Red belt (Community of Madrid)

The expression red belt is used to designate in the Community of Madrid, since the return to democracy in the last decades of the 20th century, the set of cities located in the southern part of the metropolitan area of the city of Madrid, characterized by their high population of workers or working class and because of their long history with mayors of the Spanish Socialist Workers Party or other left parties and coalitions such as the Communist Party of Spain or the United Left, representing a total of 21% of the population residing in the Community of Madrid, with six out of the ten most populated municipalities of the region belonging to the red belt.[1][2][3][4] The name is also used to talk about the southern districts of the city of Madrid.[5]

Location of the "red belt" within the Community and the city of Madrid.

As of the 2010s, there was also talk in this country of a "purple belt" in reference to the emergence, with a notable implantation in the red belt, of the new Podemos party, whose color is purple instead of the traditional red of the left-wing parties.[6][7][8]

Municipalities of the Madrilenian «red belt»

Municipality Population (2019) Mayor Term start Party (2019-2023) Parties in local government since 1979
Alcorcón 170 514 (7th) Natalia de Andrés 2019 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-1999 (PSOE); 2003-2011 (PSOE); 2019- (PSOE)
Arganda del Rey 55 389 (20th) Guillermo Hita 2015 PSOE

(Majority)

1979-1999 (PCE, IU); 1999-2003 (PSOE); 2015- (PSOE)
Coslada 81 661 (15th) Ángel Viveros 2015 PSOE

(Coalition)

1982-1983 (PSOE); 1983-1999 (PCE, IU); 1999-2003 (PSOE); 2007-2011 (PSOE); 2015- (PSOE)
Fuenlabrada 193 700 (3rd) Javier Ayala 2018 PSOE

(Majority)

1979- (PSOE)
Getafe 183 374 (6th) Sara Hernández 2015 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-2011 (PSOE); 2015- (PSOE)
Leganés 189 861 (5th) Santiago Llorente 2015 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-2007 (PSOE); 2007-2011 (PSOE); 2015- (PSOE)
Mejorada del Campo 23 274 (33rd) Jorge Capa 2015 PSOE

(Coalition)

1978-1982 (PCE); 1982-1995 (PSOE); 1995-1999 (IU); 1999-2011 (PSOE); 2015- (PSOE)
Móstoles 209 184 (2nd) Noelia Posse 2018 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-2003 (PSOE); 2015- (PSOE)
Parla 130 124 (9th) Ramón Jurado 2019 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-2015 (PSOE); 2019- (PSOE)
Pinto 52 526 (22nd) Juan Diego Ortiz 2019 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-1987 (PCE); 1987-1995 (IU); 1995-2007 (PSOE); 2008-2011 (PSOE); 2015-2019 (Ganemos Pinto); 2019- (PSOE)
Rivas-Vaciamadrid 88 150 (14th) Pedro del Cura 2014 IU

(Coalition)

1987-1991 (PSOE); 1991- (IU)
San Fernando de Henares 41 384 (25th) Francisco Javier Corpa 2019 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-1991 (PCE, IU); 1991-1995 (PSOE); 1995-2015 (IU); 2015-2019 (Podemos); 2019- (PSOE)
San Martín de la Vega 19 170 (37th) Rafael Martínez 2015 PSOE

(Coalition)

1979-2007 (PSOE); 2015- (PSOE)

Notes and references

  1. Oliveres, Victòria (2021-04-30). "Cómo la izquierda recuperó el cinturón rojo madrileño sumando al PSOE el auge de Podemos y Más Madrid". ElDiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  2. "Descalabro del PSOE en sus feudos del 'cinturón rojo' de Madrid". ELMUNDO (in Spanish). 2021-05-04. Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  3. PLAZA, ANA MARTÍN (2021-05-08). "Elecciones Madrid 4M: La izquierda se desdibuja en el cinturón rojo de Madrid". RTVE.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  4. H, Creada 18-04-2021 | 02:21 H/Última actualización 18-04-2021 | 23:09 (2021-04-18). "Del azul al rojo en diez años: así ha cambiado el mapa político de Madrid". La Razón (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  5. Peinado, Fernando (2021-05-04). "Ayuso erosiona el cinturón rojo de la capital". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  6. "Iglesias apela al 'cinturón morado' para 'echar a Mas'". ELMUNDO (in Spanish). 2015-09-15. Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  7. CALLEJA, TONO; González, Jesús Sérvulo (2011-06-11). "Adiós al cinturón rojo". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  8. Escribano, Mario (2019-05-02). "El PSOE recupera el 'cinturón rojo' de Madrid a menos de un mes de las municipales". ElDiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-10.
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