Sánchez’s
Socialists suffer heavy loss in regional Spanish election
The
far-right Vox performed well, putting it in the driver’s seat to secure
concessions for backing the victorious conservatives.
February
8, 2026 11:47 pm CET
By Guy
Hedgecoe
https://www.politico.eu/article/pedro-sanchez-socialists-suffer-defeat-aragon-regional-election/
MADRID —
The Socialist Party of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez endured a major defeat on
Sunday in an election in the Spanish region of Aragón, while the far right made
substantial gains.
The
conservative People’s Party (PP), which governs the north-eastern region, came
first with 34.3 percent support, but its 26 seats represented a loss of two and
left it well short of a majority in the 67-seat chamber.
With 99
percent of votes counted the Socialists secured 24.3 percent, good for 18 seats
but representing a loss of five, equaling their worst-ever result in the
region. Aragón is known as “Spain’s Ohio” because, like the U.S. state, it
tends to serve a barometer of the national electoral mood.
Meanwhile,
the far-right Vox secured 14 seats with support of 17.9 percent, double what it
won in the last election in 2023 and echoing its strong performance recently in
national polls.
The party
campaigned hard in Aragón’s rural areas, pitching to farmers unhappy with EU
regulations.
“This is
not the result we wanted,” said the Socialist candidate, Pilar Alegría. “An
uncertain horizon has opened up in Aragón.”
Sunday’s
was the first of three elections scheduled in the coming months in PP-held
regions in Spain, and will be followed by Castilla y León in March and
Andalusia in June.
Both the
PP and the Socialists used the regional election to discuss broader national
issues.
The PP
presented the election as a referendum on the tenure of Sánchez, whose
coalition has been rocked by scandals affecting his party and allies. Two
January train crashes that killed 47 people and triggered rail chaos around the
country have compounded Sánchez’s woes.
His
Socialists, meanwhile, presented the Aragón vote as a chance to push back
against a radical right-wing tide that is sweeping Spain and other parts of the
world.
In a
highly fragmented parliament, the PP’s only option to continue in government
now appears to be a coalition or a less formal alliance with Vox.
The snap
election was called by regional President Jorge Azcón after Vox withdrew its
support for his conservative government. With many voters jumping from the PP
to Vox, the far-right party is now in a strong position to seek concessions for
backing the PP.
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