Feijóo accuses the Government of “fiscal populism” and of raising taxes by 3,000 million

Feijóo warns of the invasion of powers of the ‘solidarity tax’ that deactivates the suppression of assets that Madrid and Andalusia have approved The leader of the PP assures that Sánchez, far from lowering taxes, has raised them more than 3,000 million euros looking for “scapegoats” Before Felipe González, who applauded the speech, he stressed that Moncloa is forgetting the middle classes and the shopping basket The president of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, has described the package of fiscal measures presented yesterday by the Minister of Finance, María Jesús Montero, of “fiscal populism”. The popular do not like at all the so-called ‘solidarity tax’ that in practice deactivates the elimination of heritage approved by Madrid and Andalusia. They believe that it invades regional powers and can create legal insecurity. In this sense, the communities presided over by Isabel Díaz Ayuso and Juan Manuel Moreno, are already threatening with two appeals before the Constitutional Court. Feijóo is convinced that the Sánchez Government would have acted differently if Catalonia had eliminated the wealth tax because “it is played the government itself”. The leader of the popular supports the legal actions that the popular barons can take. “It seems that in Spain complying with the Constitution is not profitable and stressing it, yes”, he denounced. “They announce rates and taxes against someone or against something. It is an error and fiscal populism. The measures that do not seek scapegoats are the ideal ones,” assured the popular leader in the La Toja Forum where he has spoken. Feijóo has warned that the Government’s tax reform presented as a “punishment to certain companies and taxpayers” the only thing they achieve is “deepen social divisions and make recovery slower and more expensive.” Listening to the former presidents Felipe González and Mariano Rajoy, in addition to the high representative of the EU, Josep Borrell. The leader of the PP maintains that the Government, far from lowering taxes, what it has done is raise them de facto by 3,000 million euros, in which for him it is “mismanagement disguised as aggressive taxation”. Feijóo has once again blamed President Sánchez for forgetting the middle classes, the shopping basket by not lowering VAT, and that the tax cuts for the most disadvantaged do not take effect until next year .Alberto Núñez Feijóo has assured that Sánchez is “exceeded” and that his tax reform is “confused, improvised and unspecific” and will move investments away from other countries such as Portugal. An intervention applauded at the end by Rajoy but also by the socialist Felipe González.