Yesterday, Vox deployed its entire political arsenal to set its own profile and delve into those speeches that distance it furthest from the PP. Twenty-four hours after the failure of the Galician elections, where those of Santiago Abascal were once again left without representation, important members of the party sought media notoriety.

The first vice president of the Consell and Minister of Culture, Vicente Barrera, who a few days ago disengaged from a campaign in favor of the LGTBI community of his own government, stood in the city of Alicante to demand that the central government “increase the provision material and human resources of the National Police to the Valencian Community to guarantee security.”

Barrera, Minister of Culture, emphasizing one of the workhorses of his party, pointed out that “illegal immigration and illegal occupation are decisive factors in the generation of insecurity in neighborhoods.” “You cannot allow people to illegally occupy a home that belongs to them,” he insisted.

At the same time, the second institutional authority of the Valencian Community, the president of Les Corts, Llanos Massó (also from Vox), called on the media to mark distances with the Valencian Academy of Language (AVL).

The Voxist leader pointed out that her training complies with the regulations of the linguistic institution but stressed that she will try to modify the legislation (the Statute) to “prevent the unity of the language from being a reality.” Thus, she pointed out that her party will demand validation of the Valencian titles of Lo Rat Penat or the RACV; a proposal that has not yet been debated in Les Corts and the PP is not very clear that it could be feasible.

Before Massó, the Vox ombudsman spoke in Les Corts, who regretted that the popular ones will eventually shield the AVL in the Statute. José María Llanos did not wrinkle and blamed the PP for having caused, in the past and with its policies, “the rise of Compromís separatism.”

In her statements to the media, the president of Les Corts also reaffirmed herself on another of the controversial issues on Vox’s agenda: feminism and the fight against gender violence. Llanos Massó criticized the installation of violet points for the Magdalena festivities in Castellón de la Plana by the PP, with whom they share the government of the Castelló City Council, and pointed out that “four violent points” do not make the festivities safer. The leader, who appeared for the Castelló constituency, defended that what makes the Magdalena festivities safe is the provision of the National Police and Local Police.

Llanos Massó regretted the “following” of the PP in the City Council to “the groups on the left” with the installation of these purple points for the upcoming holidays.

Regarding Compromís’ criticism of the fact that two weeks before 8-M “neither PP nor Vox nor PP nor Vox have planned activities to celebrate Women’s Day in Les Corts, the Vox leader replied “we’ll see. what is done and how it is done.”