Lluís Enric Apesteguia Ripoll (born 1985)[1] is a Spanish politician of the party Més per Mallorca. He has been a councillor (2011–) and the mayor (2019–) of his hometown of Deià, as well as his party's spokesperson in the Island Council of Mallorca (2015–2018). He led the party in the 2023 Balearic regional election, where they retained their four seats.
Biography
editBorn in Deià, Mallorca, Apesteguia graduated in Classics from the University of Barcelona, and taught Latin and Ancient Greek at secondary school.[2]
Apesteguia was voted onto his hometown's council in 2011 as the leader of the independent progressive party Agrupació Deià, becoming leader of the opposition in the seven-person council led by the People's Party (PP).[3] He retained this position in the 2015 election and four years later, he became the town's first mayor from the left; this was achieved with the unanimous vote of the five councillors from his party and the two opposition members from Proposta per les Illes (El Pi).[4]
Apesteguia joined the Socialist Party of Majorca (PSM) at the age of 18,[5] and was the secretary general of its youth wing the Joves d'Esquerra Nacionalista from 2010 to 2013.[2] He was elected to the Island Council of Mallorca in 2015 as the spokesperson for Més per Mallorca, leaving in January 2018 to be chief of cabinet in the Ministry of Tourism in the Government of the Balearic Islands under new minister Bel Busquets.[2]
In October 2021, Apesteguia won the primary to be the leader of Més in the 2023 Balearic regional election, taking 56.6% of the votes. His opponent was Maria Ramon, the mayor of Esporles, who was endorsed by the party's executive.[6] Despite the vote share dropping from 9.18% to 8.27%, the party retained its four seats in the Parliament of the Balearic Islands.[7]
References
edit- ^ Aguiló, Josep María (23 October 2022). ""El marco estatutario del 2007 ya no es suficiente; queremos plantear otro"" ["The 2007 statutory framework is no longer enough; we want to propose another]. Mallorca Diario (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ a b c "Lluís Apesteguia, jefe de gabinete en la Conselleria de Turismo en Baleares" [Lluís Apesteguia, cabinet chief in the Balearic Islands Ministry of Tourism] (in Spanish). Europa Press. 5 January 2018. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ P., Joan (6 July 2011). "Agrupació Deià critica la subida de sueldos del PP municipal" [Agrupació Deià criticises the municipal PP's rise in salaries] (in Spanish). Mallorca Confidencial. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ Cortés, Alexander (16 June 2019). "Apesteguia, primer alcalde de izquierdas de Deià por unanimidad" [Apesteguia, first left-wing mayor of Deià by unanimous vote]. Diario de Mallorca (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ Ribas, Jaume (5 January 2018). "Qui és el nou home fort de Bel Busquets a Turisme?" [Who is Bel Busquets's new strongman in the Ministry of Tourism?]. Ara (in Catalan). Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ Adrover, Miquel (24 October 2021). "Lluís Apesteguia gana las primarias con el 56% de los votos y derrota al aparato" [Lluís Apesteguia wins the primaries with 56% of the votes and defeats the establishment candidate]. Diario de Mallorca (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ Sagrera, Berto (28 May 2023). "El PP y Vox desbancan al PSIB en Balears: Marga Prohens acaba con el sueño de Francina Armengol" [PP and Vox dethrone the PSIB in the Balearic Islands: Marga Prohens ends Francina Armengol's dream]. El Nacional (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 June 2023.