PP leader María Guardiola and Vox representative seal coalition government pact in Extremadura parliament.
PP leader María Guardiola and Vox representative seal coalition government pact in Extremadura parliament.
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PP and Vox reach government pact in Extremadura after four months of deadlock

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PP and Vox announced a coalition government agreement in Extremadura on Thursday, ending four months of deadlock after the December 21 elections. María Guardiola will be invested as president with Vox support, which gains a vicepresidency and two ministries. The pact includes 74 measures, emphasizing immigration restrictions.

María Guardiola, acting PP president, and Óscar Fernández Calle, Vox candidate, appeared together on April 16 in the Patio de los Naranjos of the Extremadura Assembly in Mérida to announce the pact. "Democracy wins over polarization," Guardiola stated. The 23-page agreement, with 61 points and 74 measures, schedules investiture for April 21-22 and possession on the 24.

Vox will take a vicepresidency covering Deregulation, Family and Social Services, led by Fernández Calle, and the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Natural Environment. It also gains the regionally designated senator, Ángel Pelayo. In return, they commit to supporting four annual budgets.

On immigration, the pact states "no more unaccompanied foreign minors (MENAS)," rejection of migrant distributions, no new reception centers, age tests, suppression of subsidies to NGOs favoring illegal immigration, and a ban on burkas and niqabs in public spaces by end-2026. Spaniards will be prioritized in social housing, benefits and healthcare, per the document.

Other measures include progressive IRPF cuts in the first two brackets (0.25% annually up to 1%), 50% reduction in subsidies to unions and businesses, end to the Moroccan Arabic language program, and opposition to large renewable parks on productive land. It makes no mention of the LGTBI collective. Santiago Abascal hailed the pact from Granada, highlighting priority for Spaniards in aid.

What people are saying

Initial reactions on X to the PP-Vox coalition pact in Extremadura celebrate the resolution of the electoral deadlock among right-wing users, who view it as fulfilling the democratic mandate. Critics from the left highlight controversial measures on immigration, such as rejecting unaccompanied migrant minors and banning the burka in public spaces. Some right-leaning voices express skepticism about potential future conflicts within the coalition. Official PP accounts emphasize stability and growth for the region.

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PP and Vox seal pact in Aragón with national priority

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Spain's PP and Vox sealed a deal on Wednesday to invest Jorge Azcón as Aragón president, allowing the far-right party into government with a vice presidency and three ministries. The agreement features 'national priority' for public aid access, mirroring Extremadura where María Guardiola was invested president. Meanwhile, PP leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo pushes for an absolute majority for Juanma Moreno in Andalucía without Vox reliance.

PP and Vox representatives in Extremadura defended the discretion of their talks on Monday to reach a deal before May 4, avoiding new elections. Vox deputy Juan José García stressed negotiations are 'point by point'. The PSOE meanwhile criticized six months of paralysis under interim government leader María Guardiola.

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Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has pledged to deploy the full force of the state against any Extremadura regional laws enacting the PP-Vox pact's 'national priority' clause, which prioritizes Spaniards for social aids over irregular immigrants. The threat follows criticism from Madrid's Isabel Díaz Ayuso, who called the measure illegal.

Major Andalusian parties wrapped up their campaigns on Friday for Sunday's regional elections with rallies across cities. The PP, Vox, Adelante Andalucía, Por Andalucía and PSOE appealed for votes in simultaneous events.

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A pre-electoral poll by the Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas (CIS) places the Partido Popular (PP) at 43.6% vote estimate for the May 17 Andalusian regional elections, 17.8 points ahead of the PSOE. The PP could secure 51 to 59 seats, nearing the absolute majority of 55. Vox remains third with 10.3%.

Spain's Council of Ministers was delayed over two hours on Friday due to disagreements between PSOE and Sumar on housing measures amid the Iran war energy crisis. Pedro Sánchez negotiated directly with Yolanda Díaz to split the package into two decrees: a main one with tax cuts worth 5 billion euros and another extending rent contracts. Both take effect tomorrow, though the housing decree may fail in Congress.

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The Popular Party of Juan Manuel Moreno Bonilla wins with 53 seats in the May 17 2026 Andalusian parliament elections, two short of an absolute majority. The PSOE records its worst historical result with 28 deputies, while Adelante Andalucía achieves a strong rise to 8 seats.

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