Saturday, June 18, 2016

The Spanish campaign reaches its Ecuador with fear of a new lock – Terra Peru

The Spanish election campaign now reaches its Ecuador with the forecast that the outcome of the December elections be repeated, without any party reach a clear majority, and the risk that politicians still do not know how to manage pacts government.

The fifteen-day campaign for the vote began last Friday and will end on the 24th, before leaving a day for reflection prior to the June 26 vote.

The elections last December left a fragmented Parliament: PP (center right) with 123 seats; PSOE (Socialist) 90; We can (left anti-austerity) with 69 and Citizens (liberal) with 40.

The only agreement signed between socialists and liberals, did not have the support of other forces, so the leader PSOE, Pedro Sanchez, he not managed to be invested president of the Government in the two voting at the Congress which was presented in early March.

Polls in recent weeks portend, barring unforeseen circumstances, a similar scenario – although we second and PSOE in the third – and all parties assume that none will have a majority wide and negotiations and agreements will be required.

With this premise, the parties nevertheless seem more concerned require others to clarify before the vote be agreed that who put on the table and points in common.

Thus, the PP leader and chairman of the caretaker government, Mariano Rajoy, predicted that a possible repetition of the coalition between socialists and liberals will not be enough, as it was also not after December elections, which warned that they would need to the left of United we can.

In the negotiations of recent months we refused to negotiate with the two parties by ideological incompatibilities with Citizens.

The liberal leader, Albert Rivera, meanwhile, reiterated its rejection of a government led by Rajoy government or the current vice president, Soraya Saenz de Santamaria and was convinced that the leader PP prefer to reach agreement with the PSOE, which is known as “grand coalition” and that the socialist rule Sanchez.

The Socialists are continually challenged by liberal and United We Can to clarify who plan to agree after 26 June.

Although down from second to third place, the PSOE could have a decisive role in deciding which party governs if you choose to give their support to one or the other.

From Pamplona (north), where he starred in a public ceremony, Pedro Sanchez acknowledged today that “all those who say that the next government will depend on the Socialist Party are right.”

For Sanchez his party is the only one who can ensure that a government of change from day 26, without specifying with whom it formed.

The crossing of criticisms and assumptions about possible agreements are the elements that are present in the interventions of Spanish politicians in this campaign, far more than the specific proposals about issues of concern to the Spanish, such as unemployment and corruption.

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