Results of the 23J General Elections in Cantabria.
Below you can see the graph of the results of the general elections in Castellón:
Yolanda Diaz (Sumar), Pedro Sanchez (PSOE), Alberto Nunez Feijoo (PP) and Santiago Abascal (Vox).
The absolute majority after the elections is obtained with half of the seats plus one. The chamber is made up of 350 representatives of the different parties. Therefore, half is at 175, and the absolute majority at 176 seats. After elections, it is necessary to obtain an absolute majority in the Congress of Deputies for the possible government to move forward.
Less than a week before the elections, few details are escaping about the career and personal life of the candidates for the Presidency of the Government
One month after the elections, and regardless of the agreements and pacts, the constitutive session of Congress must be held, in which the president and the different members of the Cortes Generales board are appointed. The following week, the king will meet with the leaders of the parties represented in the Chamber. After this, he will name the candidate who can run for the investiture and a vote will be held in Congress. At this point two things can happen, that the investiture goes ahead and a new Government is formed, or that the parties do not reach an agreement and the vote does not go ahead.
Achieving 176 seats is not always easy. It may happen that a single party does not reach the necessary number of deputies to achieve an absolute majority. Given the situation, and as happened in the 2019 general elections, the Congress parties must meet in order to reach government pacts. If several parties manage to gather 176 deputies, they will be able to govern through the coalition government formula.
In the event that the selected candidate does not achieve an absolute majority, a period of two months will be opened to carry out new investiture attempts. If no Government succeeds during that period, the courts will be dissolved and elections will be called again 54 days later.
Keep reading:
How many seats are needed for the absolute majority in the general elections in SpainGuide to follow the vote count liveThe town of Yolanda Díaz where Spain’s military ships are made: industry, quiet beaches and hiking trailsCasa Labra, the tavern with more than 160 years of history that saw the birth of the PSOE and still serves its iconic slices of codUncertainty after the exit polls: GAD3 gives the majority to Feijóo and Abascal but Sigma Dos questions it Feijóo’s menu to turn Spain into “a country where to have children”: four-month permits and schools open all year roundThe PSOE recipe for 23-J: continue with its main policies in the face of the threat of repeal from the rightEliminate ‘chiringuitos’, massively reduce taxes, and that Spain “recover common sense”: this is the Vox programWho is who in Sumar: all the parties and leaders that make up Yolanda Díaz’s coalitionThe most intimate side of Pedro Sánchez: romantic, devoted father and with a “flirting” pastSantiago Abascal in intimacy: married twice, father of four children and defender of weapons
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