Spain elections: hung parliament after
conservatives fail to secure expected majority
Conservative People’s party and prime minister Pedro
Sánchez’s Socialists both declare victory, with weeks of negotiations likely
ahead
Sam Jones
in Madrid
@swajones
Mon 24 Jul
2023 00.09 BST
Spain’s
opposition conservative party secured the most number of seats in national
elections but looked unlikely to secure a coalition rightwing majority after a
vote that had raised fears of the far right entering government for the first
time since the country returned to democracy after General Franco’s death five decades
ago.
Although
the polls had consistently predicted that the opposition conservative People’s
party (PP) would cruise past the Spanish Socialist Workers party (PSOE) to
secure an emphatic win in Sunday’s election, early results quickly established that
the race was going to be much tighter.
With 100%
of the vote counted, the PP had won 136 seats to the PSOE’s 122. The
conservatives’ potential coalition partners in the far-right Vox party had
taken 33 seats – well down on the 52 they picked up in the last election – and
PSOE’s allies in the new, far-left Sumar alliance were in fourth place with 31
seats.
The count
showed that the political hue of the next government is far from a foregone
conclusion, with the left and right blocs running almost neck and neck in their
race to get as close to 176 seats as possible. As Monday approached, the PP and
Vox had secured 169 seats to the PSOE and Sumar’s 153, suggesting Spain is in
for weeks of negotiating and horse-trading as the rival camps explore their options
for government.
Negotiations
by the two blocs to form governments will start after a new parliament convenes
on 17 August. King Felipe VI will invite the PP’s leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo,
to try to secure the prime ministership. In a similar situation in 2015, PP
leader Mariano Rajoy declined the king’s invitation, saying he could not muster
the support.
If Feijoo
declines, the king may turn to the prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, with the same
request. The law does not set a deadline for the process but if no candidate
secures a majority within two months of the first vote on the prime minister,
new elections must be held.
Sánchez
said late on Sunday that the “reactionary” parties of the Spanish right had
failed at the polls.
“We’ve won
more votes, more seats and a bigger share of the vote than we did four years
ago,” he told crowds gathered outside the PSOE’s headquarters in Madrid.
“The
retrograde, reactionary block that sought to undo the advances of the past four
years has failed.”
The PP’s
leader, Feijóo, thanked those who had helped his party to victory and said he
intended to try to form a government as soon as possible.
“Our duty
now is to stop a period of uncertainty opening up in Spain,” he said. “As the
candidate for the party that won the most votes, I believe my duty is to open
up the dialogue as soon as possible and to try to govern our country in
accordance with the election results and the election victory.”
Sanchez –
who gambled on the snap election after the PSOE suffered a drubbing in May’s
regional and municipal elections, had billed the poll as a stark choice between
the forces of progress and the forces of reactionary conservatism. He had
argued that only the PSOE and the Sumar alliance, which includes Podemos and is
led by his deputy prime minister and labour minister, Yolanda Díaz, could
defend and deliver the progressive agenda he has pursued over the past four
years.
On Sunday
night, Díaz told Sumar supporters: “We’ve won. Today we have a better country.
From tomorrow, we have to keep winning rights and we are committed to doing
that – more rights for women, for LGBTI people and for workers.”
Vox’s
leader, Santiago Abascal, congratulated the PP’s Feijóo on his victory but
added: “I’d like to point out something that’s bad news for many Spaniards:
despite losing the election, Pedro Sánchez can block the formation of a new
government. Worse still, Pedro Sánchez could even be invested as prime minister
with the help of communists, [Catalan] independence supporters and terrorists.”
Although
the PP had consistently led the polls and waged an aggressive campaign, it
suffered a poor final week as the focus shifted to Feijóo. He had already been
left looking awkward after his claims about the PP’s track record on pensions
turned out to be untrue, but was then criticised for the sexist tone of an
apparent reference to Díaz’s makeup.
Feijóo had
urged Spaniards to vote “to bring our country together again” and said that,
unlike Sánchez, he was beholden to no one.
“I’ve got
no debts or deals with anyone,” he told supporters in the Galician city of A
Coruña on Friday. “I don’t need to answer to anyone except the Spanish people.”
An Ipsos
poll for La Vanguardia this month found that the economy was the single biggest
issue for voters, with 31% of those surveyed putting it at the top of their
list. Next was unemployment (10%) and healthcare (9%). Immigration, one of
Vox’s favourite talking points, was the most important issue for just 2% of
those polled.

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