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16 December 2015

Face-to-face between Spanish PM Mariano Rajoy and PSOE’s Pedro Sánchez: who won the debate?


PP and PSOE’s leaders sized each other up in the last effort to woo undecided voters - almost 41% of the electorate. Sánchez cornered Rajoy over corruption and the Spanish bail-out. C’s Rivera and Podemos’s Iglesias said the debate was the epilogue to the two-party predominance in Spain.

By Paula Martín Camargo, Editor

PP’s Rajoy and main contender PSOE’s Sánchez debated Monday night in a formal, classic Spanish debate. The first half of the discussion showed a very aggressive Sánchez, railing non-stop against Rajoy over corruption and leading the debate, while the Spanish PM was rather dubious and nervous. Sánchez even told Rajoy that “the Spanish PM has to be decent. And you are not a decent person”. PP’s leader got very angry at this accusation and responded “You are young, and you’ll lose this election. This is fine, I’ve been there before and you will recover. But what you won’t recover yourself from is that insult, which belongs to the mean, small-minded and despicable person you are.” After these abuses, the spectators, who had been rather respectful on Twitter and analysed the different proposals, raced to the social network to mock both of them. The contenders had taken the debate down to the mud, and from that point on, it was all a ‘you did it worse’ argument and an open dialectical row. [...]

Latest polls

Monday was the last day allowed by Spanish law to publish the outcome of voter intention polls. A large number of them were released over the weekend by media outlets, TV and radio stations, showing the PP has gained 1-2 points to between 25.3 and 29%, while the PSOE – the leading opposition – fell back to 21% In their worst week during the electoral campaign, Ciudadanos (C’s) slipped - to 18.2% - the lowest since November. Podemos, which had been losing steam since the summer, came back up to almost surpass Albert Rivera’s C’s party (19.1%).

El-Pais_metroscopia_voter-intention.jpg

Source: El País - Metroscopia

A coalition between PP and Ciudadanos would probably  not produce an absolute majority of seats in the Congress of Deputies and Rajoy would need a regional party – such as the Basque PNV or the Catalans UDC or CDC –to pass legislation during the next term - as PP and PSOE governments have been doing throughout the Spanish democratic history. But that coalition wouldn’t be the one preferred by Spaniards anyway: 32% of the population preferred a PSOE-Podemos pact as the one they would endorse for a government, as shown in LaSexta network.

Source: La Sexta.com - Invymark

If the polls are accurate, turnout is expected to reach as high as 80 percent, and the December 20th election is already seen as a game-changer, no matter what the outcome. However, almost 41% of the electorate haven’t decided their vote yet.

El Confidencial newspaper - the source for a POLITICO article - talked about the ‘black week’ for Pedro Sánchez, saying that Podemos has recovered in the last weeks and has now overtaken PSOE with 19.1% of the estimated vote over PSOE’s 17%. Sánchez’s party would now be fourth. PP would fall to 26.7% and C’s would be second with 23.2% of the votes.

Podemos, which had been slipping since the summer, has turned into a more mainstream party that centre voters could relate to. Since last week’s four-way debate, Iglesias has been ‘fishing’ PSOE’s votes in an attempt to identify himself with a genuine Socialist – his namesake, Pablo Iglesias, who was PSOE’s founder in the late XIX century, and thus truer to Socialist values and principles than the current party and its leader - Sánchez. Podemos, Ciudadanos and PSOE would now be running neck and neck in the final sprint for the General Election. But – with such a high level of `undecided’ voters – the situation is remarkably fluid.

Full article for consultancy clients here





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