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The exit
polls suggest that no party has won an overall majority at Spain's
general election. If the exit polls are right, PP and PSOE will have
come in on forecast, Podemos will have done better and Ciudadanos
worse. 176 seats in the Spanish Congress are required for an overall
majority.
Parties
|
Min./Max. Seats
|
Coalition?
|
PSOE + Ciudadanos + Podemos
|
(79–85) + (46–50) + (70-80) =
(195–215)
|
Possible on both lower and higher
figures.
|
PP + PSOE
|
(114–124) + (79–85) = (193–209)
|
Possible on both lower and higher
figures.
|
PP + Ciudadanos
|
(114–124) + (46–50) = (160–174)
|
Not possible.
|
PSOE + Ciudadanos
|
(79–85) + (46–50) = (125–135)
|
Not possible.
|
PSOE + Podemos
|
(79–85) + (70-80) = (149–165)
|
Not possible.
|
More
scenarios:
Not good
news.
Prediction:
Popular Right and Socialists will form a coalition to pass all the
catastrophic neoliberal measures as the European Financial
Dictatorship wants.
Update: 30% of votes: Podemos surpass 1,000,000 votes, currently translated to 42 seats.
With 99% of the votes counted on Sunday night, the PP was on track to receive 123 seats, leaving it shy of a majority in the 350-seat legislature. Led by Mariano Rajoy, the current prime minister, it earned 29% of the vote and won only two-thirds the number of seats it took in 2011.
The Socialists, who asserted throughout the campaign that they were best placed to rival the conservatives, came in second, with 90 seats and 22% of the vote.
Update: 30% of votes: Podemos surpass 1,000,000 votes, currently translated to 42 seats.
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