A CONTROVERSIAL ‘national priority’ agenda being pushed by Vox is beginning to take shape across Spain as the far-right party expands its influence in regional governments.
The policy, which Vox describes as ‘Spaniards first’, is being gradually introduced through agreements with the People’s Party (PP) in several regions, including Extremadura, Castilla y León and Aragon.
The so-called ‘national priority’ plan would give Spanish nationals, or those with what the party describes as ‘Spanish roots’, preferential access to certain public services such as social housing and regional subsidies ahead of foreign residents.
In Extremadura, Aragon and Castilla y Leon, Vox has secured varying levels of influence through power-sharing agreements with the PP, allowing it to push its agenda inside regional governments.
In all three regions, the party has called for ‘national priority’ measures which would favour Spaniards over foreigners in access to housing and social benefits, based on what Vox describes as a ‘real, lasting and verifiable link to the territory’.
Vox has openly defended the policy, saying: “We will guarantee that the Spaniard always comes first.”
In practice, Castilla y Leon offers a glimpse of how the policy could work.
Under proposals backed by the PP-Vox coalition, applicants seeking to buy subsidised public housing would need to have been registered in both Castilla y Leon and Spain for at least 10 years.
Those applying for social housing rentals would need at least five years’ residency.
Critics say the proposals could disadvantage legal foreign residents, including large expat communities.
In Valencia, the PP and Vox have also formed an alliance to pass the regional budget, giving Vox significant leverage over policy ahead of the 2027 elections.
The budget, presented in Les Corts last week, includes criteria requiring applicants for public housing to demonstrate a ‘continued link’ to the region.
Opposition politicians have accused the PP of bowing to Vox’s demands. Compromis leader Joan Baldovi described the spending plans as ‘budgets tailored to Vox’.
Meanwhile in Andalucia, talks between PP regional leader Juanma Moreno and Vox have been reported as ongoing following the regional elections, in which the PP failed to secure an outright majority.
Ahead of the election, Vox housing minister, Carlos Hernandez Quero said: “If Moreno does not have an absolute majority and wants to count on the support of Vox, national priority will have to be one of the priorities of his government.”
The growing influence of Vox and the expansion of these policies across multiple regions has sparked concern over how they could affect access to housing and public services.
In particular, areas with large expat communities such as the Costa Blanca, Costa del Sol and Valencia region are facing uncertainty over what the new measures could mean for them.
As Vox strengthens its position in regional politics, the extent to which ‘national priority’ becomes embedded in Spanish law remains a key question, and one that is increasingly drawing attention from expat communities across the country.
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