Spain’s Rajoy gets mixed messages in regional poll

Spain’s Rajoy gets mixed messages in regional poll

BILBAO - Agence France-Presse

Spanish PM Rajoy (R) and Galician President Feijoo chat during an electoral meeting. Rajoy was given a boost in Galicia for his austerity drive. REUTERS photo

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservatives have retained power in his home region of Galicia in regional elections, but separatists made a strong showing in the Basque Country.

Rajoy was spared political humiliation after his Popular Party came out on top in the polls in Galicia, official results showed, despite the sting of the recession and his government’s biting austerity measures.

The region is a traditional Popular Party stronghold and defeat would have undermined Rajoy as he tries to convince global markets that he can fix Spain’s finances.

But a second regional election in the Basque Country added to the Spanish leader’s problems with an exit poll showing a new separatist coalition had finished second behind the Basque Nationalist Party, which seeks greater autonomy for the region.

The two regional votes came at a critical time for Rajoy, who has to decide whether to seek a euro zone sovereign rescue to finance the nation’s runaway public debt. Rajoy’s Popular Party captured 41 seats in the 75-seat Galician Parliament, up from 38 seats in the outgoing assembly.

The Popular Party had been defending a tight but absolute majority in Galicia, Rajoy’s home region, which has a population of 2.8 million. Voters apparently decided to stick with Rajoy’s party despite a jobless rate that has climbed to 21 percent, approaching the national rate of 25 percent. The economic pain and cuts in education and health are fueling discontent across the 17 regions. Those sentiments are especially raw in the Basque Country, holding its first regional vote since armed separatists ETA renounced the use of violence last year.

Basque independence?

The Basque Nationalist Party won 27 seats in the 75-seat Basque Parliament, followed by the separatist Euskal Herria Bildu coalition with 21 seats, meaning around two-thirds of the assembly will be made up of nationalists. “It is time to start thinking as a people, as a nation. It is time to stop the orders from Madrid,” the leader of the Euskal Herria Bildu coalition, novelist Laura Mintegi, told a post-election rally in Bilbao.

The Bildu alliance appears to have filled the space left by the ETA-linked Batasuna party, outlawed in 2003, and the big question is whether the Basque Nationalist Party will seek an alliance with Bildu or will turn elsewhere.

Political analysts believe a Basque regional government that includes Bildu will bring questions of Basque independence to the forefront of the political debate. “If it is with Bildu, the question of [Basque] identity, of ties with Spain, will play a central role in its coalition,” said Anton Losada, political science professor at the University of Santiago de Compostela.