Table analysing the proposed measures in the Draghi Report for the automotive sector. It is based on seven variabes distributed in columns. The first three are ranking variables where each measure is awarded a score relative to the other measures in its sector or subsector in a hierarchical way: urgency in the EU, importance of the measure for the EU and importance of the measure for Spain. The remaining four variables classify the proposals on the basis of a three-point scale that depends on the assessment of the proposed measure itself: presence in the Mission Letters (explicit reference, ambiguous or no mention at all), political viability for the EU and for Spain (high, medium or low), and level of public investment needed to put the measure in practice (high-susbtantial, medium-little or none-nothing). Three of the Defence proposals may constitute Political Wins: the application of already-existing strategies and programmes for the defence industry (89), the aggregation of demand for defence assets (90) and improving the European defence industry’s access to EU funding (93). The search for Quick Wins again points to the implementation of EDIS and the adoption of EDIP (89), which are already-existing strategies and programmes, and the European funding of defence industry capabilities in the EU (92). There are three Cheap Wins in Defence, two of them overlapping with those already identified as Political Wins, namely measures 89 and 90.