The Socialist Party of Almagro has elected its new Local Executive, which will be headed by Jesús Santacruz Moreno as general secretary.Santacruz, who until now had been Secretary of Organization, for the last ten years, has taken the step of leading the Almagro group, on whose committee will also be the current mayor of the town, Daniel Reina.
The new General Secretary of the Almagro PSOE faces the exciting challenge of ensuring that the PSOE, in the May 2023 elections, achieves a Industry Email List third consecutive term in the Almagro City Council, to continue, in his words, with the economic recovery that Mayor Daniel Reina's team is achieving so much effort.The Executive is made up of practically the same people who made up the previous one, since it has opted for continuity, although with a new redistribution of responsibilities.
Thus, he will be accompanied by Antonio de Toro as Secretary of Organization, Elvira Prieto as President, Sixto Rol as Deputy Secretary General, Daniel Reina as Secretary of Municipal Policy and also the current councilors Marián Ureña, Mª Teresa Barrajón and the 1st Vice President of the Provincial Council. from Ciudad Real, Mª Jesús Villaverde.In total, a group of 22 people committed to Almagro who will work hard to, from closeness to their fellow citizens, advance in the solution of the municipality's problems.
David Triguero, Secretary of Electoral Action of the Provincial Executive of the PSOE, congratulated the newly elected Secretary General and the rest of the colleagues of the Socialist Executive of Almagro, to whom he entrusted the task of helping the Government team to win the next elections again. "to contribute to Almagro continuing to be a reference town at the national level for many reasons, but above all for knowing how to take advantage of its cultural and architectural wealth like few other municipalities.
The national deputy of the Socialist Party, Miguel González Caballero, considers that the Popular Party "in the opposition proposes and in the government does not have." Mr. Callejas comes to us with proposals but he would have to explain to us, one by one, what were the measures that the PP implemented in favor of the primary sector when it was in Government.”
He responds to the 'popular' deputy Juan Antonio Callejas, to whom he conveys that "neither farmers nor ranchers have ever had such a direct dialogue with a government before, nor have so many mechanisms and aid put in place, as those offered by the Emiliano Executive. García-Page”.

And as an example, the Common Agrarian Policy (CAP) that is applied today, by decision of three PP politicians such as Arias Cañete, Tejerina and Cospedal, forgot about the smallest farmers, those who had the right to receive less than 300 euros in aid per operation, and in Castilla-La Mancha they amounted to around 20,000 people.
20,000 Castilian-La Mancha people who were abandoned by the Popular Party, the same party that now stands behind the banners and dares to give proposals and advice to a regional government that has already incorporated into the PAC those same people that the PP forgot,” says the socialist parliamentarian.
And he adds “a CAP that classified intensive and dry olive groves as equal, intensive olive groves that are now going to have agri-food aid and before, with the PP, they were not; "the same party that negotiated for our region the lowest average aid per hectare in all of Spain, euros per hectare.
Therefore, he insists, “tell me, Mr. Callejas, something about what the PP did for farmers and ranchers, other than cuts, because of course, we already know those.And meanwhile, the Government of Spain, aware of the difficulties that the sector is going through, has approved a package of urgent support measures in the fiscal, labor, financial and hydraulic fields, in the face of the drought.“Six Ministries have coordinated to allocate 450 million euros for this purpose; so that farmers and ranchers have a 20% reduction in personal income tax modules and access advantageous lines of credit; so that they obtain deferrals in the payment of Social Security contributions and have greater facilities when accessing a subsidy, and to reduce irrigation fees in the Guadiana basin,” he explains.