“…In our case, the existence of a high number of political parties represented in the city council plenary does not seem to influence the political agenda of the governing party regarding the SDGs or the disclosure of information on the city council's contribution to the 2030 Agenda. This result coincides with those obtained by Guillamón and others (2011), García‐Sánchez and others (2013), Tejedo‐Romero and Araujo (2020), and Alcaide Muñoz and others (2022), for Spanish municipalities, and by Gaia and Jones (2020), for English local councils, who also found no evidence of a significant effect of greater political fragmentation on local government transparency. However, our result differs from the results of Navarro and others (2010), who observed that a greater political fragmentation leads governing parties to disclose more information on sustainability in the Spanish local context, and Tavares and da Cruz (2020), who found that higher levels of competition, measured as the margin of victory, increased the information transparency in Portuguese municipalities, although minority executives did not affect transparency.…”