Spain faced a struggle to form a stable government yesterday following historic elections that saw the incumbent conservative Popular Party (PP) score a win but no majority, tailed by the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) and upstart, far-left Podemos.
For more than 30 years, the PP and the PSOE had alternated power, but they now find themselves challenged by relative newcomers Podemos and Ciudadanos — the centrist party that came fourth in Sunday’s closely-fought legislative polls.
While it took the largest share of the vote, the PP lost its absolute majority in parliament by a significant margin and would now have to form an alliance with other parties to govern or attempt to rule as a minority government, creating near-term uncertainty.
Photo: AFP
Undeterred, Spanish Prime Minister and PP leader Mariano Rajoy on Sunday said he would strive to form a government, standing on top of a tall, blue podium marked Gracias (Thank you) and speaking to cheering supporters in Madrid.
“Spain needs a government that has the support of parliament,” the 60-year-old Rajoy said.
The PSOE garnered their worst result in modern history — challenged as they were by Podemos, which has skillfully managed to surf on the wave of exasperation over austerity and corruption that saw it emerge in the first place.
The polls cap a year of electoral change in southern Europe after SYRIZA swept to power in Greece in January and a coalition of leftist parties in Portugal pooled their votes in parliament to unseat the conservative government after an inconclusive election in October.
Official results showed the PP obtained 123 seats — 63 less than in 2011 — with 28.7 percent of the votes.
The PSOE followed with 90 seats and 22 percent of the vote, then Podemos with 69 seats and 20.6 percent, and Ciudadanos got 40 seats or nearly 14 percent.
The results mean that the parliament is to be constituted of four main groupings of significant clout, as opposed to the usual PP and Socialists tandem.
However, even if left-wing and right-wing parties group together — the PSOE with Podemos or PP with Ciudadanos — neither would be able to govern with an absolute majority.
One outcome could be a coalition between the PSOE, Podemos and Ciudadanos to lock out the PP and bring about a government of “change,” although any three-way negotiations would be extremely complicated.
In another possible outcome, with the support of regional separatists from Catalonia, the Basque Country and the Canary Islands, the left-wing bloc would be able to push itself over the 176 needed for a majority.
After holding talks with the leaders of each party that has won seats in parliament, Spanish King Felipe VI — the nation’s head of state —is to nominate a prime minister. The nominated leader must then win a vote of confidence in the assembly in order to take office — a process that can drag on.
If there is still a deadlock within two months of the first vote, the king must call a new election.
Sky-high unemployment, income inequality, corruption and an ever-rising separatist drive in Catalonia were just some of the issues at stake in a country deeply scarred by a financial crisis and fed up with what many considered a staid political scene.
Rajoy had positioned himself as a safe pair of hands who dragged the country away from economic collapse when he took power in 2011 and put it on the path of recovery.
However, unemployment remains stubbornly high at more than 21 percent.
During the campaign Rajoy’s rivals also pointed to glaring inequalities brought on by his drastic spending cuts, tax rises and health reforms — and none more so than pony-tailed, 37-year-old Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias.
“We are starting a new political era in our country,” he said as supporters looked on holding purple balloons.
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