Spain's revolutionary days are over (Pablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty Images)

Spaniards heading to the polls this Sunday will not do so cheerfully. Not only is the election disrupting the summer holidays of more than a quarter of Spanish voters ā but the options on the ballot paper are, at first glance, pretty dismal. Neither of Spainās two mainstream centrist parties can win outright, and so both will be forced into coalitions with smaller, more extreme parties. If one is to believe the feverish discourse, itās a choice between anti-feminist neo-fascists on the Right or blood-drenched, murderous terrorists on the Left.
There is a grain of truth in this. If the current Socialist Prime Minister Pedro SĆ”nchez wins, he will probably only be able to form a government with the backing of EH Bildu ā a Basque separatist party that welcomes former terrorists from the now defunct but once dangerous ETA into its ranks. However, if the opposition Peopleās Party (PP) of Alberto NĆŗƱez FeijĆ³o wins, it will need the support of Vox ā a hard-Right party that attracts national conservatives and authoritarians. Some of its supporters remain in thrall to the thuggish military dictator Francisco Franco.
Bildu and Vox each claim to be devoted democrats, but most Spaniards strongly dislike both ā and with good reason. Vox leader Santiago Abascal has called SĆ”nchezās government āthe worst in 80 yearsā, suggesting that he prefers Francoās violently repressive autocracy. His party hopes to repeal abortion and euthanasia laws, end measures to ensure gender equality and combat domestic violence, and re-centralise power to Madrid.
The reputation of EH Bildu leader Arnaldo Otegi is even less flattering. The ETA veteran has only semi-apologised for the groupās murder of 853 people between 1968 and 2011. Having vowed to āalleviate” the suffering of the victimsā relatives in 2021, he then humiliated them by putting forward 44 former convicts at local elections in May 2023. These included seven candidates condemned for murder or for directly assisting murder.
While Spainās mainstream parties would rather avoid such unseemly bedfellows, it seems they will have little choice: the Peopleās Party will likely win the most votes but fall short of an absolute majority. In that case, it will have no option but to turn to Vox. The party has no other potential allies: its dismissive stance on devolution and independence referenda has alienated nationalists from the Basque Country and Catalonia, who might otherwise have been sympathetic to its Christian Democrat agenda. Indeed, ever since Catalan separatists tried to secede unilaterally in 2017, the split between unionists and centralists has often dominated politics just as much as traditional Left-Right alignments.
If FeijĆ³oās PP and Vox fail to win a majority of seats, then SĆ”nchez ā whose party has long followed a conciliatory policy of devolution without independence ā will form a minority coalition government with far-Left Sumar (a tweaked version of current coalition ally Unidas Podemos) backed by all the nationalist and separatist parties. That includes five or so deputies from EH Bildu. Nevertheless, although the polls are still too tight to call a winner, a Peopleās Party-Vox coalition is still the most probable outcome.
The election campaign has become all about the kingmakers. āTake the vote of Txapote!ā (an infamous ETA chief currently jailed for several murders) is a favourite PP slogan targeting SĆ”nchezās Socialists. āVote against the pact of hate!ā shouts a massive scaffolding banner in Madridās famously gay Chueca district, claiming a PP-Vox coalition would shred womenās rights and fuel homophobia.
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