Spain’s Pedro Sanchez was re-elected as prime minister by the nation’s parliament on Thursday, when he leveraged a controversial amnesty deal to get the critical support from Catalan separatists to stay in power.
Sanchez, Spain’s Socialist leader since 2018, was backed by 179 lawmakers in the 350-seat lower house of parliament to form a new minority leftist coalition government. Only right-wing opposition deputies voted against him.
The vote came after nearly two days of debate among party leaders that centred almost entirely on an amnesty deal for Catalonia’s separatists that Sanchez agreed to in return for vital support to unlock another four-year term.
Sanchez won the vote after clinching the support of six smaller parties – including two Catalan separatist parties that command 14 seats – in recent weeks, allowing his Socialists to once again team up with the left-wing Sumar (Joining Forces) party in government.
It remains to be seen if Sanchez can maintain enough support to exhaust his mandate that can run until 2027 given that some of his backers are parties that want to break Catalonia, or the Basque Country, away from Spain.
Spain’s inconclusive national elections on July 23 left a highly fractured parliament. The centre-right Popular Party received the most votes in the elections but failed to get enough support to form a government because of its alliances with the far-right Vox party, which finished third.
The amnesty deal would clean the slate for hundreds of Catalan separatists in legal trouble following the northeast region’s illegal 2017 secession bid that sparked Spain’s biggest crisis in decades. That includes benefiting former Catalan regional president Carles Puigdemont, who is a fugitive from Spanish law and considered public enemy No. 1 by many Spaniards.
Despite lingering disagreements, the two Catalan parties as well as two Basque ones said they would back Sanchez on Thursday but let him know that he must fulfill the economic and political deals reached with each of them.
The two Basque parties pointed out that their support was also key to keeping a progressive government in power and making sure the right wing remained out of office.
The agreements with the Catalan parties include opening talks on the possibility of holding an authorized referendum for independence for the wealthy northeast region, but within the legal framework of Spain’s Constitution. Sanchez has repeatedly said that he would not permit a vote that could break up Spain.
Analyst Oriol Bartomeus, professor of political science of the Autonomous University of Barcelona, said that since Sanchez has made it over the hurdle of forming a government he has a chance, albeit small, to keep it afloat for the full term.
“There is a possibility that it can last because it is very difficult, almost impossible, to win a no-confidence vote against this government,” Bartomeus said, pointing to the only successful no-confidence vote in 2018 when Sanchez replaced his conservative predecessor.
“That said, this government will be very unstable because (the two Catalan parties) that have supported its formation have done so with strings attached.”
The amnesty proposal has been heavily criticized by Spain’s judiciary, which considers it a violation of the separation of powers. The European Union is reviewing it.
The proposal sparked street protests backed by the Popular Party and Vox, which accuse Sanchez of betraying the nation just to stay in power. Protests outside the Socialist party’s headquarters in Madrid turned ugly last week and again on Wednesday night.
“The only real reproach that the right makes against us is that with these agreements we will have won the government. Which is what is going to happen today,” Sanchez told lawmakers before they voted.
“I told the president that he had made a mistake, but he is the one responsibility for it. The amnesty is the worst way to start the legislature,” Popular Party’s Alberto Nunez Feijoo, the opposition leader, said after Sanchez received an ovation from his Socialists for having won re-election.
The speaker of the house will now convey the result to King Felipe VI. Once published in the State Gazette, Sanchez will be sworn as the new prime minister before the king, most likely on Friday.
Sanchez received congratulations from European Union Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who said on X, formerly Twitter, that she looked “forward to working together” and to “bring forward the European project.”
Sanchez’s government will continue to oversee the expenditure of tens of millions of euros (dollars) from the European Union’s post-pandemic recovery program with its focus on a green energy transformation to adapt to climate change.