Andalusia elections poll: Moreno's Junta doubles Sánchez's Government in valuation with a 55% rejection, according to GAD3

The Andalusian Executive nears 45% support while the central Government collapses in the community, according to a GAD3 survey for ABC

2 minutes

politicosademuz

Published

Last updated

2 minutes

The management of the Andalusian Government consolidates its advantage over the central Executive in the full electoral run-up. According to the latest GAD3 survey, the Junta de Andalucía reaches 45% positive ratings, more than double that of the Government of Spain, which barely reaches 22% and accumulates 55% negative opinions among Andalusians.

The data reflects a clear gap in citizen perception: while the regional Executive maintains a broad base of support, the central Government suffers structural wear and tear in the community which translates into majority rejection.

The Board holds up without wear and improves compared to 2022

The poll points to a key element: the Board not only resists, but slightly improves its figures compared to the previous legislature. In June 2022, the positive rating stood at 42%; now it rises to 45%, consolidating an upward trend despite the usual wear and tear of governing.

However, the support is not homogeneous. 34% of respondents rate the management as “fair” and 20% as “poor”, which paints a picture of broad support but not yet fully consolidated.

The central Government concentrates rejection in Andalusia

The contrast with Pedro Sánchez's Executive is much more pronounced. Only 22% of Andalusians consider his management positive, while 55% rate it as negative, the worst figure among the administrations analyzed.

This level of rejection remains practically stable over time. Although positive ratings have risen slightly from the previous 18%, the wear and tear remains deep and transversal, without solid support in any major demographic group.

Political gap: two increasingly defined blocs

The analysis by voters confirms a strong polarization. Among those who support the PP, the positive evaluation of the Junta shoots up to 76%, while among socialist voters it falls to 12%.

Conversely, the central Government obtains its best result among PSOE voters (52%), but plummets to 4% among PP voters. The map drawn by the survey is that of two clearly defined blocks, with little room for intermediate positions.

Differences by age and territory: structural advantage of the Board

The Board obtains its best ratings among those over 65 years old (57%) and retirees (58%), reinforcing its electoral base in traditionally more participatory segments.

By provinces, it stands out especially in Huelva (64%) and Jaén (60%), while its weakest point is Seville, where the positive rating drops to 35%.

The central Government, in contrast, presents low figures homogeneously throughout the community, without territories where it manages to reverse its negative trend.