El Dorado News-Times

Spain’s regional elections give boost to Rajoy’s party

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MADRID (AP) — Acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's conservati­ve Popular Party got a boost in regional elections Sunday, while the opposition Socialists lost ground.

Residents of the Basque and Galicia regions voted in elections for 75-seat regional parliament­s, but the results failed to indicate a clear path forward to ending the country's prolonged political stalemate.

Rajoy has been running a caretaker government for almost a year after two inconclusi­ve rounds of national elections in December and June. The conservati­ves won the most seats in both elections, but were unable to form a governing coalition, and another election is likely in December.

In Galicia, the Popular Party won a majority of seats, with 41, while the Basque Nationalis­t Party won 29. The Basque party won the most seats in the Basque region.

The Socialist Party lost seats in both regions. The results could cause the Socialists to abstain in a parliament­ary vote of confidence that would allow Rajoy to form a minority Popular Party-led government.

The Popular Party hopes the strong showing in Galicia, Rajoy's home region, could demonstrat­e that his party enjoys the support of the conservati­ve electorate despite recent corruption scandals and boost his efforts to form a minority government.

Rajoy has the support of 170 lawmakers in the 350seat national parliament — 137 of them from his own party. But he is still six short of the majority needed to form a government. The Basque Nationalis­t Party holds five seats and their support would leave Rajoy needing just one more vote or an abstention.

But the Basque party's results in their regional elections make it unlikely that the party would support Rajoy.

"It's difficult to imagine that the Galician and Basque elections are going to change the situation at the national level," Navarra University Public Opinion Professor Manuel Martin Algarra said.

The Basque Nationalis­t Party is more likely to seek support from the opposition Socialists, than from the Popular Party, Martin Algarra said.

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