Yahoo – AFP, Marianne Barriaux, December 21, 2015
For more
than 30 years, Rajoy's Popular Party (PP) and the Socialists had alternated
power, but millions of Spaniards exasperated with austerity and corruption
scandals voted relative newcomers Podemos and centre-right Ciudadanos into
third and fourth place.
While it
took the largest share of the vote on Sunday, the PP lost its absolute majority
in parliament and Rajoy now has the challenge of forming a stable government --
a task that the runners-up were unwilling to make easy.
"On no
account will Podemos allow the PP to govern," Pablo Iglesias, the
37-year-old pony-tailed chief of the far-left anti-austerity party told
reporters.
The
Socialists (PSOE) followed suit, with number two Cesar Luena saying his party
would block any government led by Rajoy, whose drastic spending cuts, tax rises
and health reforms over the past four years have proved deeply unpopular.
"As
far as I know, the PP is going to put forward Rajoy, and so the PSOE will vote
no to the PP and Rajoy," he said.
And with
the upstart Ciudadanos also ruling out backing Rajoy, the austere 60-year-old
premier appears increasingly beleaguered and alienated.
How the new
Spanish parliament looks after Sunday's election. 90 x 74 mm
(AFP
Photo/Jonathan Jacobsen)
|
'Political uncertainty'
The outcome
of the most-closely fought election in Spain's modern history has plunged the
country into turmoil as it was just starting to recover from a devastating
financial crisis.
And the
prospect of weeks of political uncertainty saw the Spanish stock market slump
2.5 percent in afternoon trade.
European
Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said he hoped political leaders would
succeed in forming a stable government in the eurozone's fourth largest
economy.
Official
results showed the PP won 123 seats -- 63 less than in 2011 when it roared to
victory with an absolute majority -- with almost 29 percent of the votes.
The PSOE
followed with 90 seats and 22 percent of the vote, then Podemos with 69 seats
and almost 21 percent, and finally the centrists Ciudadanos with 40 seats or
nearly 14 percent.
The results
mean parliament will be made up of four main groupings with significant clout,
as opposed to the usual PP and Socialists tandem -- putting an end to Spain's
traditional two-party system.
In an early
bid to soothe concerns, Rajoy had said he would do all he could to form a
government, standing on a podium in Madrid marked "Gracias"
("Thank you") and speaking down to cheering supporters.
"Spain
needs a government that has the support of parliament," he said.
Scarred
by financial crisis
The outcome
caps a year of electoral change in southern Europe after Syriza swept to power
in Greece in January and a coalition of leftist parties in Portugal pooled
their votes in parliament to unseat the conservative government after an
inconclusive election in October.
Sky-high
unemployment, inequality, corruption and an ever-rising separatist drive in the
northeastern region of Catalonia were just some of the issues at stake in a
country deeply scarred by the financial crisis and fed up with what many
considered a staid political scene.
"This
result will... likely usher in weeks of political uncertainty, as the various
parties try to hammer out a working arrangement in a country that has a limited
history of multi-party government," said Eurasia Group analyst Federico
Santi.
After
holding talks with the leaders of each party that has won seats in parliament,
King Felipe VI, the head of state, will nominate a prime minister -- most
likely Rajoy.
The nominated
leader must then win a vote of confidence in parliament in order to take
office.
Ciudadanos
has said it will abstain in the vote, and while the PSOE has rejected Rajoy, it
could agree not to vote against a conservative government that excludes the
incumbent premier, said Fernando Vallespin, politics professor at Madrid's
Autonomous University.
If there is
still a deadlock within two months of the first vote, the king must call new
elections.
Rajoy had
positioned himself as a safe pair of hands who dragged the country away from
economic collapse when he took power in 2011 and put it on the path of
recovery.
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