Spanish general election, 2000

Spanish general election, 2000

1996 ←
March 12, 2000
→ 2004

All 350 seats of the Congress of Deputies and 208 of 259 seats in the Senate
176 seats needed for a majority in the Congress of Deputies
Turnout 68.71%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader José María Aznar Joaquín Almunia Francisco Frutos
Party People's Party Spanish Socialist Workers' Party United Left
Leader since 20 January 1989 21 June 1997 7 December 1998
Leader's seat Madrid Madrid Madrid
Last election 156 seats, 38.79% 141 seats, 37.63% 21 seats, 10.54%
Seats won 183 125 8
Seat change 27 16 3
Popular vote 10,321,178 7,918,752 1,263,043
Percentage 44.52% 34.16% 5.45%
Swing 5.73% 3.47% 5.09%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Xavier Trias Iñaki Anasagasti Francisco Rodríguez
Party Convergence and Union Basque Nationalist Party Galician Nationalist Bloc
Leader since 2000 22 June 1986 1996
Leader's seat Barcelona Vizcaya A Coruña
Last election 16 seats, 4.60% 5 seats, 1.27% 2 seats, 0.88%
Seats won 15 7 3
Seat change 1 2 1
Popular vote 970,421 353,953 306,268
Percentage 4.29% 1.53% 1.32%
Swing 0.31% 0.26% 0.44%

Most voted party in each province, PSOE (red) and PP (blue). Every province is a multi-member district for the Congress.

Prime Minister before election

José María Aznar
People's Party

Elected Prime Minister

José María Aznar
People's Party

Spain

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Legislative elections were held in Spain on 12 March 2000. The elections were for 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies, and the 208 directly elected seats in the upper house, the Senate, determining the Prime Minister of Spain. The elections were commonly referred to as 12-M in the Spanish media in the weeks previous and next to the election day.

While most opinion polls gave him a clear victory, the incumbent People's Party of Prime Minister José María Aznar was elected to a second term in office with a surprising absolute majority of 183: a 27 seat gain from the previous election: a rise from opinion polls which gave him a plurality victory only. The opposition Spanish Socialist Workers' Party saw their number of seats reduced to 125, one of its worst results ever. While neither one of its worst defeats since Spanish transition to democracy (it lost more seats in the 1986 election, losing 18; and a similar number of seats were lost in 1996, with 16) nor the party's worst electoral result ever since (winning 118 and 121 seats in 1977 and 1979, respectively) the party's result in these elections quickly became known as Almunia's defeat, a psychological barrier for the PSOE in future elections; a result which would be vastly exceeded 11 years later.

This election featured some notable aspects. This was the first absolute majority the PP obtained in a general election, and its best result in both popular vote share and seats won until 2011. In contrast, the PSOE got its worst election result in 21 years. This was also the second time a candidate received more than 10 million votes, the last time being in 1982, when 10.1 million voters elected Felipe González from the PSOE. The voters' turnout registered was one of the lowest in democratic Spain for Spanish election standards (which tend to be usually high), with only 68.71% of the voting-able population casting a vote.

Contents

Overview

The Congress of Deputies consists of 350 members, elected in 50 multi-member districts using the D'Hondt method, with Ceuta and Melilla electing one member each using plurality voting.[1]

Apportionment

Under Article 68 of the Spanish constitution, the boundaries of the electoral districts must be the same as the provinces of Spain and, under Article 141, this can only be altered with the approval of Congress.[2]

The apportionment of seats to provinces follows the largest remainder method over the resident population ("Padrón") with a minimum of two seats (cf. Art. 162 of the Electoral Law).[3]

Electoral system

Voting is on the basis of universal suffrage in a secret ballot. The electoral system used is closed list proportional representation with seats allocated using the D'Hondt method. Only lists which poll 3% of the total vote (which includes votes "en blanco", i.e., for none of the above) can be considered. Under articles 12 and 68 of the constitution, the minimum voting age is 18.[2]

Eligibility

Article 67.3 of the Spanish Constitution prohibits dual membership of both chambers of the Cortes or of the Cortes and regional assemblies, meaning that candidates must resign from regional assemblies if elected. Article 70 also makes active judges, magistrates, public defenders, serving military personnel, active police officers and members of constitutional and electoral tribunals ineligible.[2] Article 55, Section 2 of the 1985 electoral law also disqualifies director generals or equivalent leaders of state monopolies and public bodies such as the Spanish state broadcaster RTVE.[4]

