This Sunday, May 17th, the electoral day in Andalusia began with the complete constitution of electoral tables. According to data from the Junta de Andalucía, by 9:46 AM, the process was finalized in the region's 3,756 polling stations, which house 10,403 tables.
The provinces of Córdoba and Almería were the first to finish constituting their tables, around 9:15 AM. On the other hand, Cádiz and Sevilla experienced longer delays. In Cádiz, three tables in Algeciras and one in Cádiz capital were constituted after 09:28 AM. In Sevilla, six tables in the Este-Alcosa-Torreblanca district were delayed until 09:46 AM.
With this data, the total number of constituted tables in Andalusia breaks down as follows: 849 in Almería, 1,547 in Cádiz, 954 in Córdoba, 1,143 in Granada, 662 in Huelva, 869 in Jaén, 1,772 in Málaga, and 2,607 in Sevilla.
This electoral process involves a deployment of 14,583 agents from the State Security Forces, including 5,584 personnel from the National Police Corps and 8,999 from the Civil Guard, supported by the Unit Attached to the Junta de Andalucía and Local Police, to ensure security and normality.
A total of 6,812,902 Andalusians, including 302,070 residents abroad, are called to vote to elect the 109 deputies of the new Andalusian Parliament. For this purpose, over 686 million ballot papers and nearly seven million envelopes have been printed, with an organizational cost of 14.4 million euros.
In contrast, in the 2018 regional elections, the absence of Equo ballot papers in Sanlúcar de Barrameda caused all polling stations in the town to close for over an hour, delaying the vote count and official results.




