The
matador and the moderate: Andalusia's president courts far right in the
bullring
Conservative
Juanma Moreno is keen to win over ultranationalist bullfighting aficionados
ahead of the May 17 election in Spain's largest region.
By GUY
HEDGECOE
in Madrid
May 4,
2026 4:00 am CET
Andalusia’s
upcoming regional election is being fought out in the most stereotypical of
Spanish settings: the bullring.
Incumbent
regional president Juanma Moreno, a conservative moderate, is keen to retain
control of the country’s largest region, but polls suggest his center-right
People’s Party (PP) may fall just short of a governing majority if the far
right Vox party performs well in the May 17 vote.
To stave
off that possibility, Moreno is appealing to far right voters — many of whom
are hardcore bullfighting fans. At the center of his charm offensive is José
Antonio Morante Camacho, better known as Morante de la Puebla, a 46-year-old
widely regarded as Spain’s best matador — and a fervent Vox supporter.
Moreno’s
efforts to win over Morante were on full display last month, when the
bullfighter was gored by Clandestino, a half-ton bull whose horn pierced the
matador’s buttock in front of a shocked crowd at Seville’s La Maestranza
bullring.
The
Andalusia-born Morante described the injury, which left him with a perforated
rectum, as “the most painful goring I have ever suffered.”
While he
recovered in hospital, Moreno telephoned the matador to inquire about his
injuries — and then swiftly shared details of the call with the press. “He
seemed to me to be quite strong, in good shape and looking forward to a swift
recovery,” the regional president said on Antena 3.
Bullish
courtship
Moreno’s
eagerness to publicize the call reflects Morante’s unexpected relevance in the
upcoming vote.
Data
shows bullfighting to be more popular with Spain’s right-wing voters than those
on the left. Within the right, los toros are especially popular among Vox
supporters: according to Sigma Dos polling, 38 percent of the far-right party’s
voters consider themselves bullfighting fans, compared with 31 percent of PP
voters and just 10 percent of socialist voters.
And
bullfighters have become prominent figures within Vox. Serafín Marín, a
well-known bullfighter, was one of the ultranationalist party’s candidates in
Spain’s 2019 general election. In Valencia, retired matador Vicente Barrera
became one of the region’s vice-presidents when the far right group entered
into a coalition government with the PP in 2023.
While
never occupying a formal role within Vox, Morante has stood out as one of the
far right group’s highest-profile supporters. He’s described it as “a party
that represents me and says what I think and feel,” and even forged a warm
friendship with the far-right party’s leader, Santiago Abascal. Last October,
the matador even seemed to dedicate what was widely considered to be his
valedictory bullfight to the ultranationalist leader.
But
Morante has also shown himself to have a soft spot for Moreno. Last year he
gifted the regional president a golden traje de luces — the costume matadors
wear in the bullring — to thank him for his steadfast support of bullfighting
in Andalusia.
And
Moreno has worked hard to encourage that affection by flattering Morante with
grand gestures. In February, the regional president honored the bullfighter
with the prestigious Andalusian Medal for Culture and Heritage, hailing him as
“a legend and promoter of our traditions.”
Last
month, Moreno accompanied Morante on a tour of the renowned Zahariche bull farm
near Seville. In a video posted on social media shortly after the visit, the
regional president can be seen hugging the matador and peppering him with
questions about his career.
Moderate
playbook
Moreno’s
charm offensive has not gone unnoticed. Conservative newspaper ABC recently
noted the Andalusian president was “seeking to secure the vote most closely
identified with rural tradition at a time when the [PP’s] absolute majority is
on the line.”
While
other members of his party, like Madrid’s Isabel Díaz Ayuso, have played to
far-right voters by adopting hardline positions against unaccompanied minors,
the Andalusian president has refused to stray from his moderate conservatism,
and is instead attempting to win over ultranationalists by appealing to their
love of “tradition.”
Paco
Camas, head of public opinion in Spain for the Ipsos polling agency, said that
although bullfighting is not a mainstream pastime, in Andalusia it has more of
a following than in most other areas, with fans tending to be right-leaning
males.
“[Moreno] is fighting on those issues that he
knows might be important for voters on the right and center right, especially
issues that are associated with Vox,” he said. “He wants to compete for that
flag, for that cultural identity and not let Vox have it all to itself.”
It
remains to be seen whether Moreno’s efforts to shift the matador’s loyalty from
Vox to the PP will secure him the desired electoral results. But Camas said
doing so would be a major victory for the regional president, who described the
PP’s current control of the regional parliament as “a very unusual case in
Spain today, where absolute majorities seem to be a thing of the past.”
“If the
PP lost [its majority] that would be the only positive for the Socialists and
the parties on the left,” he added.
The
elections in Andalusia follow recent regional votes in Extremadura, Aragón and
Castilla y León. While the conservatives won each contest, they consistently
fell short of securing governing majorities, and have been obliged to take on
arduous negotiations with Vox.
Addressing
Moreno and party supporters at a campaign event in the Andalusian city of
Córdoba, PP national leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo attempted to temper
expectations by warning “absolute majorities are very difficult, I know, so it
it’s best not even to say [the words].”
If Moreno
manages to pull off the feat of governing alone again, his status as a rising
star within the PP will be consolidated. Moreover, his matador strategy may
well be emulated by other conservative politicians who are keen to win over
far-right voters without alienating centrists.

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