The study, titled 'Attitudes and demands of Andalusians after the floods', was conducted between March 12 and 26, with a total of 6,016 interviews. This data was released by the Ministry of the Presidency. It is noteworthy that the dissolution of the Andalusian Parliament and the call for elections by Moreno on March 23 coincided with the period when this survey was being carried out.
Regarding the preference for presiding over the Andalusian Government, 40.9% of respondents favor Juan Manuel Moreno. He is followed by the deputy general secretary of the PSOE, María Jesús Montero, with 17.5%. The candidate for Por Andalucía and federal coordinator of IU, Antonio Maíllo, obtains 5.6%, while the candidate for Adelante Andalucía, José Ignacio García, achieves 5.5%. At the time of the survey, Vox had not yet confirmed Manuel Gavira as their lead candidate.
The leader valuation places Moreno in the first position with 5.87 points. He is followed by José Ignacio García of Adelante Andalucía with 4.82 points, despite having a lower level of public recognition. Antonio Maíllo is in third place with 4.73 points. The PSOE-A candidate, María Jesús Montero, obtains 3.93 points, and the Vox representative, Manuel Gavira, reaches 3.32 points.
46.4% of Andalusians believe that Moreno, whose management receives an average score of 5.79, possesses “management capacity and competence for the role.
Looking ahead to the regional elections, 65% of citizens state that their vote will be influenced by specific issues in Andalusia, in contrast to 27.5% who will consider general issues in Spain. The main reasons for choosing a party are the representation of ideas (44.2%), the capacity for management in the autonomous community (32.8%), and the economic and social situation (30.9%).
The CIS also inquired about the main problems affecting Andalusians. The deterioration of public healthcare tops the list with 24.8%, followed by unemployment (13.7%), housing (11.7%), infrastructure (5.3%), and immigration (5.2%). The majority trusts the PP (25.1%) to solve these problems, although the PSOE (21.4%) follows closely.
Regarding the assessment of government management, 40.2% consider the work of the Andalusian Government over the last four years to have been “very good or good,” while 25.8% rate it as “bad or very bad.” As for the management of the Central Executive, 23.3% see it as “very good or good,” and 49.6% consider it “bad or very bad.”




