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Vox demands that Feijóo not "get complex" and take note of the left, which joins "anyone" to govern

MADRID, 17 Dic.

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Vox demands that Feijóo not "get complex" and take note of the left, which joins "anyone" to govern

MADRID, 17 Dic. (EUROPA PRESS) -

Vox demands that the president of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, not become "complex" when it comes to coordinating initiatives to oppose the measures of Pedro Sánchez's Government and to forge post-electoral pacts, and reminds him that the parties that make up the left-wing bloc are They unite among themselves, "whoever and wherever necessary," to govern. "If you don't join, they take votes from wherever they need because they don't want us in power," emphasizes Vox spokesperson in the Senate, Paloma Gómez.

In an interview with Europa Press, Gómez points out that in other countries "the right supports each other to fight the left", and that does not happen in Spain. "Here we have a right, which is not Vox, which is self-conscious," says the senator, who questions "what" the 'popular' are afraid of.

To support his argument, Gómez cites what happened with the Mayor's Office of Pamplona, ​​where the PSOE and EH Bildu have reached an agreement that will allow the latter to achieve the council by unseating UPN. He sees the agreement as "undemocratic" and insists that the left join "anyone" to separate the right. Thus, he warns Feijóo that he has to be "aware" of this because, otherwise, "he's not going to get anywhere" and "he's not doing himself any favors."

The party of Santiago Abascal is irritated with Génova before the refusal of the 'people' to articulate a joint response against the Government of Pedro Sánchez and the amnesty to those involved in the 'process' agreed with Junts to impeach the president.

They particularly ask that the PP assert its majority in the Senate to prevent the processing of the law that will regulate the grace measure in the Upper House. The PP has already refused. Tired of snubs, Vox has decided to distance itself from Genoa and will only maintain collaboration with the PP at the local and regional level, where they have numerous government agreements.

In the interview with Europa Press, Gómez delves into his party's criticism of the PP Executive, although he does not believe that the relationship between both parties is "irremediably damaged" and highlights the good relationship that both parliamentary groups maintain in the Senate. But he believes that Feijóo is "a little lost" and that he "is not clear" about the link that, in his opinion, should exist between Vox and the PP at the national level, something that the 'popular' leaders in the autonomies do understand.

"Feijóo is in a situation that he himself does not understand or has the strength and power that he would need to position himself," the senator slips, adding that "when one swims between several waters, the currents, if you do not know how to control them, In the end they drag you down." "And that's what I think is happening to him," she adds, without giving further details.

Questioned as to whether Vox would feel more comfortable with a different 'popular' leader, such as the president of the Community of Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, or the deputy Cayetana Álvarez de Toledo, more similar to the postulates of those of Abascal, the senator limits itself to pointing out that both "have a more precise idea and know perfectly what the path is and what the direction is to reach the objectives."

In this context, he accuses the PP of acting out of electoralism. "There are other parties that play depending on the voting position. You can't start thinking about a voting position, the first thing you have to defend is an idea and then people take a position with your idea," says the senator, emphasizing in which the PP does it "the opposite."

"You can't confuse the citizen, you can't confuse society because you have objectives that don't really apply now. I think the PP fails there," he insists. And he reproaches the 'popular' for lack of "decision, courage, strength and not being afraid of anything." "If you are not capable of defending that, it is best that you leave and dedicate yourself to another profession," he concludes.

However, the Vox senator rules out that her party will add pressure on the PP, for example by dropping the autonomous governments they share. "The coalitions are working quite well, many improvements are being made. We are making the PP work," she concludes.