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Pepa Millán
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Pepa Millán

Pepa Millán is Vox's congressional spokesperson in Spain's Congreso de los Diputados; on 28 April 2026 she deployed the 'prioridad nacional' housing frame during the rental price-freeze vote.

Last refreshed: 30 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

What is Vox's alternative to Spain's EUR 7bn housing plan?

Timeline for Pepa Millán

#228 Apr

Deployed 'prioridad nacional' housing frame on the Congress floor, first use at national level

Nomads & Communities: Spain's Congress sinks the rent-freeze extension
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Common Questions
What did Vox say about Spain's housing plan in April 2026?
Vox spokeswoman Pepa Millán criticised the Plan Estatal de Vivienda as ideologically driven socialist overreach and argued its co-financing structure would produce administrative waste rather than affordable housing.Source: El País / Congress records

Background

Pepa Millán serves as a spokesperson for Vox (Spain's hard-right nationalist party) in the Congress of Deputies, representing the party on housing and economic affairs. In the April 2026 parliamentary debate on the Plan Estatal de Vivienda 2026-2030, Millán was quoted criticising the plan from the right, arguing that state housing investment under a socialist government represented ideological overreach and that the plan's co-financing structure with regional governments would produce administrative waste rather than affordable units.

Vox's parliamentary position on housing is distinct from its core platform (which centres on national sovereignty, immigration restriction, and opposition to Spain's regional autonomy model): the party has been broadly hostile to housing-market regulation including rent caps, but has also criticised the PSOE-Sumar government's failure to deliver visible housing results for working Spaniards. This dual critique reflects Vox's attempt to hold a protest-vote position on living costs without endorsing progressive housing economics.

Millán also opposed the rent-freeze extension voted down in late April 2026, arguing that price controls destroy rental supply and harm the tenants they are meant to help.