Spain’s far-right Vox party secures first regional coalition deal with conservatives

Il partito spagnolo di estrema destra Vox ottiene il primo accordo di coalizione regionale con i conservatori


Spain’s opposition leader and People’s Party president Alberto Nunez Feijoo attends a vote on a fiscal package extending a windfall tax on banks at Parliament, in Madrid, Spain, November 21, 2024. REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo (Reuters)

By Victoria Waldersee

MADRID, April 17 (Reuters) - Spain’s far-right party Vox and the mainstream conservative opposition People’s Party have struck a preliminary deal to govern in coalition in Extremadura in the first of three regional deals being negotiated that could test the ability of the right-wing alliance to oust the ruling Socialists in the next general election.

Vox had previously pulled out of five regional governments in 2024 in protest at the PP accepting the distribution of unaccompanied migrant minors around the country including in regions their coalitions governed.

In a sign of Vox’s growing influence over immigration policy, the latest deal says a future PP-Vox government will “oppose by all means necessary” any further such distribution of undocumented migrants including minors.

The success or failure of this second attempt at joint governance will be closely watched by voters who are considering supporting an alliance of the two parties in the next national election, which Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez must call before June next year. 

Polls currently suggest the PP and Vox are the only pairing able to form a majority, with the two parties expected to garner a combined 51.4% of votes compared to just 27.7% for the Socialists and roughly 8% for smaller parties further left, which have taken a battering in regional elections.

‘BLANK CHEQUE’

The three regions of Aragon, Extremadura and Castille and Leon, together home to roughly 10% of Spain’s population, are major agricultural producers with billions pledged by U.S. and Chinese firms in industrial investments in coming years, including in data centres and battery production. 

Extremadura also hosts renewable energy production sites, including Europe’s largest solar facility, that are likely to come under scrutiny by Vox, which opposes the European Green Deal and climate protection policies.

Though the PP will take the presidency and most ministries in Extremadura, Vox will lead the agriculture ministry as well as the family ministry, granting it greater control over important areas for its voter base.

The coalition deal includes opposition to large renewable projects on agricultural land and a pledge to push to keep open the Almaraz nuclear plant, currently slated to close by 2028.

A future Vox-PP government would cut regional taxes for lower-income earners, expand inheritance tax breaks and prioritise access to public services and housing for nationals or those with a “real, lasting and verifiable connection to the territory,” according to the deal.

The Socialist government has accused the PP of writing Vox a “blank cheque” to get deals done. PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo argues an alliance is the only democratic solution given Vox’s position as Spain’s now third-largest political force.

(Reporting by Victoria Waldersee, editing by Aislinn Laing, Kirsten Donovan)

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