Alberto Núñez Feijóo continues to seek the votes that can bring him closer to an absolute majority or a sufficient majority to be able to govern alone and everything is directed towards that end. In his speech, words that it is possible: “We are on the way to achieving good electoral success,” said the president of the PP in Zaragoza, on a new election day.

And to continue adding votes, he explains what is at stake, which is not only his government, he assures, but that on July 23 “we are going to decide the history of Spain in the next decade.” And to that company he calls more and more voters, not only those of the PP, but also those of Vox, those of the PSOE. “the only ballot that guarantees change, that guarantees that sanchismo is over, that the independence movement is going to end, the PP ballot”, or today, also so that Aragon is well treated “and we will not lose again winter games,” he said.

A message that repeats in other advertising expressions. This Sunday, the PP deployed a large canvas in Madrid in which it asks the broadest spectrum of voters to vote: “If you want a president who governs for all, vote Feijóo.” A slogan in large letters on a background with the colors of all the state-level parties running for election: purple (from United We Can, now add); red, from the PSOE; blue, from PP; orange from Ciudadanos, and green from Vox.

And he addressed all of them in Zaragoza, a stop on his electoral tour, before continuing on to Guadalajara, with the message that that majority could be achieved: “if those who want change vote, it is possible”, if “they vote for the that have been harmed by the chosen date, it is possible”, if “all those who have asked to vote by mail can vote, it is possible”, if “those disappointed with the Government do not stay at home” vote “it is possible”, although , makes it clear, “nothing is done yet.”

Feijóo’s message is to explain to those potential voters what they would be voting for, and he summed it up by saying that they would vote for “a government that spends less on it, a government that helps those who need it most to make ends meet, a government that would lower taxes, that would guarantee the necessary stability to obtain investments”. It would be a government, insists Feijóo, that “would universalize education from zero to three years” to promote conciliation and help the most modest families.

The president of the PP wants the vote so that there is a government “that exercises its powers in Health”, summoning more MIR positions, which would prepare a mental health plan and work for a National Health Service that is sustainable. A government, he stressed, “that restores the dignity of the nation” that guarantees that “the nation cannot fracture because it needs the vote of the independentistas to be in power.” It would be a “competent government that would never make a law like the yes is yes.” A government, in short, with which “there would be no sanchismo, there will be no blocks or blockades, and there would be a government”

That is why he insists on asking for the vote “of the socialist voters who should know that there is a state party in the PP” which the PSOE is ceasing to be; and he asks right-wing voters, possible Vox voters “who want change and who have already seen that it is possible to tell Sánchez the truth to his face, but with education.”

He also tells them that it would be a government with a project that would get Spain out of the current situation, as Aznar did in 1996 and Maríano Rajoy in 2011, and that the PP is now called upon to move forward with a Spain that “is not for blocks and that the elections be repeated as in 2015 and 2016”. It is an appeal, he stressed, “to moderate, focused people, to the autonomous”, to whom he asks for the vote “so that Spain cannot be blocked”.

At the rally, as on the canvas, the PP stresses that the vote for Feijóo is the only one that opens the door to a government without labels, since what is settled at the polls next Sunday is not a matter of acronyms, nor of blocks, nor fronts” and that beyond ideologies, Feijóo brings together the sensibilities shared by the majority of Spaniards. He calls those who previously voted for Podemos “and you do not want VOX to have political weight” to those who voted the PSOE but they do not like “their management or their pacts”, those who voted for Cs “because they are a moderate center option” and those who voted for Vox, “to defeat sanchismo and the independence movement”.