Macarena Olona is the head of Vox’s poster for the election to the Andalusian Parlament on June 19. He has asked Juanma Moreno to be “truthful with the Andalusians.” He demanded this Friday that Juanma Moreno, the president of Board, and candidate for reelection, “state once and for all” what he would do on June 20. That night, June 19, when we will know how much confidence the Andalusians have in each of the parties.”
In an audio broadcast of an interview with Onda Ceo by Vox, Olona has repeated the dilemma Moreno has faced since the Andalusian presidential election. He said that “if he wants vice president of Juan Espadas, or vice president with Vox government and me at the helm”, as he described Moreno being “in that embrace” with Mr. Juan Espadas and consequently asked him if he was going to place his bets on the true change Andalusia needs to see it.
Olona, in addition to the post-election agreements following the June 19 vote, has focused his attention on “generating jobs and quality public services”, after calling the Andalusian government’s health management “a real shame”. He also highlighted the dismissal of 8,000 sanitation workers “whose contracts were not renewed during the fight against coronavirus”. This led him to conclude that the solution offered by San Telmo (headquarters for the Presidency) of the telephone attention cannot be the best.
He lamented that this non-face to face health model was not suitable for patients. He stated that he needed to be “looked at in the eye, to be touched”.
Vox candidate for Andalusia has declared that education must be a social lift in Spain. She has also assured that her party will exercise effective competition if it is elected to the Presidency. The Vox candidate warned that knowledge was the only thing that should be taught in classrooms.
Olona warned that Andalusia has the highest youth unemployment rates. He recalled that it was twice as high as the rest of Spain than in Europe. To emphasize that Cadiz is the most important focus, he urged him to “create employment” to ensure that Andalusians don’t suffer the “penalty of exile” of being “forced” to leave Andalusia.