Politico: Spanish elections: Sánchez holds off right surge  

The center-right Popular Party won the most votes but does not appear to have a path to form a government. 

MADRID — Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is poised to remain prime minister as a result of Sunday’s inconclusive national elections in which the center-right Popular Party won the most votes but was left with no clear path to form a government. 

As expected, none of Spain’s major parties secured a governing majority. 

With 99 percent of the votes tallied, the Popular Party had 136 seats, the Socialists 122, the far-right Vox 33, and the left-wing Sumar 31. 

Prior to the vote, conservative leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo indicated that he would be willing to form a coalition government with Vox, but both parties fell short of the 176 seats needed to control the Spanish parliament.  

Read more ….  

WNU Editor: Expect weeks of negotiations to form a coalition government. 

No Clear Victor In Spanish Election  

Spain election 2023: live results — The Guardian
 

Spain’s conservatives miss out on all-out victory as left celebrates — BBC
 

Spain at risk of political gridlock after conservative win falls short of toppling PM Sánchez — AP
 

Spanish election’s nail-biting finish makes hung parliament likely — Reuters
 

Spain elections: No party wins the needed majority to form government — France 24
 

Spain election: Conservatives win but fall short of majority — DW 

Spain’s rightwing parties fail to gain expected poll lead in election — The Guardian 

Spain elections: no party wins enough seats to establish government — UPI
 

No clear victor in Spanish election as results defy predictions — CNN