REUTERS
Sunday January 11, 2015 10:45 a.m.
The survey of 1,000 people conducted Metroscopia and published by the newspaper El País , showed that we can get 28.2 percent of the vote, up from 25 percent reached in December when it fell to second place behind the Socialists, Reuters quoted.
We can had 10.7 percent of the vote intention when it was first included in the polls in August.
Spain will hold general elections by the end of the year and regional elections expected and municipal in May. Most who told Metroscopia they would vote for can said he believed the country needed to rid the system of one-party administration.
We may have benefited from discontent over corruption cases involving the political class and high unemployment, describing the two major parties in the country – the socialist PSOE and the conservative Popular Party -. as groups that have an interest in maintaining the status quo while ordinary citizens suffer the effects of the crisis
The survey showed that the Socialists fell to 23.5 percent of the voting intentions, from 27.7 percent seen in December, while the ruling Popular Party (PP ) continues to decline with 19.2 percent of the vote compared to 20 percent last month.
The figure is less than half the support of 44.6 percent who received the PP in the last general elections in November 2011, followed by 28.7 percent of the Socialists.
The fragmentation has generated a debate on party alliances or the possibility of a coalition government, although there has not been one since Spain’s return to democracy in the 1970s.
The socialist leader Pedro Sanchez recently ruled form a “grand coalition” with the PP.
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