The electoral programs of Vox and Se Acabó la Fiesta (SALF), the brand of ultra propagandist Luis Pérez (known as Alvise Pérez), are very difficult to distinguish. Almost mimetic, like his Trumpist strategies and his conspiracy theories. Santiago Abascal and his Vox forces have been propagating them for a long time from the institutional tribunes and some coalition governments, thanks to the bewildered acquiescence of Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s PP. Until now, Alvise broadcast them with megaphones at his rallies and through his social networks to thousands of unconditional supporters of the conspiracies of all types of frauds, pranks and hoaxes. Not long ago, these confabulations seemed like an extemporaneous anecdote, a grain that the system granted itself with democratic generosity. Now they are a threat in every institutional, European and national rule, for the political and social climate of the country, but also for the future of the PP.
The slogans about the dangers and risks of immigration and its relationship not based on official data and statistics with citizen insecurity were more than just a mantra in the public events and speeches of Vox, its leader, Santiago Abascal, and any of his acolytes. To many thousands of Spaniards, former voters of the PP, but also of Vox, these racist appeals about immigrants or those excessive attacks on European bureaucracy, gender policies, measures to alleviate climate change or the theoretical bipartisan pacts, do not They have satisfied them enough. And the majority of those escaped voters that Alvise and SALF have captured are young people and students, according to the CIS kitchen data, who applaud and reproduce in their chats suspicions about everything that the Government, the PP, or Europe may promote or tell. .
The followers of Alvise, who was the chief of staff of the actor Toni Cantó during his time as leader of Ciudadanos in the Valencian Community, do not hesitate to defend as the only credible truth, in the face of the classic parties and the major media, that everything What is happening now in Spain is a consequence of sabotage. Or electoral fraud. What they call shenanigans in which they mix lies and suspicions about who was behind the 11-M attacks and false accusations about who pulls the strings of the company Indra, the company that processes vote data at the polls, or the use of the Post Office to benefit Pedro Sánchez. The only thing that unites them all is their hatred of the common enemy: the leader of the PSOE.
The problem with these ultra factions is general for Europe, but in the PP there are also leaders who take note of the drift through which they are precipitated. The PP won these European elections, but Vox is also growing and SALF almost reaches 5% of the votes. That cocktail is now shaken a little more ultra.
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The PP’s lurches have been happening since Mariano Rajoy had to be replaced by Pablo Casado after the 2018 motion of censure. The popular people do not know what to do or how to relate to Vox. Abascal’s party, moreover, has not sunk again in these European elections, nor did it do so in Euskadi or Catalonia, as the PP expected to reactivate its path towards the reconstruction of the common home of the entire right. And where before in the PP they looked even askance at hypothetical partners like the PNV and Junts, now it no longer reaches them even with Vox.
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