Post by account_disabled on Mar 16, 2024 4:17:44 GMT
The CIS survey for the European elections predicts that the PSOE will win the elections with 6 or 7 more seats than the PP Regarding the regional elections, the Barometer estimates that the right will not be able to take any autonomy from the PSOE and gives the socialists chances to win in Madrid. The CIS predicts that Manuela Carmena will remain mayor of Madrid and predicts a tie between Ada Colau and Ernest Maragall in Barcelona. After the last general elections, many Spaniards no longer take the results of the Sociological Research Center surveys so lightly, as it was almost the only survey that indicated that PP, Ciudadanos and Vox would not add enough seats to unseat Pedro Sánchez .
Now, 15 days before the European, regional (in 12 of the 17 autonomous regions) and municipal elections, the CIS Barometer offers new surprises. Thus, he predicts that the PSOE , with former Foreign SW Business Directory Minister Josep Borrell as the head of the list, will win the European elections with between 17 and 18 seats. Read more: This is how the results of the general elections would look with other electoral systems The other novelty that the CIS advances regarding the elections to the European Parliament is the entry of the former Catalan president Carles Puigdemont as an MEP of the Lliures per Europa coalition.
Meanwhile, the poll gives theCiudadanos, 8 to Podemos ando Vox, which would join forces in Strasbourg with the European extreme right. At the regional level, the CIS Barometer predicts that the positions will be maintained in the majority of communities in contention , except in Navarra, where the coalition between Podemos and the nationalists could lose the majority, Madrid, where the sum of the left would surpass that on the right, and the Canary Islands, where the PSOE could unseat the Canary Coalition. Finally, in the battle for the city councils, the CIS predicts that Manuela Carmena will maintain the mayorship of Madrid , as will Joan Ribó, from Compromís, in Valencia, and the socialist Juan Espadas that of Seville.