The newly re-elected president of the Andalusian Parliament, Jesús Aguirre, indicated this Friday that the investiture debate to which the current acting president of the Board and PP-A candidate for re-election, Juanma Moreno, will submit could take place during the first half of July.
In statements to Canal Sur Radio, reported by Europa Press, Aguirre explained that next week the parliamentary groups will be constituted and that, in the following week, his intention is to hold meetings with each of them, from smallest to largest representation, in order to know if they would be willing to support any parliamentary group.
After this initial schedule and once two or three weeks have passed, the Parliament's Bureau, as he detailed, will propose a specific date for the investiture debate, which would be around the first fortnight of July.
"But all of this will depend on the parliamentary pacts that are made, that is, there are different loose ends that will have to be brought together and the next steps taken," he indicated.
He recalled that four years ago the entire investiture debate process went "much faster," as the PP-A had achieved an absolute majority in the June 2022 elections. "Now it will be done more slowly, as direct pacts must be reached to achieve governability between different parliamentary groups," Aguirre pointed out.
Regarding the composition of the Parliament's Bureau resulting from the constitution plenary, which was made up of five members from the PP-A and two from the PSOE-A, he stated that, although the Popular Group's majority "is very large," it "can perfectly negotiate with any other group to cede one or two members," alluding to the conversations being held with Vox regarding the investiture of Juanma Moreno.
"It is a negotiation that is done as a whole, not for a specific or single issue like the Bureau," Aguirre specified, for whom all of this is included within the "negotiating deck."
In his opinion, the fact that no parliamentary force has achieved an absolute majority in the elections of last May 17 forces them to be "more dialoguing" and to seek spaces for "consensus." "Sometimes it will be with one parliamentary group, sometimes with another, but well, that's politics," he said.