Opinion polls

Date(s) Conducted Polling institute PP PSOE IU CiU PNV Others / undecided Lead
12 March 2000 Election Results 44.5%
183 seats
34.2%
125 seats
5.5%
8 seats
4.2%
15 seats
1.5%
7 seats
10.2%
12 seats
10.4%
5 March Opina 41.8%
166 — 170 seats
37.2%
136 — 140 seats
8.0%
12 — 14 seats
4.2%
14 — 15 seats
1.3%
6 seats
7.5%
5 — 16 seats
4.6%
5 March Ipsos-EcoConsulting 40.5%
158 — 164 seats
36.7%
138 — 144 seats
7.3%
9 — 12 seats
4.3%
15 — 16 seats
1.4%
6 — 7 seats
9.8%
7 — 24 seats
3.8%
5 March Demoscopia 41.7%
165 — 171 seats
37.1%
131 — 139 seats
4.6%
5 March El Mundo
164 seats

160 seats
30 January Opina (no PSOE-IU pact) 42.5%
164 — 168 seats
37.0%
138 — 143 seats
7.5%
14 — 15 seats
4.3%
14 — 15 seats
1.3%
5 seats
7.4%
4 — 15 seats
5.5%
30 January Opina (PSOE-IU pact) 42.0%
157 — 160 seats
40.0%
145 — 148 seats
8.0%
15 — 16 seats
4.0%
14 seats
1.2%
4 — 6 seats
4.8%
6 — 15 seats
2.0%
January CIS 41.6% 36.6% 7.4% 4.1% 1.3% 9.0% 5.0%
2000
28 November Opina 41.5%
163 — 167 seats
36.0%
132 — 140 seats
8.0%
13 — 15 seats
4.0%
14 — 15 seats
1.5%
5 — 6 seats
9.0%
7 — 23 seats
5.5%
October CIS 40.6% 35.8% 6.8% 4.5% 1.2% 11.1% 4.8%
July CIS 40.7% 35.8% 6.6% 4.6% 1.2% 11.1% 4.9%
April CIS 41.0% 35.9% 8.9% 4.6% 1.3% 8.3% 5.1%
31 January Opina 42.0% 37.0% 7.5% 4.4% 1.5% 7.6% 5.0%
January CIS 41.1% 35.4% 9.2% 4.5% 1.3% 8.5% 5.7%
1999
22 November Opina 41.5% 37.5% 6.5% 4.8% 1.0% 8.7% 4.0%
October CIS 40.9% 36.6% 9.1% 4.2% 1.3% 7.9% 4.3%
July CIS 38.4% 37.9% 9.3% 4.5% 1.3% 8.6% 0.5%
17 May Opina 40.0% 38.0% 7.0% 5.0% 1.0% 9.0% 2.0%
April CIS 37.1% 38.9% 9.0% 4.9% 1.3% 8.8% 1.8%
January Opina 41.0% 36.0% 6.5% 4.8% 1.0% 10.7% 5.0%
January CIS 40.5% 36.4% 9.3% 4.5% 1.3% 8.0% 4.1%
1998
14 December Opina 40.0% 37.0% 6.5% 4.6% 0.8% 11.1% 3.0%
October CIS 39.6% 36.4% 9.0% 4.6% 1.2% 9.2% 3.2%
28 September Opina 40.0% 38.5% 8.5% 5.2% 1.0% 6.8% 1.5%
July CIS 40.3% 38.2% 9.4% 4.3% 1.4% 6.4% 2.1%
22 June Opina 40.0% 38.0% 10.5% 5.0% 1.0% 5.5% 2.0%
25 May Opina 39.5% 38.0% 10.0% 5.1% 1.2% 6.2% 1.5%
27 April Opina 38.0% 39.0% 10.5% 5.0% 1.0% 6.5% 1.0%
April CIS 39.2% 37.4% 10.5% 4.6% 1.2% 7.1% 1.8%
16 March Opina 38.0% 38.5% 10.0% 5.0% 1.0% 7.5% 0.5%
9 February Opina 38.4% 37.4% 10.0% 5.0% 1.0% 8.2% 1.0%
January CIS 38.7% 38.2% 10.0% 4.5% 1.4% 7.2% 0.5%
1997
6 October Opina 37.2% 39.1% 10.3% 4.8% 1.4% 7.2% 1.9%
October CIS 36.3% 39.9% 10.5% 5.1% 1.3% 6.9% 3.6%
July CIS 38.8% 37.3% 11.2% 4.6% 1.4% 6.7% 1.5%
April CIS 38.6% 37.3% 11.3% 4.9% 1.3% 6.6% 1.3%
3 March 1996 Election Results 38.8%
156 seats
37.6%
141 seats
10.5%
21 seats
4.6%
16 seats
1.3%
5 seats
8.2%
11 seats
1.2%

Results

Congress

The ruling People's Party saw its vote share increase little in comparison to 1996 (roughly 600,000 votes), yet it achieved one of its greatest electoral victories until the 2011 election, winning an absolute majority of 183. The opposition Spanish Socialist Workers' Party, in contrast, lost the support of around 1.5 million voters (who either abstained or voted for other parties), which resulted in the loss of 16 seats to stay at 125 seats from the 141 it held in the previous legislature. This election also resulted in the second highest abstention rate for a Spanish general election; surpassed by small margins only by the abstention registered in 1979. Both elections registered an abstention of around 32% of the electorate.

