Overview
- National and regional PP leaders endorsed five principles to tighten migration policy, including choosing who enters, welcoming contributors, expelling offenders, curbing subsidy dependence, and favoring culturally proximate migration.
- Miguel Tellado said benefits must not create an 'efecto llamada' and flagged limits on the Ingreso Mínimo Vital for immigrants as part of the party's plan.
- As reported by El Mundo, the draft contemplates reserving the IMV for long‑term residents obtained after at least five years of legal stay with 70% of that period cotised, equivalent to 3.5 years.
- The party frames the approach as 'contribuir para permanecer' and pairs it with pledges to fight trafficking networks, protect borders, and support integration for those who 'vienen a sumar.'
- PSOE figures accused the PP of copying Vox and fueling polarization, while the PP also amplified criticism over the Begoña Gómez case and the failed anti‑abuse bracelets during the Murcia summit.