Off the wire
Brazil's Swan, Albrecht grab Olympic sailing spot  • China Hushen 300 index futures open mixed Monday  • China treasury bond futures open higher Monday  • Chinese shares open lower Monday  • German Bundesliga results  • German Bundesliga standings  • Yearender: Ukrainian, Syrian crises deadlocked as they become wrestling rings of global players  • Spanish La Liga standings  • Aussie FM hosts Indonesian counterpart for talks on defense, trade and national security  • Italian Serie A standings  
You are here:   Home

Spanish PM to form new gov't after elections

Xinhua, December 21, 2015 Adjust font size:

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has the right to form a new government as his People's Party (PP) came out of Sunday's general elections as the biggest political force although it lost absolute majority in Congress.

The PP lost 3.7 million votes and 63 seats in Congress compared with the results of the 2011 elections. Its 123 seats falls well short of the 176 needed for a majority.

However, the party is well ahead of the 90 seats won by the Socialists, the 69 won by left-wing Podemos and the 40 claimed by the center-right Citizens.

"This is still the first political force in Spain," said Rajoy from the balcony of his party headquarters in Madrid.

"We have won the elections again ... Who wins the election should try and form a government," he said.

Rajoy's remarks were echoed by Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez, whose party had their worst ever election results.

Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias celebrated his party's eruption on the political scene.

"Spain has inaugurated a new political era in our country. We have won over 20 percent of the vote and over 5,000,000 voters. We are the main party in Catalonia and the Basque country and second in places such as Madrid, Valencia, Galicia and Navarra," Iglesias said.

Albert Rivera's Citizens will be disappointed with their 40 seats, but Rivera highlighted his party was made up of "normal people doing extraordinary things."

He promised Citizens' representatives would work for social justice, and also a new electoral law for the 21st century in Spain. Endi