Sunday, July 26, 2015

Spain hopes for an “inevitable” coalition government after elections – El Universal (Venezuela)

Madrid .- The Spanish Socialist Party (PSOE) and the Popular Party (PP) won advantage over may, at least six months the general elections in Spain, according to a survey released Sunday.

If the election were held right now, the PSOE achieved the first position (23.5%) with the PP on the heels (23.1%), according to this survey , published by the newspaper El País .

On the contrary, we, who had come to reach 28% of voting intentions in January, would not get more than 18.1% of the vote, down from 20% threshold for the first time since October 2014.

The other emerging training Citizens get 16% of the vote , according to the poll conducted by the institute between Metroscopia 20 and July 22 between a thousand people, and margin of error of 3.2%.

However, the scenario envisaged after the appearance of these formations has not changed, and “the prospect of a coalition seems inevitable”, considers the daily, stressing that, whoever the party wins, both the PP and the PSOE should ally with other formations if they wish to govern.

The Citizens fourth political force led by Albert Rivera, movement gained 1.5 percentage points from June.

Training United Left (IU) also back slightly from June, up 5.6% compared to 4.1% a month ago.

These results give encouragement to the supporters of a list unit of the different parties alternate, including IU, presented as a great platform along the lines of “Now Madrid”, supported by Podemos, prompting Judge Manuela Carmena mayor of Madrid.

We can, trying to preserve its “centrality” to avoid being relegated to the left of the Spanish political scene, rejected for now any application “of popular unity.”

According to the same survey, Albert Rivera is political highest rated, with 50%, far from the Prime Minister, Mariano Rajoy (25%).

Advances in this way also the leader of Podemos, Pablo Iglesias (31%), confirmed this week the primaries of his party as candidate for the election.

In the last general election, in late 2011, the PP won by a wide margin, with 44.6% of the vote, compared to PSOE 28.7%.

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