The future leader of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, yesterday separated from Vox by refusing to govern with populism, while from his party they defended the coalition in Castilla y León as a pact of this community that does not mortgage future alliances, for example in Aragón , where this Friday his spokesman spoke in Parliament, cowboy seawhich has ensured that the agreement reached in the Castilian territory “It cannot be extrapolated to our community.”
The Popular Party defended itself once morest criticism from the European PP for the formation of the coalition government with Vox in Castilla y León by being framed in the “constitutional order” and have as a programmatic basis respect for all the principles and policies that the PP defends and leads.
“This is a responsible decision on the part of Mañueco, thinking of the Castilian-Leonese in order to offer them a stability project,” explained Vaquero, who highlights that it is a government “that is going to be made up of the first and third most voted party in these elections.
«There is no other alternative in Castilla y León. The PSOE has been demonstrating for decades that it has no project for this community. He has had the opportunity to favor this PP government alone simply by abstaining and he has not done so. It was the first party, in fact, that met with Mañueco, but has not offered any alternative, “said the conservative.
“Fed up with the polls”
According to the Aragonese parliamentarian, “not reaching this agreement would have caused call elections once morebut citizens are tired of going to the polls”, so the PP, “which is the most voted party”, is going to lead a “serious, moderate and responsible” project.
After announcing the agreement with the extreme right, the conservative leaders have disassociated their party from populism to highlight their autonomist and pro-European ideas with which they aspire, they say, “to once once more achieve forceful majorities” such as those of José María Aznar or Mariano Rajoy . The reaction came a day following the president of the EPP, Donald Tusk, asked that the coalition with Vox, which he defined as a “sad surprise”, be an “incident” and not a “trend”.
Mañueco argued that the pact responds to specific circumstances and is “applicable at a given time and a given community”while reminding the PSOE that they are not “to give lessons to anyone” following preferring to govern “with the extreme left, the separatists or the heirs of ETA”, Mar Vaquero concluded.