Abascal rejects the PP's conditions and demands that they stop treating them as "savages"
He states that the Popular Party's decalogue for negotiations with Vox means "starting off on the wrong foot".
BarcelonaSantiago Abascal is lashing out at the PP. The leader of Vox has lashed out this Tuesday against the ten-point document drawn up by the popular party to address negotiations with the far-right across the State and has denounced that they are being treated as "savages" to be "tamed". "The music sounds bad to me, it's a bad start," he lamented in an interview on Antena 3.
Abascal confessed to being annoyed that Alberto Núñez Feijóo's ten points refer to issues that are "obvious" for Vox, such as national unity, the constitutional framework, or the rule of law. He said he would understand if these were highlighted if the aim were agreements with Junts, for example. "But to agree with Vox I don't understand it," he stressed.
All this, in the context of the tug-of-war in the negotiations for the investiture in Extremadura, which Feijóo has decided to lead alongside the candidate and acting president, Maria Guardiola. A guardianship that will also be extended to Jorge Azcón in Aragon and that the PP does not rule out extending to Alfonso Fernández Mañueco in Castilla y León if, after the elections on March 15, his dependence on the far-right is also confirmed.
Within the "unique and binding" ten-point framework document to address negotiations with Vox, another of the points is the regional budgets. In the text, to which ARA has had access, the demand is included for Santiago Abascal's party to commit to approving public accounts for an entire legislature.