PSOE losses were severe. It won the popular vote in only 6 out of the 52 constituencies and in just two of the 19 autonomous regions (17 communities and 2 cities): Catalonia and Andalusia. Meanwhile, the PP won in 9 of the regions with an absolute majority of the popular vote, while winning another 16 regions with a plurality of the votes, winning an overall majority of 183 seats and a vote share of 44.5%. As a result of the election's outcome, Joaquín Almunia resigned as party leader, paving the way for the 35th PSOE Congress in which José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, future Prime Minister of Spain, would be elected as his successor.

While most opinion polls gave an advantage to Aznar's PP, they failed to determine the scope of his victory, and gave away the possibility of winning an absolute majority. This came mostly because in previous elections, opinion polls usually overestimated the PP's advantage while underestimating PSOE's popular support; something which opinion agencies wanted to avoid this time. However, unlike what happened in 1993 and 1996, the Socialists failed to mobilize its electorate this time. Not so the PP, which achieved the largest support (in number of votes) a Spanish Prime Ministerial candidate had ever received until the next election.[5]

Popular vote
PP
  
44.52%
PSOE
  
34.16%
IU
  
5.45%
CiU
  
4.19%
PNV
  
1.53%
Others
  
10.15%
Parliamentary seats
PP
  
52.29%
PSOE
  
35.71%
CiU
  
4.29%
IU
  
2.29%
PNV
  
2.00%
Others
  
3.42%
e • d Summary of the 12 March 2000 Congress of Deputies elections results
Parties Votes % ±pp swing MPs
1996 2000 ± % ±
People's Party 10,321,178 44.52 5.7 156 183 27 52.29 7.7
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party 7,918,752 34.16 3.4 141 125 16 35.71 4.6
Convergence and Union 970,421 4.19 0.4 16 15 1 4.29 0.3
United Left 1,263,043 5.45 5.1 21 8 13 2.29 3.7
Basque Nationalist Party 353,953 1.53 0.3 5 7 2 2.00 0.6
Canarian Coalition 248,261 1.07 0.2 4 4 0 1.14 0.0
Galician Nationalist Bloc 306,268 1.32 0.4 2 3 1 0.86 0.3
Andalusian Party 206,255 0.89 0.4 0 1 1 0.29 0.3
Republican Left of Catalonia 194,715 0.84 0.2 1 1 0 0.29 0.0
Initiative for Catalonia Greens 119,290 0.51 0.5 1 1 0.29 0.3
Eusko Alkartasuna 100,742 0.43 0.0 1 1 0 0.29 0.0
Chunta Aragonesista 75,356 0.33 0.1 0 1 1 0.29 0.3
Other parties 736,233 3.18 1.0 1 0 1 0.00 0.3
Blank ballots 366,823 1.58 0.6
Total valid 23,181,290 99.32 0.2 350 350 0 100.00 0.0
Invalid ballots 158,200 0.68 0.2
Total (turnout 68.71%) 23,339,490 100.00 8.7
Source: Ministerio del Interior de España

