Vox forces a vote in Congress to demand national priority in aid and housing

Vox will submit a motion to Congress to prioritize Spaniards in housing and toughen immigration policy with repatriations and legal changes.

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Vox will submit to a vote in the Plenary Session of Congress next week a proposal to implement national priority in access to protected housing, social rent, and housing subsidies, in addition to demanding that all "pull factor" immigration policies be stopped "at the root".

Santiago Abascal's party already brought this debate to the last Plenary Session through an urgent interpellation addressed to the Minister of Housing, Isabel Rodríguez, who branded Vox's initiative as "racist and indecent".

That interpellation has now been transformed into a motion, which Europa Press has accessed, that includes several specific points for voting. One of them urges the Executive to establish a model for access to protected housing, social rent, and housing aid "inspired by the principle of national priority and that seeks the preferential allocation of public resources to Spaniards".

Expel those who "live off public aid"

Among other demands, Vox calls for the repatriation of all immigrants in an irregular administrative situation in Spain and the deportation of those who, regardless of their legal status, commit crimes or seek to "impose customs or values alien to Western culture". The party also proposes to favor the remigration and return of foreigners who do not work, do not contribute to the system, and "live off public aid".

Likewise, the party proposes to establish reinforced mechanisms for control and verification of the municipal register to prevent fictitious registrations, cases of overcrowding, "patera" flats, and irregular uses of housing, through automatic alert systems, municipal verification protocols, and specific inspections.

To carry out these measures, Vox proposes to reform the 1985 law regulating the bases of the local regime, the Organic Law of 2000 on the rights and freedoms of foreigners in Spain, and the Urban Leases Law of 1994.

Finally, the parliamentary group reiterates its request to suppress or "significantly" reduce the taxes associated with the purchase of the first habitual residence by young people, families, and Spanish workers.

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