(Reuters) – Spain’s snap parliamentary election on July 23 is unlikely to produce a working majority for any one party, with complex pre- and post-ballot alliances holding the key to governing Spain.
Below are the main groups vying for power:
SPANISH SOCIALIST WORKERS’ PARTY (PSOE)
Founded in 1879 by printing workers and intellectuals, PSOE is Spain’s oldest active party and one of two that have dominated the political landscape since Franco’s rule ended with his death in 1975. It has been in government the longest since then (1982-96, 2004-11, 2018-23).
In 2019, PSOE and hard-left Unidas Podemos forged Spain’s first coalition government since the return to democracy.
PEOPLE’S PARTY (PP)
The PSOE’s main rival, the PP was formed during the transition to democracy by former Franco regime officials – including six ex-ministers – but after a relaunch in 1989, it veered to the centre and has headed the national government twice (1996-2004 and 2011-2018).
VOX
Vox split from the PP in 2013 when anti-separatists within the latter pushed to suppress Spain’s semi-federal system that grants regions a certain degree of autonomy. With a mix of social ultraconservatism and economic neoliberalism, it campaigns against feminism, immigration, LGBT rights and Islam.
Regarded as too toxic by the PP national leadership, Vox and the PP have nevertheless teamed up at municipal and regional levels, and Abascal has said he is open to a post-election alliance on a national level.
SUMAR (“UNITE”)
A personal initiative of charismatic Labour Minister Yolanda Diaz, Sumar combines 15 left-of-PSOE parties, including the junior ruling coalition partner Podemos (“We Can”), which won 35 parliamentary seats in 2019. Podemos emerged from the Indignados protest movement in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis that hit Spain especially hard. It peaked in 2015 with 5.2 million votes but has since haemorrhaged support after multiple internal squabbles and splits.
Other members of Sumar are the United Left coalition that includes the Communist Party of Spain – of which Diaz is a member – as well as the Valencia region’s Compromis and Mas Pais (“More Country”), which split from Podemos in late 2018.
PRO-INDEPENDENCE PARTIES
Several parties in parliament fight for their regions’ secession from Spain. The left-wing ERC (Republican Left of Catalonia), centre-right Junts per Catalunya (Together for Catalonia) and anti-capitalist CUP (Popular Unity Candidacy) joined forces for the region’s failed independence bid in 2017.
EH Bildu (Basque Country Unite) and BNG (Galician Nationalist Bloc) are two left-wing parties advocating independence for the Basque Country and Galicia, respectively.
Most of these parties have backed the Sanchez government in parliament.
OTHERS
DROP-OUTS:
(Reporting by David Latona; Editing by Andrei Khalip, Giles Elgood and Conor Humphries)