Party vote share by electoral district

Electoral District PSOE
(1996)
PP
(1996)
PSOE
(2000)
PP
(2000)
PSOE
Change
PP
Change
A Coruña 33.8 47.3 24.7 51.9 -9.1 4.6
Álava 25.4 27.3 24.3 39.1 -1.1 11.8
Albacete 43.9 44.6 41.2 51.2 -2.7 6.6
Alicante 40.0 45.7 34.8 54.2 -5.2 8.5
Almería 47.1 40.2 42.2 48.6 -4.9 8.4
Asturias 39.8 41.0 37.0 46.3 -2.8 5.3
Ávila 30.4 58.7 26.6 65.3 -3.8 6.6
Badajoz 48.7 39.1 44.7 47.0 -4.0 7.9
Barcelona 40.3 18.3 35.5 23.5 -4.8 5.2
Burgos 30.8 54.3 29.0 58.3 -1.8 4.0
Cáceres 47.9 42.0 44.6 47.7 -3.3 5.7
Cádiz 43.9 35.3 39.4 41.2 -4.5 5.9
Cantabria 35.6 50.4 33.4 56.8 -2.4 6.4
Castellón 40.0 46.4 35.3 53.8 -4.7 7.4
Ceuta 35.8 53.2 18.0 47.6 -17.8 5.6
Ciudad Real 45.2 45.0 42.5 51.7 -2.7 6.7
Córdoba 44.6 33.0 40.5 40.8 -4.1 7.8
Cuenca 42.4 50.2 41.1 53.3 -1.3 3.1
Girona 36.4 12.0 28.4 15.9 -8.0 3.9
Granada 46.5 38.4 44.3 42.6 -2.2 4.2
Guadalajara 34.9 51.8 36.0 54.4 -1.1 2.6
Guipúzcoa 22.7 14.3 23.7 24.6 1.0 10.3
Huelva 52.1 33.9 46.9 40.1 -5.2 6.2
Huesca 41.1 45.6 37.0 45.1 -4.1 -0.5
Islas Baleares 35.9 45.1 29.3 53.8 -6.6 8.7
Jaen 48.7 36.9 47.7 40.3 -1.1 3.4
La Rioja 36.6 49.4 34.8 54.1 -1.8 4.7
Las Palmas 25.8 42.4 18.4 48.0 -7.4 5.6
León 37.8 48.7 31.9 48.7 -5.9 0.0
Lleida 33.0 17.9 27.6 21.0 -2.4 3.1
Lugo 32.5 53.4 22.9 57.9 -9.6 4.5
Madrid 31.4 49.3 33.0 52.5 1.6 3.2
Málaga 42.0 38.5 39.0 43.4 -3.0 4.9
Melilla 43.3 50.5 20.4 49.8 -22.9 -0.7
Murcia 38.0 49.9 32.4 58.1 -5.6 8.2
Navarra 30.2 37.1 27.3 49.9 -2.9 12.8
Ourense 36.2 48.8 23.1 57.2 -13.1 8.4
Palencia 37.9 51.3 35.8 55.5 -2.1 4.2
Pontevedra 32.5 47.1 23.0 53.4 -9.5 6.3
Salamanca 35.0 54.1 32.6 58.5 -2.4 4.4
Santa Cruz de Tenerife 34.5 32.4 26.3 35.0 -8.2 2.6
Segovia 32.2 54.7 30.8 57.5 -1.4 2.8
Sevilla 50.0 31.4 49.0 35.0 -1.0 3.6
Soria 34.3 55.2 32.0 58.4 -2.3 3.2
Tarragona 38.1 20.0 32.4 24.3 -5.7 4.3
Teruel 41.2 49.2 33.8 47.9 -7.4 -1.3
Toledo 41.7 48.2 40.2 52.7 -1.5 4.5
Valencia 37.0 42.0 33.2 50.4 -3.8 8.4
Valladolid 35.8 48.8 35.1 53.1 -0.7 4.3
Vizcaya 23.8 18.4 22.8 27.2 -1.0 8.8
Zamora 37.0 54.0 32.4 58.8 -4.6 4.4
Zaragoza 31.9 48.2 29.1 47.6 -2.8 -0.6
SPAIN TOTALS 37.6 38.8 34.2 44.5 -3.4 5.7
Party seat allocation by electoral district

Senate

The People's Party increased its majority on the Senate up to 127 seats, to the detriment of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party which saw its own representation reduced from 81 to 53: a net loss of 28 seats.

e • d Summary of the 12 March 2000 Senate of Spain elections results
Parties MPs
1996 2000 ±
People's Party 112 127 15
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party 81 53 28
Entesa Catalana de Progrés 1 8 7
Convergence and Union 8 8 0
Basque Nationalist Party 4 6 2
Canarian Coalition 1 5 4
Independent Party of Lanzarote 1 1 0
Total elected 208 208 0
Members appointed by the regional legislatures 49 51 0
Total 257 259 0
Source: Ministerio del Interior de España

Investiture voting

On April 26, José María Aznar was invested Prime Minister for a second term by the Congress of Deputies, thanks to the absolute majority of his party. Also supporting Aznar were CiU and Canarian Coalition. To date, this is the only investiture voting in which all 350 deputies voted either Yes or No, without abstentions or absences.[6]

26 April 2000
Investiture voting for José María Aznar López (PP)

Absolute majority: 176/350

Vote Parties Votes
Y Yes PP (183), CiU (15), CC (4) 202
No PSOE (125), IU (8), PNV (7), BNG (3)
CHA (1), ERC (1), PA (1), EA (1), ICV (1)
148
Abstentions 0

External links

References