[7] By that time, Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias had also expressed interest in an alliance pact with Compromís in the Valencian Community, with his party's main requirements being the preservation of their own label and the holding of primaries at the constituency level.
[11][12] However, as a result of the low turnout, the Bloc's sector opposing negotiations demanded for it to be re-held, being made binding and with a clearer question, leading to a new vote being held on 12–19 September with two alternatives: that the Bloc ran under the Compromís label alone, or in alliance with Podemos "and/or other statewide political forces or similar platforms"–suggested the possible integration of United Left of the Valencian Country (EUPV) into the ticket–as long as the four previous conditions were respected.
[21] During the next ten days, the opposing stances of Bloc leader Enric Morera and Mònica Oltra on the issue of the alliance brought Compromís to the bring of fracture.
[25] Finally on 4 November, the choice in support of the Compromís–Podemos agreement won by a 76–24% margin among party members under a 42% turnout, but conditioned on attempting to seek EUPV's involvement into the alliance as well.
[28][29][30] As a result, the Bloc supported the alliance between Compromís and Podemos alone, which was registered just before the legal deadline under the "Compromís–Podemos–És el moment" label.