunity to show his "satisfaction" with Vox's electoral campaign, in which he has denounced that they have had to suffer "violent attacks and unprecedented campaigns of manipulation."

He has also criticized the day chosen by the chief executive for the elections, which he believes "only responds to an attempt to harm participation" and "do everything possible to modify the result."