Government speeds up autonomous financing reform ahead of 2026 elections

The Spanish government has accelerated its proposal to reform the autonomous communities' financing model, aiming to present an advanced offer in the coming weeks that includes more resources for public services. This initiative seeks to appease partners like ERC, who are pressing for progress on Catalonia's singular financing, and to position itself favorably in the 2026 regional elections. Andalucía will benefit from financial improvements and significant debt relief.

The government of Pedro Sánchez has intensified efforts to reform the autonomous communities' financing system, driven by the 2026 electoral cycle and pressure from parliamentary allies. Vice President and Finance Minister María Jesús Montero has stated that the proposal is "very advanced" and will focus on increasing resources for regional public services. This measure responds to the recent electoral setback in Extremadura and aims to center the debate on improving health and education ahead of elections in Aragón, Castilla y León, and Andalucía.

Montero has criticized Andalusian President Juan Manuel Moreno Bonilla for "flirting with copago" and health privatization, while defending that the reform will provide more funds to underfinanced communities like Andalucía, forgoing central government resources. Sources close to the talks estimate the executive will inject about 18 billion euros extra to balance the system, maintaining the status quo for current beneficiary regions, addressing Catalan demands, and rewarding Valencia, Castilla-La Mancha, Murcia, and Andalucía.

The PP, governing 11 communities, opposes pacts with independentists but lacks a united front: the Balearics defend the ordinality principle, rejected by Andalucía. A Fedea report concludes Andalucía has been the worst financed in 20 years, a "sustained grievance," according to spokesperson Carolina España.

Additionally, the government has approved a debt write-off from the Autonomous Liquidity Fund totaling 83.252 billion euros, with Andalucía relieved of 18.791 billion, nearly half its burden. This measure faces PP opposition in Congress and doubts from Junts.

ERC, key for budgets, shows impatience. Oriol Junqueras warns that IRPF management by Catalonia's Tax Agency is "essential" for negotiating budgets with Sánchez and Illa, delayed until 2028. "ERC does not want these negotiations to drag on indefinitely," he said, insisting on respecting ordinality. Both Madrid and Barcelona are extending the 2023 budgets.

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Juanma Moreno announces Andalusian regional elections for May 17 at Parliament press conference.
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Juanma Moreno calls Andalusian elections for May 17

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Andalusia's Junta president, Juanma Moreno, announced Parliament's dissolution and regional elections for May 17, advancing the date initially set for June. The move follows a full four-year term, unseen in 14 years, aiming to boost turnout by avoiding events like the Pope's visit. PSOE candidate María Jesús Montero will leave her role as Spain's first deputy prime minister to focus on the campaign.

The government of Salvador Illa and the central government are preparing a bilateral commission next week to address pending transfers that could help approve the Catalan budgets after the March setback.

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Salvador Illa's government has submitted a budget project to parliament with record spending of 49.162 million euros for 2026, plus 893 million euros extra from agreements with ERC and the Comuns.

Salvador Illa and Oriol Junqueras will sign an agreement today that enables approval of the first Catalan budgets of the term. The pact includes sovereignty concessions and a push for the orbital railway line.

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Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has appointed Carlos Cuerpo as first vice president and Arcadi España as finance minister to replace María Jesús Montero, who will run as PSOE candidate in the Andalusian elections on May 17. Sánchez keeps Economy and Finance separate, betting on technical profiles amid an economic crisis from the war in the Middle East.

Spain's PP and Vox sealed a deal on Wednesday to invest Jorge Azcón as Aragón president, allowing the far-right party into government with a vice presidency and three ministries. The agreement features 'national priority' for public aid access, mirroring Extremadura where María Guardiola was invested president. Meanwhile, PP leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo pushes for an absolute majority for Juanma Moreno in Andalucía without Vox reliance.

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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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