Unió Laurediana warns split centre‑right could hand victory to Concòrdia
Party president Josep Majoral says a joint candidacy and shared programme are essential to stop Concòrdia; Unió Laurediana remains active and may.
Key Points
- Majoral: failure to present a united right/centre‑right candidacy gives Concòrdia an advantage.
- Unió Laurediana’s executive still meets; the party has not ruled out running in the next general election.
- The party projects as a parish list; national strategy will depend on alliances formed.
- Despite setbacks, the party aims to remain politically active and to block Concòrdia from taking power.
Sant Julià de Lòria — Josep Majoral warned that if right and centre‑right forces fail to present a joint candidacy, “they are giving Concòrdia and its candidate many opportunities to win the next general election.” He said any agreement should be built around a shared political programme.
Majoral, president of Unió Laurediana, said the party remains active and that its executive meets periodically, which he argued demonstrates that it has never ruled out running in a general election. He stressed that the party intends to preserve its territorial character.
Unió Laurediana projects itself primarily as a parish list, as it traditionally has, and Majoral said its national strategy would depend on the alliances that can be formed. The party does not rule out contesting the next polls but frames participation around maintaining local presence.
Despite setbacks — including Terceravia’s absence from the last ballot and the loss of the Sant Julià parish government — Majoral said the formation still has the strength to remain on the political scene and to take part in upcoming elections. He said the main objective is to prevent Concòrdia from coming to power through a possible union of conservative forces.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: