
Supporters of the Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) wait for the results of Spain's general election in Madrid
With the Spanish political landscape increasingly fragmented, voters went to the polls on Sunday to take part in the country's third general election in four years. Turnout was a high 75 percent, and all 350 seats in Spain's Congress of Deputies were up for grabs.
With 84 percent of votes counted by Sunday evening, Sanchez' decision to call a snap election in February looks to have paid off. His socialist PSOE party looks set to take 123 seats, or 29 percent of the vote. Previously, Sanchez led a minority government of 85 deputies, with the support of a handful of independence-favoring Catalonian parties.














Comment: The trend of schlerotic election results continues in western Europe. No elections in any country west of Austria has produced a majority government in the last 5 years.
No doubt this too is Russia's fault, what with all its 'meddling' and 'divisiveness'...
In reality, of course, it's a strong sign of 'a house divided' by its own hand.