The president of Vox, Santiago Abascal, has called on the PP to make a “clean slate” and vote together on the motion of censure that is being debated this morning in the Congress of Deputies against the Government of Pedro Sánchez, which he has accused of being an “expired product” and to leave a “terrible legacy” for which he believes that he will “go down in history”.

The far-right leader, who has intervened in the Lower House to present the motion of censure that the ex-communist economist Ramón Tamames will defend this Tuesday, has justified in these terms the initiative that is being debated today and that will be voted on tomorrow without the possibility of success.

“We have launched this motion so that the decomposition of your project can be seen,” Abascal snapped at Sánchez, who has focused a good part of his speech on trying to dismantle the ideology that, in his opinion, is behind the feminist laws that the Executive has approved, raising the contradictions within the same Government as in the case of the trans law or the only yes is yes.

Abascal has also charged against the PP and against its president, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, absent in the Chamber, whom he has reproached precisely for being the leader of the opposition, not being in the room and, in his opinion, not even making opposition. For Abascal, the PP “only seeks pacts for the PSOE” and that is why they do not support the motion. “Vox is not the enemy to beat,” he warned.

The Vox leader has started the motion of no confidence at 9:00 a.m. from the speaker’s rostrum and in front of his candidate, Professor Tamames, who is sitting on his seat.

Abascal has stressed that “there are plenty of reasons” to present this constitutional tool that must put an end to this suicidal legislature and call early elections. “Whatever we did, we couldn’t further degrade this legislature than you have done,” he said after criticizing that the press had already written the headlines and their chronicles even before the debate.

Abascal has gone up to the rostrum with the book Spain vindicated, by the author Macario Valpuesta, who was a Vox deputy in the Andalusian Parliament and which affects the Spanish empire and has recalled the values ??of the Constitution. He has also regretted that some parties consider Vox dead and has said that while “their obituaries already smell, the dead are in good health.”