Andalusian table: Montero commands, and the pocket?

Published on June 10, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The Governing Board of the Parliament of Andalusia already has its owners, and María Jesús Montero repeats as spokesperson for the PSOE. The distribution of seats promises to influence public services, taxes, and employment. But beyond the names, the key question is whether citizens will notice anything in their wallets or on the SAS waiting lists, or if this is just another chapter of the same old show.

photorealistic wide shot of an empty parliamentary chamber in Seville, a single large calculator balanced on a leather seat, its display showing a blinking zero, a worn wallet and a faded SAS health card lying on the floor beneath the chair, dust particles floating in a beam of sunlight through tall windows, dramatic contrast between the ornate red velvet seats and the cold marble floor, cinematic political still life, ultra-detailed textures, shallow depth of field focusing on the calculator keys, moody ambient lighting with deep shadows

Big data or endless paperwork at the SAS? 📊

While parties negotiate quotas and visibility, digital healthcare continues to drag outdated systems. Waiting lists are managed with tools that seem from the 90s, with no real data integration between districts. If Montero wants to prove effectiveness, she should push for a unified platform for appointments and medical records, using predictive analytics to allocate resources. Without that, any change of position is just administrative noise.

The musical chairs: same rhythm, new dancers 🪑

Montero being spokesperson won't change that when you go to the health center, they give you an appointment three months from now, or that bread goes up two euros. It's like changing the sign on the bar door: the beer is still just as expensive, and the bartender, just as slow. But hey, at least the politicians have a new seat to nap in while deciding our future.