Malacara highlights healthcare as key issue in Andalusian elections

Seville creator Lucas Melcón, known as Malacara, says people openly discuss the deterioration of the healthcare system on Andalusian streets ahead of elections. In an EL PAÍS interview, he explains everyday concerns like health, housing, and education dominate talk. He stays out of the current campaign, watching from the sidelines.

Lucas Melcón, 34, from Puerto Real (Cádiz), is known for his character Malacara, using Andalusian dialect on social media and t-shirts with phrases like “Arle caso a tu mare” or “No te preocupe, también te va a keá carvo”. He collaborated on past political campaigns but now limits involvement to clothing designs.

In an EL PAÍS interview published on May 2, 2026, Malacara calls electoral campaigns “a very complicated terrain” with “discontrol and frenzy”. “I'm glad to be on my own this time and watch the bulls from the barrier,” he states. He notes politics appears in daily life, in “absences or presences” seen in windows.

On the Andalusian elections, he notes a shift: 40 years ago debates covered abortion, drugs, or euthanasia, but now focus on housing, health, and education. “For the first time, people openly talk about the deterioration of the healthcare system. It's a topic commented on in streets or bars because you don't know if there will be a doctor or when you'll be seen,” he says.

Malacara calls himself “a political animal” but avoids deep involvement amid a “almost violent” climate. On nearly 40% of voters undecided two weeks before elections, he warns: “People must know many things are at stake”. If starting a party, it would be Andalusian-focused, valuing local identity, joking with ideas like “Out influencers from the fair”.

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Dramatic scene from RTVE's Andalusian election debate: left-wing candidates confront President Moreno on health and housing crises.
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Left-wing parties attack Moreno in first Andalusian electoral debate on RTVE

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In the first five-candidate debate for the May 17 Andalusian elections, left-wing candidates unanimously attacked Juan Manuel Moreno over his health and housing management. The Junta president avoided clashing with Vox and focused on María Jesús Montero. The RTVE-moderated event highlighted the breast cancer screening crisis.

Thousands took to the streets on Sunday in Andalusia's eight capitals against the collapse of public healthcare, in the ninth Marea Blanca rally since 2022. The protest, with around 22,000 attendees per National Police estimates, comes a month before the May 17 elections and features opposition left-wing leaders. Demonstrators decry endless waiting lists and health center closures.

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Juan Manuel Moreno and María Jesús Montero kicked off the Andalusian pre-campaign on Sunday by clashing over healthcare management, with claims of public service dismantling and hoax privatization allegations. Moreno acknowledged room for improvement in waiting lists, while Montero pledged to cut appointment times. The issue dominates the May 17 elections.

Health Minister Mónica García announced on Saturday her intent to run in Más Madrid primaries against Isabel Díaz Ayuso, sparking tensions with deputy Emilio Delgado. They clash over the primaries model, particularly voter eligibility. The conflict surfaced in a Friday phone call and a Monday TV debate.

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Andalucía's regional president and PP re-election candidate Juanma Moreno presented his electoral program on Monday in Antequera, stressing that priorities are people. He announced measures including tax cuts, digitalization incentives, and housing boosts, while warning against overconfidence in the campaign. The event underscores his autonomous roadmap ahead of the May 17 elections.

Next Sunday, alongside congressional elections in Colombia, voters can participate in three consultations to select presidential precandidates. Politicians from Huila have shared their preferences for these consultations amid controversies stirred by President Gustavo Petro and his party. Several local figures back candidates like Paloma Valencia and Roy Barreras, while others choose to abstain.

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Just days before Colombia's March 8, 2026, legislative elections for 102 senators and 188 House representatives—plus three inter-party presidential consultations—polls highlight frontrunners amid corruption scandals and fragmentation. With over 3,000 candidates, informed voting is crucial to combat polarization and abstention.

 

 

 

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