|
Pedro Sánchez, president of the Government. Despite not having managed to win the Community of Madrid and maintain the city council of the capital, the PSOE ratified on March 26 the results it obtained in the General Elections and has managed to gain power. In several territories it will need the support of Podemos, Compromís, the PRC or the PNV, while it boasts absolute majorities typical of other times in Castilla-La Mancha and Extremadura. The disparate fate of its parliamentary partners , with the failure of Podemos and its confluences and the good results of Basque nationalists and Cantabrian regionalists, will condition the negotiations for the investiture , in which it is more likely that the PSOE will opt for the same formula as the last legislature, that is, a government alone and in a minority, resorting to concrete support to legislate.
All this, with a Pedro Sánchez who ratifies his internal power and who opened the door on Sunday to broad agreements . The loss of power in Madrid, Barcelona, Zaragoza and A Coruña weakens the chances of Podemos entering Sánchez's Government Pedro Sánchez and Pablo Iglesias at the Moncloa Palace Pedro Sánchez and Pablo Iglesias at the Moncloa Sweden Mobile Number List Palace Shortly before 26M, the general secretary of Podemos Pablo Iglesias assured that it was "common sense" for his party to enter a possible coalition government with the PSOE . After the elections, the loss of municipal power in the majority of the city councils of the change, the loss of representation in all the autonomies and the decline in MEPs seems to push that horizon further away.

Podemos arrived at the Municipal and Regional Elections worn out in its municipalist brands and fragmented into several territories . Thus, the party of Podemos co-founder Íñigo Errejón surpassed the purple party's candidate for the Community of Madrid, Isa Serra, but her results do not add up to a majority with those of Ángel Gabilondo's PSOE. This fragmentation has also taken its toll on Iglesias, who did not appear before the press on election night and which seems to close an electoral cycle that began exactly 5 years ago, when Podemos broke into the institutions, surprisingly reaching 5 seats in the 2014 European Elections. Five years later, the trend is definitively reversed.
|
|