In the Spanish general election, the ruling Spanish Socialist Labor Party has won.
However, the country’s main opposition, the People’s Party, has been in a downward spiral.
Spain’s general election ends today.
This election won more and more attention due to the rise of the extreme right-wing Vox, since the elections were held less than a month before the European elections.
Five major parties contested the election, with the ruling Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) winning by a majority.
However, the party, led by Pedro Sánchez, won only 29 percent of the vote.
Accordingly, it will have to get the support of the other parties because they do not have the majority required to form a government.
The main opposition, the People’s Party, came to the polls for a time when its leaders were accused of corruption.
Candidates of 137 parliamentary seats won only 66 seats in the polls, according to critics.
The main topics of this year’s election are the Catalonian Freeze fight and the immigration dispute.
The waxing party in the country has been running this election promising to provide rigorous solutions to Catalonism’s separatism and migration issues.
Its popularity was further confirmed, with Waram being able to enter Parliament for the first time since the end of the military rule in the 1970s.