Business Day

Spain’s Sanchez calls snap election

- Belén Carreño and Inti Landauro

Spanish socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez called a snap national election on Monday after left-wing parties were routed in a regional ballot, portraying the defeat as a debilitati­ng vote of no confidence in his coalition government.

Sanchez had said often that he wanted to see out a full term in office and that elections would take place in December, near the end of his rotating presidency of the EU, which begins on July 1.

But he said that the scale of Sunday’s defeat, in which the conservati­ve mainstream People’s Party (PP) took up to eight regional government­s from the socialists, meant he felt compelled to “take personal responsibi­lity for the results”.

“All those reasons lead me to seek a clarificat­ion about the wishes of Spain’s people, a clarificat­ion about the political direction that the government should take, and about the political forces that should lead the country through that phase,” he said in a televised speech that took even some of his political allies by surprise.

“I believe it is necessary to respond and submit our democratic mandate to the will of the people.”

Sunday’s results indicate the PP and the far-right Vox could unseat Sanchez and his Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) if they replicated that performanc­e at national parliament­ary level.

But it is highly unusual for a Spanish government to call a snap ballot after a poor performanc­e in a regional vote.

Pablo Simon, a political science professor at Carlos III University in Madrid, said Sanchez’s strategy may be to try to limit further losses of support, with the PP focused on talks to form regional coalitions with Vox. Sanchez may also seek to mobilise support by raising the spectre of a first far-right government since the dictatorsh­ip of Francisco Franco. “He’s playing at that,” Simon said.

The PSOE and its junior ally Podemos lost ground on Sunday, while the PP and the anti-immigrant and anti-separatist Vox performed better than expected.

The PP potentiall­y took as many as eight regional government­s from the socialists, depending on how successful the opposition party is in negotiatin­g alliances with Vox.

Vox leader Santiago Abascal said his party was “here to stay”.

It was “here to be decisive in the constructi­on of the alternativ­e Spain needs,” he said in a speech early on Monday. He said he had not yet spoken to PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo.

The socialists’ main setbacks came in the Valencia, Aragon and Balearic Island regions, as well as in one of their most important fiefdoms, the southweste­rn region of Extremadur­a.

RISK-TAKER

Sanchez is known for taking unexpected risks throughout his political career.

He came to power in June 2018 by winning the first noconfiden­ce vote in Spanish history and removing Mariano Rajoy of the PP after negotiatin­g a pact with Catalan and Basque pro-independen­ce parties.

The fragility of his coalition government forced him to call snap elections twice in 2019.

The leader of the PP in Madrid region, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, who won one of the PP’s few absolute majorities on Sunday night and is expected by some to challenge Nunez Feijoo, publicly reacted to the news.

Spain under the socialists had lost its way and its internatio­nal image, she said, and Sunday’s results revealed the fury of its “citizens, self-employed, entreprene­urs (and) people of the countrysid­e,” she said.

“This shows that Pedro Sánchez has nothing left to do. You can’t fool everyone all the time.”

 ?? /Bloomberg ?? Possible strategy: Pedro Sanchez, Spain's prime minister, may be trying to limit further loss of support.
/Bloomberg Possible strategy: Pedro Sanchez, Spain's prime minister, may be trying to limit further loss of support.

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