Santa Fe New Mexican

Election fails to end gridlock in Spain with no clear winner

- By Barry Hatton and CiarÁn Giles

MADRID — A general election called to end political deadlock in Spain has only deepened uncertaint­y about the future of the European Union’s fifthlarge­st economy and raised the possibilit­y of yet another ballot — the fifth in five years — next year.

No party achieved a clear mandate to govern in Sunday’s vote, which was the second election in seven months and was intended to clear away the stalemate. Further weeks or months of political jockeying now lie ahead.

Incumbent Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s left-of-center Socialists captured the most seats, with 120. But that is far short of a majority in the 350seat chamber, meaning the Socialists will have to negotiate deals with other parties if they are to govern.

The outcome also threw up a new roadblock: Support surged for far-right party Vox, which was launched just six years ago.

It collected 52 seats, more than double its showing in the last election in April, making it the third largest party in parliament behind the Socialists and the conservati­ve Popular Party, which recovered to collect 88 seats.

Across Europe, far-right parties have made gains in recent years, setting off alarm bells about the bloc’s political direction. Some analysts put down Vox’s rise to nationalis­t sentiment stirred up as a result of mass protests by separatist­s in the wealthy northeaste­rn region of Catalonia. The protests have included recent violent clashes with police that left more than 500 people injured.

The push for Catalan independen­ce, which the national government won’t allow, is Spain’s most serious political issue in decades and shows no signs of abating. Three Catalan separatist parties won a combined 23 seats, one more than in

April. José Ignacio Torreblanc­a, an analyst and head of the Madrid office of the European Council on Foreign Relations, said the Catalan separatist­s helped give rise to Vox.

“The one thing that the Catalans have achieved is to get a radical right equally as radical as they are on the other end, a kind of a mirror thing and with that make everyone’s life more miserable,” he said.

On Monday, Catalan radicals resumed their protests by blocking a major highway crossing the border between France and Spain and promising to keep it closed for three days. French police pushed them back toward Spain and scuffles broke out.

Vox leader Santiago Abascal said Monday that his party won’t support a Socialist government and issued a warning: “We demand that order be restored in Catalonia.”

Contemplat­ing the election outcome and another fragmented parliament, many people on the streets of Madrid were scratching their heads Monday over what would happen next.

“I think we are worse than before: We are more divided,” said Antonio Prados, a 44-yearold police officer. “I don’t know, there’s a possibilit­y to form a government, but I don’t know how they will come up with the numbers.”

Andrew Dowling, an expert on contempora­ry Spanish politics at Cardiff University in Wales, said Sánchez’s plan to reconfigur­e parliament to his benefit had backfired, leaving Spain once again at the mercy of an unpredicta­ble political landscape.

“The Spanish Socialist party made a major miscalcula­tion in calling new elections,” Dowling said.

The next step will be for parliament­arians to select a house speaker in the coming weeks and then for talks between King Felipe VI and party leaders to begin so that one of them, most likely Sánchez, will be called on to try to form a government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States