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DEMOCRACY
Spain's Socialists look to future after vote drubbing

Merkel blames Fukushima for poor showing in regional poll
Berlin (AFP) May 23, 2011 - German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday blamed the Fukushima nuclear disaster for allowing the Greens to push her conservative party into third place in a regional election on Sunday.

The vote in the northern state of Bremen, the smallest of Germany's 16 states, marked the first time the environmentalists had scored more votes than the conservatives in a regional or federal election.

The election saw the ruling coalition of Social-Democrats (SPD) and Greens returned to power.

"The energy question played an important role" in the Bremen regional election, Merkel told a news conference.

"The situation in Fukushima has temporarily changed things", boosting the Green vote in Bremen as it did in March in the southwestern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, Merkel said.

Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which had governed Baden-Wuerttemberg for nearly six decades, lost that state to a coalition of Greens and SPD. At the time, Merkel also blamed Fukushima for the defeat.

The March 11 disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan prompted the German government to decide on a u-turn in its nuclear energy policy.

In the face of growing public concern over nuclear safety, Merkel in March ordered a moratorium on the development of nuclear power, along with the emergency closing of five of the oldest power plants, but this failed to rally support for her embattled coalition.

The CDU "cannot be satisfied" with the result of Sunday's election, the fifth regional poll so far this year, but "one of the reasons" for its poor showing is "the energy policy" which the government is still in the process of redefining, the chancellor and party leader said.

The government will set a date for Germany renouncing nuclear energy by early summer, thereby levelling the political playing field in time for two more regional elections to be held in September, Merkel added.

Bremen, a city-port run by the SPD for the past 66 years, has always proved "difficult" terrain for the CDU, the chancellor also noted, suggesting that "demobilisation" of CDU voters was reflected in a low voter turnout of some 54 percent.

The SPD scored 36.8 percent of the vote, compared to 36.7 in the 2007 election, according to partial results issued at lunchtime Monday and based on counting at 166 out of 507 polling stations.

The Greens scored 22.1 percent, up 5.6 percent compared to 2007.

The CDU won 19.9 percent, down 5.7 percent on the previous election.

The Free Democrats (FDP), allied to the conservatives in Merkel's federal government, only managed 2.7 percent of the vote, below the 5-percent barrier needed to send representatives to the local assembly.

The left-wing Linke won 5.4 percent of the vote.

Final results will not be known for several days because of a complicated ballot counting system.

by Staff Writers
Madrid (AFP) May 23, 2011
Spain's ruling Socialists Monday vowed to stage a dramatic comeback for 2012 general elections after being crushed in local polls by voters angered over soaring unemployment.

The party of Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, in power since 2004, suffered an unprecedented mauling in the regional and municipal elections on Sunday.

With all ballots counted, the Socialists had captured just under 28 percent of the total compared to 37 percent for the opposition right-wing Popular Party.

Support for the government collapsed in the face of the beleaguered economy, the highest unemployment rate in the developed world and massive week-long street protests which continued on Monday.

The rout was a grim omen for the party ahead of general elections due by next March, when the conservative Popular Party of Mariano Rajoy is widely expected to romp into office after eight years in opposition.

"The tsunami of May 22 drowns the Socialists," said the centre-left El Pais, Spain's leading daily.

"The PP has more regional power than ever," the paper added. "The triumph of the party of Mariano Rajoy was indisputable, overwhelming, as he had hoped for to open the way to the prime minister's office."

Rajoy said his party was ready to face a general election and he repeated his call that Zapatero call an early vote, saying the government "was not remotely qualified to generate confidence and dispel doubts" over the economy.

"Spaniards have said clearly that the PP is the alternative to what at the moment is the government of Spain," he added.

Zapatero refused to contemplate calling snap elections, vowing to pursue reforms to fix the economy and expand employment until the end of his mandate, due March 2012.

The party's deputy secretary general, Jose Blanco, sought to rally the party.

"Now is not the time to founder but to look to the future," he told a news conference on Monday following a party meeting to analyse the results.

"It's true that many citizens denied us their support yesterday, but we know that the vast majority want us to give them reasons to trust us again in the next election," he said.

"The government will work to achieve economic recovery and the party will work to regain public confidence and win the next general election."

He also announced that the Socialists on Saturday would launch the process of finding a new party leader to replace Zapatero, who said last month he would not seek a third mandate.

More than 66 percent of the 34 million eligible voters cast ballots to choose 8,116 mayors, 68,400 town councillors and 824 members of regional parliaments for 13 of the 17 semi-autonomous regions.

Of the 13 regional parliaments up for grabs, the Socialists were outvoted in every one, including former stronghold Castilla-La Mancha, but should cling on in Extramadura as part of a left-wing coalition.

Grinding in the humiliation, Socialists lost historic bastions Seville and Barcelona, a city they had run since the first municipal vote in 1979 four years after the death of dictator Francisco Franco.

Demonstrators had packed city squares throughout the country for the past week, refusing to budge as they accused the major Spanish parties of leading Spain to economic ruin.

In a plastic-covered protest camp in central Madrid's Puerta del Sol square, the epicentre of the movement, thousands rallied late Sunday after activists vowed to stay put until Sunday at least.

The spontaneous popular protests were the largest since Spain's property bubble collapsed in 2008 plunging the country into recession and destroying millions of jobs.

Even as the economy grew timidly this year, the unemployment rate shot to 21.29 percent in the first quarter, the highest in the OECD club of industrialised nations. For under-25s, the rate in February was 44.6 percent.



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