MADRID — Step into Bar Oliva, a cafe in a southern suburb of Madrid, and you step back 44 years.

Gen. Francisco Franco, the far-right dictator, died in 1975, but his spirit lives on at the bar, where portraits of him hang from the walls, his bust stands behind the counter, his face peers from the labels of wine bottles and a map of his victorious campaign during the Spanish Civil War droops above a table.

“Franco presente!” a sign beside the door declares. “Franco is here.”

And so are the far right.

The flag of a disbanded far-right party is draped above the television. Several customers say they’ll vote in the coming general election for Vox, a xenophobic party that is likely to become the first far-right group in four decades to enter the Spanish Parliament.

And the bar is one of 12 marked on a map of fascist-friendly establishments in Spain that is being circulated among Vox supporters.

“People come from across Spain to see this place,” the owner said on a recent Saturday night. “They come to the Valley of the Fallen,” the memorial west of Madrid where Franco was buried, he said.