Felipe González declares himself socialist in talk with Moreno in Seville

Former Spanish Prime Minister Felipe González affirmed he is a socialist during a talk with Andalusian President Juan Manuel Moreno in Seville, amid the pre-campaign period. The event, focused on the Duchess of Alba, has caused discomfort in the Andalusian PSOE. González criticized the current state of Spain's railways.

On March 26, 2026, in Seville, former Prime Minister Felipe González and Andalusian President Juan Manuel Moreno took part in a talk about the Duchess of Alba, organized by Cayetano Martínez de Irujo at the Fundación Cajasol to mark the centenary of her birth. Moderated by Susanna Griso, the event coincided with the start of the pre-campaign for the May 17 Andalusian elections, drawing significant media attention despite being planned nearly a year in advance, according to organization sources and reports from EL PAÍS and other outlets. No Andalusian PSOE leaders attended, though Seville's mayor and Junta advisors from Finance and Culture were present, as were historic socialists like Miguel Ángel Pino and Alfonso Garrido, along with the duchess's family and figures like Bertín Osborne. To journalists, González responded to whether he preferred Moreno or María Jesús Montero by saying: “Soy socialista” (“I am a socialist”). Moreno voiced admiration for González, highlighting his “magnetism, leadership and capacity,” and thanked him for the first AVE line to Seville: “Agradezco que haya políticas de Estado” (“I appreciate state policies”). González praised the AVE from his era: “El AVE empezó a funcionar, no como lo de ahora” (“The AVE started working, not like now”), and called the current rail situation a “disparate,” especially criticizing Rodalies and its potential transfer to Catalonia: “Me parece un disparate lo que está pasando.” He defended commuter investments but noted: “Rodalíes está hecho un desastre” (“Rodalies is a disaster”). Asked if Spain is failing, González said: “Si tuviera 50 años menos haría una campaña con el lema de ‘lo que quiero hacer es que España funcione’” (“If I were 50 years younger, I would campaign with the slogan ‘what I want is for Spain to work’”). The event has upset the PSOE-A. Susana Díaz called it an “indecent manoseo” by the PP, recalling their past attempts to try González. Moreno questioned the PSOE rejecting “de manera ostentosa su pasado” (“ostentatiously its past”). González also discussed geopolitics, warning of gains for China and Russia amid global chaos. Attendees like Rosario, Marisa, and José Antonio praised both as “sensible and moderate.”

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Pedro Sánchez and José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero endorse María Jesús Montero at the opening PSOE campaign rally in Cártama, Málaga.
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Sánchez and Zapatero back Montero at start of Andalusian campaign in Cártama

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Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and former President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero backed socialist candidate María Jesús Montero at the first campaign rally in Cártama, Málaga, on May 1. They called to concentrate the left-wing vote on the PSOE for the May 17 regional elections and defended progressive policies. Sánchez demanded Netanyahu release a Spanish citizen detained on a flotilla to Gaza.

María Jesús Montero, PSOE-A candidate to lead Andalusia's Junta, launched her election campaign in Granada on Thursday ahead of May 17. With the slogan 'defend the public', the former deputy prime minister focuses her speech on recovering public services against Juan Manuel Moreno's government. Accompanied by Miguel Ríos, she urged voters not to be 'duped' by PP propaganda.

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Andalusia's Junta president and PP candidate Juan Manuel Moreno launched the campaign for the May 17 elections on Thursday in Seville's Jardines de Murillo. Before around 2,000 people, he showed confidence but urged caution: “Quien diga que vamos a sacar 60, no conoce la sociología de Andalucía, esto hay que ganarlo pasión a pasión, ternura a ternura”. He criticized the PSOE's past and central government policies.

Major Andalusian parties wrapped up their campaigns on Friday for Sunday's regional elections with rallies across cities. The PP, Vox, Adelante Andalucía, Por Andalucía and PSOE appealed for votes in simultaneous events.

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Álvaro Sánchez Cotrina, PSOE leader in Cáceres, won the socialist primaries in Extremadura with 58.95% of votes against Soraya Vega's 41.05%, becoming the first federation secretary general from that province. Aged 39 and mayor of Salorino, he succeeds Miguel Ángel Gallardo following his resignation. The process will culminate in a regional congress on April 25 in Mérida.

The Popular Party lost its absolute majority in the May 17 Andalusian regional elections after gaining more votes than ever but losing five seats due to the rise of Adelante Andalucía. The PSOE suffered its worst historical result with 28 seats. Vox gains influence and will condition Juan Manuel Moreno's next government.

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Santiago Abascal, Vox leader, accused Pedro Sánchez of being 'the X of corruption' at a rally in Dos Hermanas, Seville, on Tuesday. He sharply criticized the government president over corruption cases and warned of a supposed migrant invasion. He called for votes for his candidate Manuel Gavira in the Andalusian elections.

 

 

 

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