March 22, 2015
The most populous country, where election day passed without incident just on a spring day with the threat of rain autonomous community, rely mainly on the Socialist Party Working Spanish (PSOE), which governs a region traditionally left for 33 years, according to polls
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SEVILLA – Nearly 6.5 million Andalusians were called to the polls Sunday in Andalusia, where polls predict that the emergence of new parties begin to redesign national political map cornered for decades bipartisanship.
The most populated autonomous community country, where election day passed without incident just on a spring day with the threat of rain, mainly rely on the Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE), which governs a region traditionally left for 33 years, according to polls.
“We voted for the PSOE, as we have always done, are most do in Andalusia, nobody like them,” he told the output of a central polling station with his wife José, retired 82 years.
The projections, however, give the PSOE its worst election result since 1982, forcing a full or timely agreeing to govern the community with more unemployment in Spain, 34 percent to over 60 percent among young people.
“I hope, enthusiasm and confidence,” said the PSOE candidate to the regional parliament, Susana Díaz, after voting in the morning in the Triana district of Seville, where voters were mixed with tourists and faithful attending the many temples in the area.
According to surveys, the Parliament will be more fragmented than the current one, from three to five games and forcing full or partial agreements that could reproduce national level after the general elections later this year.
The PP candidate for the Board, Juan Manuel Moreno, also called on citizens to vote in a session in which the undecided, that polls estimated at one third of potential voters, will be decisive in the outcome.
The participation data showed that 18.00 was 51.43 percent voted on a census, 4.2 percentage points higher than in 2012 when the overall number of influx at the end of the day stood at 62.23 percent.
Then, the Popular Party won the most votes, with 40.6 percent of the votes, but failed to rule against the alliance between the PSOE, which had achieved 39.52 percent, and United Left, with 11.34 percent of the vote.
On this occasion, polls predict a sharp decline for these three political forces can before the advance of the anti-austerity party that placed as second force in the region, and the centrist Citizens PP fourth behind and ahead of IU.
Citizens, which did not exist in Andalusia one month before early elections to be held in January, is seen by some analysts as a hinge for governance if the Socialist candidate fulfills his promise not agree nor can nor PP.
ILLUSION FOR CHANGE
José Manuel Ramos, a man 50 years well dressed asking alms in the center of the Andalusian capital carrying a sign that stopped laments his condition, places his hope in one of the new formations.
“This afternoon, when I pull the money to sleep go to vote. I am voting can (…) At the end are all dogs with the same necklace, but they generate illusion of something different, “he said after explaining that he was evicted a year ago after losing his job as a waiter.” I’ve always voted for the PP, never the PSOE, but what has made the PP with Merkel …. “
The Socialist candidate, 40, has appealed for much of the campaign to pain among Andalusian cuts by the policies of the central government of the People’s Party, which polls lost 16 of the 50 seats in 2012.
In a chamber of 109 deputies, CIS estimates give the PSOE 47 seats, compared to 21-22 Can, 5 and 4-5 Citizens United Left, which would rise from third to fifth political force in a region that in the past two years has contributed to govern in coalition with the PSOE.
The high rate of unemployment, harsh austerity recipes for fiscal discipline and the six years of crisis, combined with the numerous cases of political corruption, have generated social discontent that seek to capitalize on the new formations.
And disaffection and discredit noticeable in the streets: “I will not vote, why ?, it’s all a lie, I do not think anyone,” says Joseph, who at 40 years runs a newsstand in central Seville.
Historical PSOE voter is recognized and does not believe in the new populist options. “Less than can those who want to take our Easter” says referring to the proposal to consult the public on the continuity of an established religious tradition in the Andalusian capital.
Reuters
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