Spain election repeat more likely after expat
vote count
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s already narrow path to
a new administration just became trickier.
BY AITOR
HERNÁNDEZ-MORALES
JULY 29,
2023 1:52 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/election-repeat-spain-likely-expat-vote-tie-parliament/
Spain’s
already complicated electoral landscape just got a lot more complex.
On
Saturday, the count of the 233,688 ballots deposited by Spaniards living abroad
— which are tallied five days after the in-person vote is held — led to the
redistribution of seats in the Spanish parliament. As a result, Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez’s Socialist Party lost one of the spots it was allocated in
Madrid, which will now go to the center-right Popular Party.
The Popular
Party is now set to have 137 MPs in the next legislature; together with the
far-right Vox party’s 33 MPs and the single MP belonging to the affiliated
Navarrese People’s Union (UPN), the right-wing bloc is set to control at least
171 seats — the same number as Sánchez and his preferred partners. Should the
Canarian Coalition revise its stated position, which is against backing any
government that includes Vox, the conservative bloc could add another seat to
its tally.
Those
numbers do not improve conservative leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s chances of
becoming prime minister. Even with an additional seat under Popular Party
control, he still does not have enough support to overcome the crucial simple
majority vote that a candidate must win in parliament in order to form a
government.
But with
the technical tie created by the reallocation of seats, Prime Minister
Sánchez’s already narrow path to victory has become much more precarious,
making the possibility of new elections in Spain more likely.
Prior to
the loss of the seat in Madrid, Sánchez’s options for remaining Spain’s head of
government involved persuading nationalist and separatist MPs to back a
left-wing coalition government formed by his Socialist Party and the left-wing
Sumar group. The combined forces of those parties and the 153 Socialist and
Sumar MPs would have enabled Sánchez to count on 172 favorable votes, slightly
more than the 170 the right-wing bloc was projected to control. As long as he
convinced the Catalan separatist Junts party to abstain, Sánchez would have had
more yeas than nays and been able to form a new government.
But now,
with only 171 votes in its favor, the left-wing bloc will be facing at least an
equal number of right-wing MPs capable of rejecting Sánchez’s bid to remain
Spain’s prime minister. Getting Junts to abstain is no longer enough — Sánchez
will need one or potentially two of the separatist party’s MPs to vote in his
favor.
A hard
circle to square
If getting
Junts to abstain was already unlikely, getting the party to explicitly back the
Socialist candidate seems virtually unthinkable right now.
Since 2017
the party’s founder, former Catalan President Carles Puigdemont, has been
pursued by the Spain’s judiciary for his role in the Catalan independence referendum.
As a member of the European Parliament, Puigdemont has been able to sidestep
Madrid’s efforts to extradite him from Belgium, where he lives in self-imposed
exile. But in June a top EU court stripped him of his immunity and just days
ago Spanish prosecutors called for a new warrant to be issued for his arrest.
Earlier
this week Junts said that it would only negotiate with Sánchez if he agrees to
declare a blanket amnesty for everyone involved in the 2017 referendum and
commits to holding a Catalan independence vote.
“The party
that needs our support will have to be the one to make the effort,” said
incumbent Junts MP Míriam Nogueras. “These negotiations need to be held from
one nation to another … Things are not going to be as they have always been.”
Spain’s
Deputy Prime Minister María Jesús Montero was quick to reject both demands,
saying on Tuesday that the Socialist Party could only negotiate “within the
margins of legality set out within the Spanish constitution.”
.
Holding new
national elections would almost certainly hurt separatist parties. With the
exception of Basque group EH Bildu, all of them lost seats in last Sunday’s
vote, and they’re likely to lose even more support if they force electors to go
back to the polls in December or January.
On
Saturday, Raquel Sans, spokesperson for the Republican Left of Catalonia party,
admitted that her group had begun to hold discreet talks with Junts with the
goal of forging “strategic unity” among Catalan separatists and avoiding repeat
elections that “are not in the interest of the public.”
The tie
between the two blocs may allow conservative leader Feijóo to press Spain’s
King Felipe VI to name him as his candidate to be the next prime minister when
parliament is reconvened next month.
Although
there is no chance that Feijóo will be able to win the required support from
fellow MPs, a failed bid in parliament will allow him to momentarily quiet the
dissenters in his ranks who have been calling for him to step down in the aftermath
of last Sunday’s result, in which the Popular Party won the most votes in the
election but failed to secure the seats needed to form a government.
There is
still the possibility, however, that enough party leaders will tell the king
that they back Sánchez’s bid and that he has a viable path to form a coalition
government. While the now-caretaker prime minister is keeping a low-profile
this week, Socialist Party representatives are said to be hard at work, holding
informal chats with partners with the objective of stitching up that support in
the coming weeks.
Regardless
of whether the candidate is Feijóo or Sánchez, the moment one of them fails
their first investiture vote, a two-month deadline will begin counting down, at
the end of which the Spanish constitution dictates that the king must dissolve
parliament and call new elections. That new vote must be held 54 days after the
legislature concludes, so if no deal is struck in the coming months, Spaniards
would go to the polls again at the end of this year or, more likely, at the
beginning of 2024.
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