A new exchange of opinions, with very far-reaching visions, between Vox and PP today in Aragon. This Wednesday, December 3, at a press conference in the Cortes Parliamentarian, the spokesman for the Vox party, Alejandro Nolasco, welcomed the change in rhetoric. … The directive set by the new President of the Valencian Community, Juanfran Pérez YurcaWho agreed with the party of Santiago Abascal. Why yes in Valencia and not in Aragon? is the question posed by the voter to the famous Jorge Azcon.
Vox “never changed” his roadmap, and he again asked Azcon to negotiate tax cuts, reject illegal immigration and also “climate fanaticism”, noting that in August 2023, the PP and Vox reached an agreement in Aragon, and later, in 2024, after seeing that the PP did not adhere to it, Vox made “a radical decision to leave the seats so as not to give up the principles.”
Pérez Yurca’s inaugural address was led by Vox To believe that “there may be a change in the direction of the PP, the PP appears to have changed”, Pointing out that Valencia’s new president has declared that the European Green Deal is the “biggest threat” to farmers and has defended the abolition of regional taxes derived from it. Moreover, Nolasco continued, Pérez Yurca has chosen to channel the most dangerous stretches of the Turia River and said we cannot turn a blind eye when “people who intend to maintain practices that are contrary to our values” arrive in Spain.
“We ask ourselves that if Valencians are going to enjoy all this, why can’t we enjoy it in Aragon as well,” emphasized the Vox spokesman, who pointed to other proposals for training, such as coordinating the entire high school, and building a health center in the Arcosur neighborhood of Zaragoza. Irrigation modernization And reduce taxes. He wondered “if the situation in Aragon would be changed in favor of the Aragonese.”
He also said that “Vox’s rhetoric is the same throughout Spain” and that in the case of the People’s Party “it seems that it is not the same throughout Spain”, emphasizing: “We want the facts.”
Alejandro Nolasco reiterated that “there has been no contact” either with Azcon or with the National People’s Party to talk about the 2026 budgets and that the People’s Party said “a year or so ago” that it would present the 2025 budgets, and did not do so, and a month ago it again announced the “imminent” and “imminent one-month” presentation. He also said that a month ago, the PP Aragon had “made a very harsh speech against Vox, flatly rejecting and using techniques that seemed to us morally unworthy, such as attacking us for issues specific to the group” but “Now PP has changed course This means that things can return to normal,” he said, noting that “it is the Popular Party that has changed, not us.” Nolasco confirmed that he will attend the round of consultations when the Prime Minister of Aragon convenes the parliamentary groups, which is also an important change compared to a few weeks ago.
But on the other side of the table, after Nolasco’s remarks, the PP’s spokesman in Cortes Aragon, Fernando Ledesma, stated that “the PP is not the challenger”, but rather “the challenger is Pedro Sánchez” and asked Fox “not to make any mistake” as an opponent. The Aragonese Popular Party spokesman regretted that Nolasco “chose the wrong opponent at this critical moment for Spain,” which is “engaged in one of the moments of the profound attack on democracy that we witnessed in 1978” by the Socialist Workers Party.
The Green Charter was rejected by both parties if it harmed Aragon
Fernando Ledesma continued, who on the other hand stressed: “We are not your enemies. The competitor who must be expelled is Sanchez, and he is the competitor that the majority of Spaniards have.” “The People’s Party of Aragon has not changed its position on key issues”: “We are against illegal immigration, and we are simply fighting the problem through legal measures, within the framework of the Constitution and within the framework of current Spanish legislation.”
also Rejection of the European Green Deal measures “Which harm Aragon and Aragon, especially the countryside” and defended nuclear power and hydraulic works, among other things, the construction of the Pescarroes (Huesca) reservoir, as well as the dredging of rivers “always within the legislation.”