{ "id": "IN11111", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "number": "IN11111", "active": true, "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "versions": [ { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 597741, "date": "2019-05-02", "retrieved": "2019-05-03T22:18:30.004744", "title": "Spain\u2019s 2019 Election", "summary": "Many U.S. officials and Members of Congress consider Spain to be an important U.S. ally and one of the closest U.S. partners in Europe. Spain\u2019s April 2019 election returned a fragmented result, but most seated parties favor the continuation of close U.S.-Spain relations.\nSocialist Party Wins, But No Majority\nThe center-left Socialist Workers\u2019 Party (PSOE), led by incumbent Prime Minister Pedro S\u00e1nchez, came in first place in Spain\u2019s general election held on April 28, 2019. The PSOE won 123 out of the 350 seats in Spain\u2019s Congress of Deputies (lower house of parliament), with nearly 29% of the vote. The center-right Popular Party (PP) came in second place with 66 seats. \nThe election was Spain\u2019s third general election in three and a half years. General elections in 2015 and 2016 did not produce a majority government; no single party won a majority of seats, and no combination of parties adding up to a majority was able to agree on forming a coalition government. After a 10-month political deadlock, the PP formed a minority government in late 2016. \nTo form a minority government, a party holding less than half of the seats in parliament negotiates with one or more other parties for their support in reaching the majority threshold needed to win a parliamentary vote of confidence, in return for certain policy concessions. Support for ensuing legislation is typically determined on a case-by-case basis.\nThe PP was subsequently damaged by a corruption scandal, and S\u00e1nchez became prime minister in June 2018 after a parliamentary vote of no confidence defeated the PP-led government. After leading a minority government holding less than one-quarter of the seats in the Congress of Deputies (85 out of 350), S\u00e1nchez called an early election when he was unable to secure enough votes to pass the 2019 budget.\nS\u00e1nchez has indicated that the PSOE could run another minority government. In order to win a parliamentary vote of confidence, the most likely scenario appears to be that S\u00e1nchez would seek support from Podemos, a far-left, anti-establishment party that won 42 seats in the election, as well as from an array of smaller, regional parties. Reliance on Catalan separatist parties, two of which won a combined 22 seats, would likely prove contentious and raise concerns about what concessions those parties might demand in return for their support. \nA less likely scenario, but one which has not been completely ruled out, would be a partnership between the PSOE and center-right party Ciudadanos, which came in third place in the election with 57 seats. \nTable 1. Results of 2019 Spanish Election\n(voter turnout: 75.75%)\nParty\n# of\nSeats\n% of\nVote\nSeats +/- compared\nto 2016\nVote % compared\nto 2016\n\nSocialist Workers\u2019 Party (PSOE)\n123\n28.7%\n+38 \n+5.7% \n\nPopular Party (PP)\n66\n16.7%\n-71\n-16.3\n\nCiudadanos (Citizens)\n57\n15.9%\n+25\n+2.9\n\nUnidas Podemos (Together We Can)\nResults incorporate the electoral alliance of Podemos, United Left, EQUO (a merger of green parties), and En Com\u00fa Podem.\n42\n14.3%\n-29\n-6.7%\n\n\nVox (Voice)\n24\n10.3%\n+24\n+10.3\n\nAll Others\nEight regional parties won between one and 15 seats each.\n38\n10.1%\n+13\n+0.1\n\nSource: \u201cElecciones Generales 2019,\u201d El Pais, April 29, 2019. \nTrends and Dynamics\nSpanish politics have become increasingly fragmented in recent years, as a system long dominated by the PP and the PSOE has fractured into five parties each drawing between 10% and 29% of the vote. In winning the most seats in the 2019 election, the PSOE benefitted from a splintering of the right-wing vote between three parties. Support for the PP dropped considerably, as many voters angry over PP-linked corruption scandals turned to Ciudadanos and others shifted to Vox, a new far-right, anti-immigration party that entered parliament with 24 seats. Competing with the PSOE on the left, Podemos arose largely out of a protest movement in the wake of the 2008-2009 financial crisis. Although the Spanish economy has been improving in recent years, economic conditions and high unemployment have been a predominant issue in Spain since the crisis.\nThe Catalan separatist issue has been the other predominant issue for Spain in recent years. All of the mainstream national political parties oppose the idea of Catalan independence. Whereas hardline opposition to Catalan independence is a fundamental position of the three parties of the right, the PSOE has been more willing to enter into dialogue with the separatists, and Podemos has expressed support for Catalonia\u2019s right to decide.\nOn the European level, the victory of the PSOE provides a measure of optimism for the continent\u2019s center-left social democratic parties, many of which have experienced declining support in recent years. The emergence of Vox adds to the trend of far-right, anti-immigrant parties making gains in a number of European countries, although some observers assert that backlash to Vox helped mobilize center-left voters. Previously, Spain had often been cited as a European country that had remained relatively \u201cimmune\u201d to the far-right, as prior to Vox the far-right had no significant role in Spanish politics since the end of the Franco dictatorship and transition to democracy in the mid-1970s. \nU.S.-Spain Relations and Issues for Congress\nGiven its role as a close U.S. ally, developments in Spain and its relations with the United States following Spain\u2019s April 2019 election are likely to be of continuing interest to the U.S. Congress. \nThe United States and Spain have extensive cultural ties and a mutually beneficial economic relationship, and the two countries cooperate closely on numerous diplomatic and security issues, including counterterrorism. Spain has been a member of NATO since 1982 and a member of the European Union (EU) since 1986. \nSpain plays an important role in U.S. defense strategy for Europe and Africa. Four U.S. destroyers equipped with the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense system are based at Rota naval station, and Mor\u00f3n air base is the headquarters for a rapid reaction force of U.S. Marines that protects U.S. interests and personnel in North Africa. Spanish armed forces participate in numerous international peacekeeping and security operations. \nSince taking office in 2018, Prime Minister S\u00e1nchez has not made any dramatic changes to Spain\u2019s foreign policy. His government has adopted a distinctly pro-EU approach and an outlook emphasizing multilateral foreign policy cooperation through Spain\u2019s membership in institutions such as NATO and the United Nations. The PSOE favors maintaining U.S.-Spain defense cooperation and security ties. Podemos, which could provide parliamentary support for a Socialist-led government, has in the past demanded a referendum on Spain\u2019s NATO membership and most recently campaigned to redirect Spain\u2019s security strategy away from NATO in favor of the EU.\nFor additional background information, see CRS Report R44298, Spain and Its Relations with the United States: In Brief, by Derek E. Mix.", "type": "CRS Insight", "typeId": "INSIGHTS", "active": true, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "https://www.crs.gov/Reports/IN11111", "sha1": "4e3d4225dd8bc5ce526a6c24b494840d63edbd4e", "filename": "files/20190502_IN11111_4e3d4225dd8bc5ce526a6c24b494840d63edbd4e.html", "images": {} }, { "format": "PDF", "encoding": null, "url": "https://www.crs.gov/Reports/pdf/IN11111", "sha1": "40818fa73f7120c1921e87cdcc57fb7736b187db", "filename": "files/20190502_IN11111_40818fa73f7120c1921e87cdcc57fb7736b187db.pdf", "images": {} } ], "topics": [ { "source": "IBCList", "id": 4786, "name": "Europe, Russia, & Eurasia" } ] } ], "topics": [ "CRS Insights", "National Defense" ] }