
"No government, no thieves," said Félix Pastor, a language teacher who, like many voters, is fed up with the corruption and scandals that tarnished the two previous governing parties.
Mr. Pastor, a wiry, animated 59-year-old, said Spain could last without a government "until hell freezes over" because politicians were in no position to do more harm.
After two grueling national elections in six months, and with a third vote possible in December, no party has won enough seats or forged the coalition needed to form a government. For the first time in Spain's four decades as a modern democracy, this country of 47 million people has a caretaker government.
That has produced an unprecedented public spectacle: Politicians scheme and plot but reject the difficult compromises needed to form a government. Voters watch ruefully with a mix of fascination and contempt.
On Saturday, the Socialists' leader, Pedro Sánchez, stepped down in a move that could open the way for his party to agree to the re-election of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and a government led by his conservative Popular Party.












Comment: Boy oh boy, Ashton Carter has been a busy little war-monger hasn't he. Just last week he was giving a pep talk riling up the troops against Russia at Air Force Global Strike Command base in Minot, North Dakota - and now this. But that's what good little US War Secretaries do right? They pound the ungodly drums of mass gore and carnage - or the threat of mass gore and carnage - if sovereign countries don't want to follow the Empire's dictates.