It’s well known at Vox that we’re not very friendly with autonomous communities. These are young political formations, but they are settled by the big parties, and they are embedded in our Constitution to try to quell the separatism that bleeds all over our country – as if an insatiable beast could be satisfied. An invention that creates divisions and inequalities in rights, freedoms and duties among Spaniards and also costs us an extra eighty billion euros each year.
But on top of all that – which is no small thing – it has a devastating effect on everyone, like regional centralization. And in the province of Alicante we know this very well, and for over forty years there have always been bipartisan policies and negotiations in offices that have undermined our most fundamental and fundamental rights and goals.
Go ahead, even our compatriots in Valencia and Castellón, with whom we share the territory, are in no way guilty of this. It’s not about victimisation, it’s about fighting for equal treatment between the Community of Valencia and all the provinces of Spain. The feeling of belonging to the same nation, which we understand and love so much in our Levantine lands, and the desire to live and progress in equality and freedom spread to three provinces. The fact that Spaniards are not just about the fact of being Hispanic is bipartisan politics after all, but the number of votes and seats sent to the Congress of Deputies and the Valencian Parliament is important for each state.
La millor terra del món just wants our Magna Carta catalog of fundamental rights implemented and our children allowed to study in the language they want and parents decide. In Vega Baja Alicante, not a few families have to enroll in Murcia to avoid the school failure inherent in the linguistic imposition of the Valencian language—or rather Catalan—initiated by the Popular Party incited by Compromís separatists and completed by the PSOE. . We also call for the removal of the language requirement, which, as in other regions such as Catalonia, the Balearic Islands or Galicia, has led to a shortage of specialist professionals to take care of us in our hospitals.
La millor terra del món only wants our identity preserved in the service of Spain. Our gastronomy, spearheaded by our rice dishes, is a history diluted by our traditional festivals such as Bonfires or Moors and Christians, and today regional centralism. Not in vain and to take an example button, Valencian Commonwealth Day is October 9 because this is the day of the reconquest of the city of Valencia by the king of Aragon, Jaime I the Conqueror, while the capital of our province is for the King of Castile. Wise Alfonso X.
The world’s largest country only wants its commitments to build and maintain infrastructures so essential to our future. Construction of Alicante Central Park and removal of coastal railways, preservation and re-opening of the Tajo-Segura transhipment, construction of coastal rail in the northern regions, improvement of the commuter network and 95 will be done in CV-Vega Baja. And so, the endless number of demands promised by the PP and PSOE over the decades and dusted off every time there is an election to see if the people of Alicante can keep them in their seats.
We hate separatism in Alicante province and will not succumb to its whining and grievances to ensure our demands are met. We want to continue to offer “new splendors to Spain” from our Alicante, but not under the yoke of a decentralized and autonomous system that clearly harms our development and growth. The division of Spain into autonomous communities has been and will continue to be a scam for all provinces, without distinction, and we know this firsthand in Alicante. Valencia and Castellón also know this. And in Huelva. And in the Royal City. And in Teruel.
The only thing that autonomism and regional centralism has led to is continuing to cause division among Spaniards and to feed the separatism and regionalist parties that are destroying everything we have built together.