A year on, leader of Spain’s Valencia region quits over deadly floods
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
The leader of Spain's Valencia region, Mr Carlos Mazon, giving a press conference on Nov 3 to announce his resignation over flooding a year ago that left 229 people dead.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
- Valencia's leader, Carlos Mazon, resigned amid pressure over his handling of the 2024 floods that killed 229 people, admitting to mistakes.
- Mazon criticised PM Sanchez's government for a lack of support and blamed weather agencies for failing to adequately warn of the disaster.
- Residents and analysts view Mazon's resignation as self-exculpatory, with political implications for the PP and rise of Vox in Valencia.
AI generated
VALENCIA, Spain - The leader of Spain's eastern Valencia region said on Nov 3 he was stepping down under pressure over his handling of catastrophic floods a year ago that were the worst of their kind in Europe in over half a century.
Mr Carlos Mazon had faced repeated calls to resign
The Oct 29, 2024, downpour
The floods sparked a lengthy blame game between the Socialist-run national government and the regional government run by the opposition conservative People’s Party (PP).
“I can’t go on any more,” Mr Mazon said. “I know I made mistakes, I admit it, and I know I’ll have to live with them for the rest of my life.”
However, he excoriated what he termed an “egregious” lack of support from Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’ government due to political strategy, adding that it sought to add debts to Valencians’ woes with loans for rebuilding work.
Economy Minister Carlos Cuerpo said the government provided €8.2 billion (S$12.3 billion) in direct aid for Valencia’s recovery to date.
He also said Mr Mazon’s resignation came too late, and that he should have called a snap regional election.
Mr Mazon said no one foresaw the local river gorge would overflow, blaming national weather agency Aemet and the body regulating the regional hydrological network, overseen by Spain’s Energy and Environment Ministry, for failing to adequately warn of the impending disaster.
The ministry said in a statement that both agencies had acted with technical rigour and provided essential data.
Mr Mazon said he did not request the central government to declare a national emergency – which would have put Madrid in charge of the response – because the PP party chief, opposition leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo, had advised him not to.
Mr Feijoo said later on Nov 3 that it was up to Mr Sanchez to declare a national emergency.
Political fallout
Residents of the affected areas accuse the regional government of issuing an alert too late after buildings were already under water and many people were drowning.
“He is still repeating lies and making it look like he’s the victim,” Ms Rosa Alvarez, who heads the main association of flood victims, told SER radio station.
Analyst Pablo Simon said Mr Mazon’s resignation was self-exculpatory, both politically and in terms of potential legal consequences.
Historian Joan Esculies said the timing of Mr Mazon’s resignation had less to do with him personally and more because the PP feared the issue was hurting them politically in Valencia and at a national level.
Polls show far-right Vox’s anti-establishment messaging is resonating.
Mr Mazon is expected to be replaced by another PP-nominated leader, though this pick will need the backing of Vox, as the PP is 10 lawmakers short of a majority in the Valencia assembly.
His successor could carry out the remaining legislative term until May 2027. REUTERS

