Political leaders from IU, Sumar, and Podemos in urgent meeting over Andalucía coalition, realistic news illustration.
Political leaders from IU, Sumar, and Podemos in urgent meeting over Andalucía coalition, realistic news illustration.
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IU and Sumar summon Podemos to key meeting on Andalucía coalition

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Izquierda Unida and Sumar have summoned Podemos to a meeting on Thursday April 2 to decide on its integration into the Por Andalucía coalition before Friday's deadline. Podemos has launched a 24-hour snap consultation with its Andalusian bases to endorse negotiations for a unitary candidacy. The move follows the purple party's strategic U-turn after poor results in other regions.

Por Andalucía, led by Izquierda Unida with Antonio Maíllo as candidate, has summoned the coalition's parties, including Podemos, to a party table meeting on Thursday April 2. The goal is to finalize formal registration with the Electoral Board, with a deadline of Friday at 23:59 for the May 17 regional elections.

Sources from Por Andalucía describe the call as an opportunity for Podemos to join, after 18 months sidelined from the process started in October 2024. The purple party, which did not take part in re-forming the coalition or selecting Maíllo, has shifted stance following 0.94% in Aragón and 0.74% in Castilla y León.

On Tuesday, Podemos Andalucía opened a consultation with its members from 17:00 to 17:00 Wednesday. The question is: "Are you in agreement that Podemos Andalucía seeks the necessary agreements to achieve the broadest and most unitary possible candidacy for the next Andalusian elections?" The decision was unanimous in the regional Executive, backed by candidate Juan Antonio Delgado and Pablo Fernández from the national leadership.

Podemos's offer, without preconditions and accepting Sumar, aims to prevent a fragmented left. However, Por Andalucía has not yet officially responded, and time is pressing to avoid repeating the 2022 delay that left Podemos formally out.

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X discussions reflect mixed sentiments on IU and Sumar summoning Podemos to a Thursday meeting for Por Andalucía coalition integration. Pro-unity voices stress the need for a strong left to counter right-wing gains, while skeptical Podemos supporters worry about losing representation. Journalists highlight the tight deadline and Podemos' base consultation.

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Illustration of IU and Podemos leaders in intense late-night negotiations in Seville to seal coalition deal before Andalusian elections deadline.
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IU and Podemos negotiate coalition at the last minute for Andalusian elections

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Izquierda Unida and Podemos are rushing negotiations to register a joint coalition before the Friday 23:59 deadline. Thursday's key meeting in Seville yielded no public details after over nine hours. The deal aims to unite forces to the left of the PSOE for the May 17 elections.

81.4% of Podemos Andalucía militants voted in favor of negotiating entry into the Por Andalucía coalition with IU and Sumar for the May 17 regional elections. The 24-hour snap consultation saw 5,710 participants. Podemos will attend Thursday's key party table meeting.

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Podemos candidate for the Andalusian government presidency, Juan Antonio Delgado, offered on Sunday an 'extended hand' to Antonio Maíllo of Por Andalucía to negotiate a united left-wing candidacy for the May 17 regional elections. Parties have until April 3 to register coalitions. Delgado emphasizes that 'the Andalusian people want us to go together'.

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.

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Sumar's Lara Hernández defended the party's boycott tactic at the Council of Ministers, which led to the approval of a housing decree extending rental contracts and capping increases at 2%, published amid the Iran war's energy shock. Junts vowed opposition, calling it harmful to small owners.

Spain's Council of Ministers was delayed over two hours on Friday due to disagreements between PSOE and Sumar on housing measures amid the Iran war energy crisis. Pedro Sánchez negotiated directly with Yolanda Díaz to split the package into two decrees: a main one with tax cuts worth 5 billion euros and another extending rent contracts. Both take effect tomorrow, though the housing decree may fail in Congress.

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The Popular Party leverages Junts' threat to break with the PSOE to ramp up pressure on Pedro Sánchez's Government, during a week of key decisions in Catalan independence and judicial appearances. Deputy Secretary Elías Bendodo has urged Carles Puigdemont's party to 'stand firm' against what he calls a corrupt Government. Sánchez, meanwhile, ignores the challenge and focuses his attacks on the PP's management in Valencia after the DANA floods.

 

 

 

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