Vox, in Prohens: "To implement Vox policies, it's better for Vox to govern."
Manuela Cañadas reminds the PP that it "does not have an absolute majority" and invites it to negotiate.


Palm"To implement Vox's policies, the best thing is for Vox to govern; that's the best way to summarize it." This is how Manuela Cañadas, spokesperson for the far-right parliamentary group, summarized the speech given by President Marga Prohens during the general policy debate on Tuesday. Although she declined to give a detailed assessment of the announcements made by the Popular Party, she emphasized that "they are proposals and demands" that fall within Vox's ideological framework.
Although she didn't specify which proposals she was referring to, Prohens has aligned herself with Vox, especially in its anti-immigration rhetoric and in limiting access to aid for residents who have been in the islands for less than three years. In contrast, she has distanced herself from the far right on linguistic matters and has also rejected gender-based violence.
"The PP doesn't have a culture of pacts," said Cañadas, when asked about the possibility of remaking alliances with the PP after overturning the Executive's latest decree-law. "I understand she's a good actress because she's been in politics for many years and they're campaigning," she concluded. "Do they have an absolute majority? No, then let's talk," she concluded.
The spokesperson for the PP parliamentary group, Sebastià Sagreras, considered it "unavoidable" that "some people get angry with the PP when it sets red lines, such as the defense of the Catalan language and linguistic vehicularity in education, and also when it fulfills its electoral program." "The least Vox could do is support the government's initiatives when it agrees," he considered, and accused Cañadas's party of following "in tow" the PP's proposals.