Antonio Sanz, currently serving as the Minister of the Presidency, Interior, Social Dialogue, and Administrative Simplification, will head the popular candidacy in the province of Cádiz. This decision, to be ratified by the Andalusian PP Electoral Committee this Wednesday, positions him as a key figure in the party's electoral strategy.
The leader from Cádiz, who also chairs the PP-A Electoral Committee, highlighted the swiftness with which this process has been managed, calling it a "very important procedure." According to Sanz, this efficiency reflects the "unity, serenity, and stability" that characterize the PP-A and the autonomous community itself.
“"The diligence with which the party has resolved this very important procedure reflects the unity, serenity, and stability that reign in the PP-A, which is the same as that boasted by our autonomous community."
Sanz takes over from Ana Mestre, who led the candidacy in the regional elections of June 2022 and 2015. For Antonio Sanz, this will be his first time leading the list for Cádiz since 2012, marking a significant return to the electoral forefront in the province.
Across the rest of Andalusia, the PP has also defined its lead candidates. Juanma Moreno, president of the Junta de Andalucía, will repeat as number one for Málaga. Other ministers from the current Andalusian Government will lead the lists in most provinces, with the exception of Córdoba.
Among the new appointments, Ramón Fernández-Pacheco, Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Water, and Rural Development, will be the lead candidate for Almería. Rocío Díaz, Minister of Development, Territorial Planning, and Housing, will lead for Granada, and Catalina García, Minister of Sustainability and Environment, for Jaén. In Córdoba, the general secretary of the PP-A, Antonio Repullo, will assume leadership.
Patricia del Pozo for Seville and Loles López for Huelva will retain their positions. The composition of these candidacies, with four men and four women, aims to combine "political experience and management," with seven of the eight lead candidates being part of the current Andalusian Governing Council.




