María Guardiola on phone with Vox leader Óscar Fernández to form Extremadura government after PP election win.
María Guardiola on phone with Vox leader Óscar Fernández to form Extremadura government after PP election win.
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Guardiola opens negotiations with Vox after Extremadura election win

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Following the PP's victory in Extremadura's December 21 elections—securing 29 seats but needing Vox's 11 for a majority—acting president María Guardiola contacted Vox leader Óscar Fernández last Tuesday to initiate government formation talks. The brief, cordial call prioritized regional stability over positions, with negotiations hinging on Vox's previously rejected 206-measure document.

The phone call, held Tuesday afternoon, laid groundwork for future discussions without delving into seat distribution. "Think only of Extremadura. We don't need to talk about posts, but about stability, about four years to keep growing," Guardiola said Friday at a press conference after her party's Directorate Committee in Mérida.

Vox's October document, rejected by Guardiola during failed 2026 budget talks for being unfeasible and illegal, demands include scrapping the abortion objectors registry, cutting subsidies for international cooperation, gender ideology, unions, and employers; repealing the LGTBI law, eliminating the ecotasa, and opposing the European Green Deal. Vox insists no new proposals have been added, while PP sources indicate adjustments to some items for a potential deal.

Guardiola emphasized her autonomy: "I only think about Extremadura. Negotiations from Madrid complicate things a lot." The Extremadura Assembly convenes January 20, launching a one-month investiture period.

Final overseas (CERA) vote counts, completed Friday, left results unchanged: PSOE retains its Cáceres deputy by 38 votes amid low turnout (913 of 12,769 in Badajoz). PSOE's José Luis Quintana called any abstention request a 'total failure' for Guardiola, framing his party as the true alternative.

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Discussions on X highlight mixed reactions to María Guardiola's initial contact with Vox leader Óscar Fernández for government formation in Extremadura. Pro-PP-Vox users view it positively as essential for regional stability and growth. Vox supporters emphasize their electoral gains and stronger negotiating power. Critics from the left decry perceived hypocrisy, noting Guardiola's prior rejection of Vox's 206 demands. Satirical posts mock the PP's dependence on Vox after calling snap elections to avoid it. High-engagement media shares report the cordial call neutrally, focusing on stability over posts.

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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.

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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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.

Alfonso Fernández Mañueco was reelected Tuesday as president of the Castilla y León regional government for a third consecutive term. The 33 PP deputies and 14 from Vox combined for 47 votes in favor in the regional parliament at 8:39 p.m.

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Alberto Núñez Feijóo proposed on Monday an instrumental motion of censure to form a PP-only government without Vox that would immediately call early elections.

María Jesús Montero, the socialist candidate for re-election in Andalusia, accused regional president Juan Manuel Moreno of seeking stability to continue privatizing public services. At a rally in Huelva with José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, they defended Pedro Sánchez's government management. Zapatero condemned the murder of children in Gaza, prompting public reactions.

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Junts spokesperson Míriam Nogueras called on Friday for Pedro Sánchez to call general elections immediately due to corruption cases affecting the PSOE, while rejecting support for a censure motion.

 

 

 

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