Juanfran Pérez Llorca is going to eat this Thursday with the reins of the Palau de la Generalitat close, very close, but without having them tied. That depends on Vox, whose ombudsman, José María Llanos He has already passed through the speakers' gallery, and in 30 minutes of speaking he has not confirmed his support. Although he has left it close after showing his harmony and predisposition. To do this, it requires a series of extra commitments to those given in the presidential speech. on topics such as language, agricultureimmigration or tax policy.
Vox will push until the end and that end will be, at least, the response that Llorca must have to all the groups this afternoon. In it, the Voxists hope to hear the latest demands that their spokesperson has outlined in the middle of the debate after “celebrating” that he has already included in his government approach several of those that have been negotiated in recent weeks in his first speech. “I am glad that you have committed them in the investiture debate, I hope that your reply will add to the commitments that I have just proposed,” Llanos indicated.
For this response, the Voxist leader has placed some of the specific measures on already known axes that Llorca has mentioned. The clearest, immigration, a key issue for the ultras. Thus, after applauding some references given in his first speech, Llanos has demanded that Llorca commit to spending the two million to carry out age tests on migrant minors, he has demanded that he publish crime statistics according to the countries of origin and that he promote a Security Observatory.
“Commit to it and you will have Vox's support in the investiture,” Llanos indicated. This scheme, applauding some of the concessions announced by Llorca in his speech, assuming the theses of the Voxists and subsequently adding concrete measures, is what he has repeated in the rest of the issues demanded by the Voxists. Thus, for example, agriculture has been, where the European Green Deal has been the main focus of the criticism that the candidate had already made and to which Vox has joined in asking for a call for extra aid to offset its costs.
He has also demanded that he commit to maintaining the 50% cut to the Valencian Academy of Language, something that was already applied in the previous 2025 budget agreement signed by the Consell and Vox. “It's a beach bar that we pay for with the money of Valencians and also with our freedom,” said Llanos, who has also claimed “apply quickly and to the last consequences the law of educational freedom”, rule also agreed upon by both formations.
“He will have the support of Vox”
Likewise, Vox has also tightened its grip on taxation. Specifically, he has demanded a reduction in the Wealth Tax “retroactively” from this same investiture debate, as well as a reduction in the Asset Transfer Tax and “incentives for families and entrepreneurship.” After that, and now focused on reconstruction, Vox has demanded a prevention fund against natural disasters and “establishing direct contact with all the victims of the flood.” “If he does that, he will have the support of Vox,” he assured.
Llanos' words on the platform have been preceded by the statements of Santiago Abascal, the leader of the formation at the national level and who has supervised the negotiations, in Congress who has assured that he “liked” what he was able to read from Llorca's speech. In this sense, he applauded that the presidential candidate has “clearly opposed” the European Green Deal, the migration pact, “facing the possibility of making policies to reverse it” or that he has made a “bet on tax reductions.”
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