Edmundo González met with the leader of the Vox party

  • Sep, Mon, 2024


The leader of Vox, Santiago Abascal, met this Monday in the Congress of Deputies in Madrid, Spain, with the Venezuelan opposition leader in exile Edmundo González, and expressed his concern about the “disturbing role” that in his opinion former president José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero plays as “one more cog” of Nicolás Maduro.

This was stated by the leader of Vox before the media, and expressed: «We hope to see you soon back (in Venezuela) presiding over your own nation«.

Among the topics addressed, Abascal mentioned Zapatero for his “disturbing role as another cog in Maduro” and as a “member of the Puebla Group,” an organization “supported by Hezbollah, Hamas and regimes such as Iran and Cuba,” which They represent “the worst of humanity.”

Vox expresses support for Edmundo González

The leader of Vox also had a memory for the opposition leader María Corina Machado, “a heroic figure who continues in Venezuela representing the hopes of many people,” and for the “hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans who “They suffer persecution, kidnapping, torture and sometimes murder” due to the repression after the July elections.

Finally, Europa Press reported, Abascal told González that Vox supports him with its parliamentary force in Spain and in the European Union.

The meeting between Abascal and González takes place after the demonstration called by Venezuelan opponents on Saturday in Puerta del Sol.

The Venezuelan opposition leader is asylum in Spain after the Venezuelan elections of July 28 in which Venezuelan authorities proclaimed Nicolás Maduro as the winner. To date, he has held meetings in La Moncloa with the president of the government and in Congress also with the leader of the PP.









Independent journalism needs the support of its readers to continue and ensure that the uncomfortable news they don’t want you to read remains within your reach. Today, with your support, we will continue working hard for censorship-free journalism!

Support El Nacional





Source link