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Spain's PP unites with far-right to rule Valencia region

By AFP - Jun 14,2023 - Last updated at Jun 14,2023

Spanish far-right Vox Party Secretary-General Ignacio Garriga chats with journalists after a press conference at the party's headquarters in Madrid, on Monday (AFP photo)

MADRID — Spain's Popular Party and the far-right Vox reached a deal on Tuesday to govern the Valencia region in a tie-up that could be replicated nationally if the right wins July's election.

With less than six weeks until the July 23 snap election, the two parties reached "a government agreement in principle", said Juan Francisco Perez, a negotiator for the right-wing Popular Party (PP), which polls suggest is on track to win.

The parties "have agreed on a coalition government in the Valencia region”, Vox wrote on social media.

Located on Spain's eastern seaboard, Valencia has five million residents and is Spain's fourth-largest region in terms of population.

The agreement means Valencia will become the second of Spain's 17 regions to be jointly ruled by the PP and Vox, the first being Castilla y Leon near Madrid.

The Valencia deal is the first big agreement between the two factions following their success in the May 28 local and regional elections, with the PP's Carlos Mazon taking over as regional leader.

On that day, elections were held in 12 Spanish regions, with the PP seizing six of them from the ruling Socialist Party of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.

But the PP needs the support of Vox to govern in five of them: Aragon, Baleares, Extremadura, Murcia and Valencia.

 

Socialists decry 'shameful' pact 

 

Polls have long suggested that PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo's chances of replacing Sanchez hinge on his party inking a pact with Vox — which could harm his image as a moderate.

During negotiations over Valencia, the PP managed to ensure that Vox's regional candidate Carlos Flores — who was convicted in 2002 of psychologically abusing his ex-wife — would not be given any role in government.

"I'm not stepping aside, I'm moving forward," said Flores who has now left regional politics to run as a Vox candidate in the general elections.

The PP-Vox deal was dismissed as "embarrassing and shameful" by Socialist spokeswoman and Education Minister Pilar Alegria, who denounced Vox for fielding a candidate like Flores.

The PP has "reached a deal with a party which rejects the idea of gender violence out of hand, which says it doesn't even exist", she said.

"And even worse, this man [Flores] has been convicted of domestic violence."

The two parties also signed a pact to jointly govern Elche, a town of 230,000 residents in the Valencia region in what was their first such deal at a municipal level.

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