The Phnom Penh Post

Rajoy looks to form government

- Marianne Barriaux

SPAIN’S ruling conservati­ves made a fresh push yesterday to form a government to unblock months of political paralysis after emerging stronger from another inconclusi­ve general election.

The Popular Party (PP) was the big winner of Sunday’s elections, the second in six months, which played out against a background of turbulence from Britain’s shock vote to leave the EU that analysts said may have influenced the polls.

The fractured results were much the same as after uncertain December polls, with the PP coming first, followed by the Socialists, a far-left coalition led by Podemos and marketfrie­ndly upstart Ciudadanos.

But unlike the other three parties that lost seats, votes or both, the PP came out strengthen­ed from the election, beating expectatio­ns and its December score with 137 seats in the 350-strong lower house of parliament. However, the PP, led by incumbent Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, is still far from an absolute majority and needs support from other parties to form a government – no easy task.

But the extra seats give Rajoy more clout in coalition negotiatio­ns, coupled with the fact that parties are under pressure to reach a deal to avoid a third round of elections.

An emboldened Rajoy held his hand out to parties yesterday and particular­ly the Socialists, telling Spanish radio he would speak to the PSOE first, “which remains our country’s second political force”.

Rajoy or no Rajoy?

Looking ahead, the PP could team up with market friendly Ciudadanos, but their combined total number of seats would still not be enough to form a majority centre-right government and win the necessary vote of confidence.

So they will need to court smaller regional parties and the Socialists (PSOE), which came second in Sunday’s elections with 85 seats, its worst score in modern history.

The PSOE could decide to ab- stain in the parliament­ary vote to let a government through and avoid taking the country to a third round of elections.

But angry over a string of corruption scandals that have hit the PP and severe austerity measures under Rajoy’s watch, it may not want to back a government with him at the helm.

In fact, rival parties before the election had insisted on the fact that they wanted Rajoy to go, whatever the outcome.

“We won’t support Rajoy,” said Cesar Luena, number-two of the Socialist party, setting the scene for what could be tough coalition negotiatio­ns.

Asked whether the Socialists would consider abstaining, Luena said this would be an issue they would discuss when the time came. “But the PSOE wants to replace Rajoy,” he said.

In its pre-election campaign, Ciudadanos had also called for Rajoy to step down. Now though, the PP’s better-thanexpect­ed results make this more difficult.

“Rajoy has come out strengthen­ed internally in his party and no one will now be able to tell him that he will block the formation of a government,” said Jose Pablo Ferrandiz of polling firm Metroscopi­a.

The big loser in Sunday’s elections was the far-left coalition composed of Podemos and green-communists Izquierda Unida, which opinion polls had suggested would come second and overtake the Socialists as the country’s main left-wing force.

Analysts said the PP had conducted a successful campaign against the Unidos Podemos coalition, emphasisin­g the need for stability in the face of “radicalism” and “populism”.

Britain’s shock exit from the European Union last week only contribute­d to voters’ desire for stability, they added.

Spain’s stock market briefly celebrated the conservati­ve election win yesterday morning, with shares in its main Ibex 35 index shooting up more than 3 per cent before going back down in line with other markets weighed down by Brexit.

“Many voters opted for the old parties, the parties that are more anchored to the idea of Europe,” said Anton Losada, a political scientist at the University of Santiago de Compostela.

“There is a sensation of entering territory where we don’t really know what is going to happen [with Brexit], and in this territory, best to bet on what we know works.”

 ?? AFP ?? After emerging from another inconclusi­ve general election, Mariano Rajoy of the Popular Party has vowed to form a government after his party garnered 137 seats out of 350 in the lower house of parliament.
AFP After emerging from another inconclusi­ve general election, Mariano Rajoy of the Popular Party has vowed to form a government after his party garnered 137 seats out of 350 in the lower house of parliament.

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