|
It is still relevant that in its first elections the party led by Santiago Abascal has managed to enter Congress with no less than 24 deputies , a significant figure for a party that is running for the first time in general elections. The entry of Vox into Congress may be a first step for the far-right party. If you play your cards right, in the future, you could obtain better results than what you have now. And if, at this moment, Vox remains somewhat displaced to the right, it could also follow in the footsteps of the European far-right parties, whose representation is much greater and stronger.
Far-right parties in Europe have been entering discreetly, as happened with Finland or Italy, but this first and timid incursion has resulted in a first step in a broader advance. “This is just the beginning, we told you that we were beginning a reconquest and that is what we have done in Congress ,” Abascal celebrated in his SW Business Directory speech after knowing the election results. What is clear is that the fragmentation of the right into three political forces has had a negative impact on this side. Vox has not entered with the expected force but it has managed to weaken the Spanish right and proof of this is the fall suffered by Pablo Casado's PP, which has not only achieved a result much lower than expected with 66 deputies (71 less than in the previous elections) but has also lost representation in places like the Basque Country.

These photos show how the way we Spaniards vote has changed The leader of Vox, Santiago Abascal, in his post-election speech charged against the Popular Party and Ciudadanos: “here the only responsibility lies with those who were not able to confront the left” And he did not lack words to attack the left either. “We have come to launch a message of national unity that contrasts with that of the other parties,” Abascal said in a speech that closed with the Spanish anthem in a square full of Spanish flags. Previously, the general secretary of Vox, Javier Ortega Smith, appeared before the followers of the green party in Margaret Thatcher Square in Madrid.
|
|