Soltalk February 2019 | Page 11

Right in control Andalucía is now under the control of a right-wing coalition, ending almost 37 years of socialist domination. The change follows the regional election in early December which produced no overall majority and prompted a frantic six weeks of negotiations. The election result was marked by the arrival of a far-right party Vox which took 12 seats in the elections giving the group its first-ever elected representatives. This led to demonstrations against “facism” and “hatred” in several cities. On December 27, the newly-elected Deputies met in Sevilla as required by Andalucía’s constitution and voted Marta Bosquet, a Ciudadanos deputy from Almería, as the parliament’s new Speaker. During January, Vox, known for its anti-immigration stance, clarified that it wants to repeal regional laws protecting women and the LGBTI collective, to expel 52,000 “illegal immigrants” and to end support for “supremacist feminism.” It also wants new legislation to protect bullfighting and hunting, as well as popular culture and traditions. In doing so, it effectively talked itself out of a right- wing coalition with the Partido Popular (PP) and Ciudadanos who went on pool their total of 47 seats to create the biggest group in the regional parliament. The PP, meanwhile, while initially describing Vox’s plans as “unacceptable,” managed to find enough common ground with the newcomers to guarantee their support in debates, giving the three parties a total of 59 seats and a majority of four in the 109 seat parliament. The deal signed between the PP and Vox on January 9 stipulates 37 goals, led by job creation, the fight against corruption, and respect for democracy. Other areas of agreement include support for bullfighting and flamenco. However, there is no mention of deportations or scrapping existing laws which protect vulnerable sectors of society. The political upheaval ended on January 16 when Juan Manuel Moreno Bonilla, a PP deputy from Málaga, was elected President of Andalucía, the first non-socialist to hold the post since 1982 when elections were first held after the death of the dictator Francisco Franco. Moreno said that, “After ten legislatures monopolized by the PSOE in Andalucía, the door is open for a political change of course and government.” The new president, known as Juanma Moreno, is a 48-year-old who was born in Barcelona but brought up in Málaga from just three months old. He joined the Partido Popular aged 19, became councillor for youth and sport in the city of Málaga in 1995 aged 25, and two years later became a Deputy in the regional government. In 2000, he entered Congress and was Secretary of State for Social Services and Equality between 2011 and 2014. He was then elected the PP’s president in Andalucía and now lives with his wife and three children in the Sevilla town of Alcala de Guadaira. The developments of the last two months in Andalucía have rocked Spanish politics and came as a blow to the country’s socialist prime minister. Pedro Sánchez of the PSOE seized power from the PP last year with the support of the Catalan separatists, and is facing 13 more regional elections, alongside nationwide European and local elections, on May 26. Blast victim The Spanish woman who died in last month’s gas explosion in Paris was on a romantic getaway with her husband, who was also injured. The powerful blast took four lives, left 50 injured and caused widespread damaged. The Spanish victim was named as 38-year- old Laura Sanz Nombela from Toledo who was the mother of three children. Voting rights Voting rights for Britons resident in Spain and for Spanish nationals living in the UK will not be affected by Brexit. An agreement signed between Madrid and London last month means local municipal elections will be the only polls in which each group can participate and stand as candidates while in their chosen foreign country. It is estimated the arrangement will cover about 300,000 Britons in Spain and 175,000 Spaniards in the UK. See Smalltalk on page 20 9 Eurovision choice The singer Miguel “Miki” Núñez (pictured above) will represent Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest to be held in Tel Aviv in May. “La venda” (The Band), a Catalan rumba written by Adriá Salas of the band La Pegatina, took over a third of the votes in a telephone poll on RTVE last month. Miki has a lot to do in Israel as Spain does not have a good record in recent years, including coming last two years ago. Slow down Speed limits on Spanish roads were reduced on January 29 in an effort to achieve a “zero accident objective.” On secondary roads, the maximum speed is reduced from 100 to 90 kph with further restrictions planned, while the maximum on motorways remains at 120 kph, plus further limitations applying to certain vehicles. The maximum speed on inner-city roads (“built up areas”) falls from 50 to 30 kph. Plane crash The brother-in-law of celebrity chef Paul Hollywood was one of two Britons killed last month when their Piper PA- 28 aircraft crashed into a mountain in the Basque country in poor conditions. Simon Moores and his passenger were en route from Portugal to Hondarribia near the French border when it struck Mount Hernia less than 50 metres below the summit. It was suggested that the plane may have had a faulty altitude indicator. Kidnap suspects Three Costa Rican nationals detained in Zaragoza are thought to be the leaders of a gang who kidnapped an American businessman in the city of Heredia, north of San José, last September. Another nine suspects have been arrested in Costa Rica. The victim is still missing and police believe the three suspects now held in Spain fled after receiving a ransom of around $1 million from his family.