Jorge Buxadé
Jorge Buxadé Villalba (Spanish: [ˈxoɾxe βuɣsaˈðe], Catalan: [- βuʃəˈðe]; born 16 June 1975) is a Spanish lawyer and right-wing politician who was elected as a member of the European Parliament in the 2019 European Parliament election in Spain,[1] and has been spokesperson for the right-wing Vox party since February 2020.[2] He previously worked for the centre-right People's Party between 2004 and 2014. He was an unsuccessful candidate in the 1995 Catalan regional election as a member of the far-right Falange Española de las JONS, and he was number 8 in the Falange Española Auténtica list for Barcelona for the 1996 Spanish general election.[3] BiographyBorn in Barcelona on 16 June 1975,[4] Buxadé is graduated with a law degree from Abat Oliba CEU University.[5][4] He entered the State Lawyers Corps in 2003.[6] He was the president of the Foro Catalán de la Familia, a conservative organization.[3] He regularly writes for his own blog Lo antiguo es lo nuevo. He is opposed to Catalan independence and is a member and cofounder of anti-secessionist organizations like Societat Civil Catalana and Fundación Joan Boscà.[7][8] Political careerBuxadé was appointed as the second vice-president of Vox in March 2020, and remained in that position until January 2024.[6] Buxadé is a member of the Madrid Forum, an international alliance organized by Vox that comprises right-wing and far-right individuals.[9] He was awarded the Order of Saint Raymond of Peñafort, first class.[4] In November 2023, he was awarded with the Cross of the Hungarian Order of Merit by the Viktor Orbán government.[10] Political positionsJorge Buxadé Villalba is a self-confessed admirer of José Antonio Primo de Rivera, the founder of the Spanish Falange. In September 2012, he described José Antonio and Ernesto Giménez Caballero, one of the ideologues of fascism in Spain, as "two superior souls". In the same article, published on his blog, he condemns the 1978 Constitution, adopted after the end of the Franco regime.[11] He has also been directly linked with the far-right blog Dolça Catalunya, that contains anti-Catalanist, ultra-Catholic and discriminatory, mockery articles.[8][12] In a 2019 interview, he said that he regrets his former People's Party (PP) militancy, but that he doesn't regret having been a Falange militant.[13] Buxadé has been identified as the head of an "anti-globalist" faction in Vox,[14][15] that would be opposed to the "liberal faction" represented by more moderate party members such as Víctor Sánchez del Real.[14][16] References
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