Victor has maintained a personal relationship with Luis Alfonso de Borbón, the great-grandson of the Spanish dictator, Francisco Franco. González boasts extensive business experience and economic training and served as the spokesperson of the party for economic policy. Yet was convicted in court of significant “accounting irregularities” that helped lead to the ruin and bankruptcy of a major marble corporation, Marmolería Leonesa. He was banned from working as the administrator of companies for three years, yet he ignored the ruling and continued to administer companies while serving in the Congress of Deputies and being prohibited from doing so.
He has been an active part of VOX’s Foro Madrid project, which seeks to bring together parties of the far right together in an anti-communist alliance. He has claimed that leftist movements throughout South America are heavily funded by the drug trade, Russia, China, and Iran. In Bolivia, González has regularly supported the fascist, white supremacist Civic Committee of Santa Cruz (CCSC). After the CCSC launched a failed attempt to topple the government through terrorism and economic disruption, killing 9 people and causing tremendous damage across the province of Santa Cruz, Víctor González flew to Bolivia to support their efforts in January 2023. He was immediately expelled for “the political work of generating violence in the country.” He has also claimed that former Ecuadorian president Rafael Correa had monthly expenses exceeding 60,000 Euros a month, while in exile in Belgium, and that his party was a major funder of Podemos in Spain. Coming from the (relatively) moderate wing of VOX, he was marginalized within the party after the 2023 election, although he continues to serve as an MP in Congress for Salamanca.