Socialist Progressives
Related: About this forumThe best time for a political earthquake in Spain is now!
The most crucial elections in Europe after the Battle of Greecehttp://failedevolution.blogspot.gr/2015/12/the-best-time-for-political-earthquake.html
2naSalit
(92,732 posts)no more banksters
(395 posts)PSOE + Ciudadanos + Podemos (7985) + (4650) + (70-80) = (195215) Possible on both lower and higher figures.
PP + PSOE (114124) + (7985) = (193209) Possible on both lower and higher figures.
PP + Ciudadanos (114124) + (4650) = (160174) Not possible.
PSOE + Ciudadanos (7985) + (4650) = (125135) Not possible.
PSOE + Podemos (7985) + (70-80) = (149165) Not possible.
Minority Government Options
PP in minority (114-124), with Ciudadanos (46-50) abstaining and PSOE & Podemos (149-165) voting against? (-35 to -41) Not possible.
PP & Ciudadanos (160-174) and PSOE & Podemos (149-165) voting against? Depends on the numbers.
PSOE & Podemos (149-165) with Ciudadanos and PP (160-174) voting against? Depends on the numbers
https://www.thespainreport.com/articles/535-151220103337-spanish-general-election-2015-election-day#412
Prediction: Popular Right and Socialists will form a coalition to pass all the catastrophic neoliberal measures as the European Financial Dictatorship wants.
Ghost Dog
(16,881 posts)is not unlikely, although PSOE leader Pedro Sanchez said no to that before the election. Or Podemos+PSOE+Others. Or no deal & fresh elections called within 3 months.
In fresh elections the result would probably produce further polarisation, with Podemos likely gaining ground, barring accidents...
no more banksters
(395 posts)Anyway, it would be interesting to see how things will evolve in the new Spanish political landscape.
no more banksters
(395 posts)The results of yesterday's national elections in Spain were more or less the ones that the polls had preannounced. A relative disappointment came from the fact that Podemos didn't manage to take the second place, which would give them the chance to be the absolute regulators of the political transformation of the Spanish political landscape.
Although the political "earthquake" in Spain was not, eventually, so impressive, the reality is that the first step has been taken by the Spanish people. The political establishment lost much of its power with Spain entering into a new era. The two traditional parties that belong to the European political families of Popular Right and Social Democrats, carriers of the neoliberal agenda, lost much of their power.
The final results, however, give the chance to the political establishment to form a coalition. Despite the heavy losses, Rajoy's Popular Right took 123 seats, and the Socialists in the second place took 90 seats.
Although all the opposition parties before the elections declared that they will not cooperate with Rajoy, the Socialists can form with him a wide majority with 213 seats, far more than the 176 seats needed.
In such a scenario, Spain may experience one of the worst periods, as it happened in Greece from 2011 to 2015. During that period, Greece was ruled by coalition governments with New Democracy (Popular Right) and PASOK (Socialists) at their core. These governments passed the most brutal neoliberal measures under the Brussels-Berlin axis orders.
http://failedevolution.blogspot.gr/2015/12/the-not-so-big-political-earthquake-in.html