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Sanchez Wins Backing for His Anti-Austerity Coalition in Spain

Sanchez Seeks to Break Spain’s Deadlock by Slimmest of Margins

(Bloomberg) -- Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez won the narrowest of victories in parliament on Tuesday to take power for a second term in Spain with the backing of the anti-austerity party Podemos and a Catalan separatist group.

Sanchez, 47, had 167 lawmakers backing him and 165 against, to win a decisive second round of voting. He fell short of the absolute majority he needed in the first ballot held on Sunday. That slim victory, facilitated by 18 abstentions, including 13 from the pro-independence Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya party, underscores the difficulty he’ll face to pass the litany of legislation his coalition has promised their voters.

Sanchez Wins Backing for His Anti-Austerity Coalition in Spain

“Spaniards have done their duty by voting not once but five times in a year and our obligation is to give them what they have voted for: a government,” Sanchez said in a speech to parliament Tuesday.

The result gives Sanchez a mandate to reverse some of the policies that helped Spain emerge from an economic crisis six years ago. He plans to fund more social spending with higher taxes on large companies and wealthier Spaniards and to bring in more protection for workers and a higher minimum wage in the country’s first coalition government since before the 1936-1939 Civil War.

The minority government’s first major task will be to make up for lost time and pass the 2020 budget, long overdue. Spain has been in political stasis for nearly a year after voters elected divided parliaments in April and November -- Spaniards have also voted in local, regional and European elections in the meantime.

The prospect of power-sharing with Podemos has concerned some investors. The party led by Pablo Iglesias has pushed for higher taxes on banks to recover some of the 60 billion euros ($67.2 billion) spent bailing them out during Europe’s financial crisis. It also wants to further regulate the real estate market, including introducing rent caps.

Mirroring a trend elsewhere in Europe, the political spectrum in Spain too has become increasingly splintered, making the formation of government more difficult. The country held four elections in as many years. One of the most divisive forces in the country’s political arena was the campaign by Catalan nationalists to force a break from the rest of Spain in 2017.

To contact the reporters on this story: Charlie Devereux in Madrid at cdevereux3@bloomberg.net;Jeannette Neumann in Madrid at jneumann25@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Ben Sills at bsills@bloomberg.net

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