| March 10, 2008 Spain's Socialist PM wins re-election
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MADRID, Spain (AP) - Spain's Socialist prime minister won
re-election Sunday, as voters dismissed worries about a slumping
economy, immigration and resurgent Basque militants to hand him a
second term.
The results were a clear endorsement of Prime Minister Jose Luis
Rodriguez Zapatero's record, which includes reforms such as
legalizing gay marriage and granting on-demand divorce, once
thought unthinkable in this overwhelmingly Roman Catholic country.
Zapatero also withdrew Spanish troops from Iraq and launched a
drive to cede more power to Spain's semiautonomous regions.
"The Spanish people have spoken clearly and decided to start a
new era," Zapatero told euphoric supporters outside the party's
headquarters in Madrid. "I will govern with a firm but open
hand."
With 97 percent of the vote counted, Zapatero's Socialist party
had 43.7 percent, versus 40.1 percent for the conservative Popular
Party, according to the Interior Ministry.
Opposition conservatives conceded defeat, but took solace in
picking up more parliamentary seats than the Socialists. Both
parties gained seats at the expense of smaller leftist and regional
groups.
While Zapatero's party picked up seats in the lower house, it
fell short of a majority and will have to form an alliance with
smaller regional parties to govern.
For Mariano Rajoy, Zapatero's conservative rival both in
Sunday's vote and in the 2004 election, his second defeat will
likely increase pressure
on him to step down as party chief.
"I thought Rajoy would do better, he speaks with such
conviction I'm surprised he fell behind," said Jose Eguren, a
29-year-old security guard in the Basque city of Bilbao.
Sunday's vote came two days after the killing of Socialist
politician Isaias Carrasco at the hands of the Basque militant
group ETA, which jolted Spaniards and prompted both parties to
cancel final campaign appearances.
Some in Spain had predicted the killing might prompt a wave of
sympathy and boost at the polls for Zapatero's party, especially
after Carrasco's 20-year-old daughter Sandra made an emotional
appeal Saturday for people to defy ETA by turning out en masse to
vote.
The timing of the attack was reminiscent of the massacre by
Islamic militants who killed 191 people in bombings against
commuter trains in Madrid on March 11, 2004.
Three days after that attack, Zapatero won a surprise victory
amid a wave of voter outrage at the ruling conservatives, who
blamed them on ETA even as evidence of Islamic involvement mounted.
The tactics were widely seen as a bid to deflect perceptions that
the killings were al-Qaida's revenge for the government's deeply
unpopular support of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
Many conservatives considered Zapatero's 2004 victory a fluke,
and saw Sunday's vote as their chance to correct it. The prime
minister's victory was seen as finally giving him a legitimacy that
critics say he has lacked.
Sunday's results showed the Socialists on their way to winning
168 seats in the 350-seat lower house, up from the current 164 but
shy of the 176 seats needed for an outright majority.
The Popular Party was also shown picking up seats, raising its
total from 148 to 154.
In his next term, Zapatero's main task will be to reboot the
once booming but now slowing economy, shaken by the subprime
mortgage crisis in the U.S. and a cooling construction sector.
Zapatero also faces the challenge of the resurgence of ETA,
which ended a cease-fire in December 2006 and made a dramatic show
of force with the killing of Carrasco.
The campaign was marked by acrimony, with Rajoy hammering
Zapatero on everything from immigration to the economy.
In two televised debates between the men, Rajoy used a form of
the word "liar" more than 30 times to describe Zapatero. He also
blamed Zapatero for not doing enough to spur the cooling economy.
Rajoy vowed to make immigrants sign a contract obliging them to
respect Spanish customs and learn the language, a position
Zapatero's party called xenophobic. The candidates also clashed on
Zapatero's willingness to grant more self-rule to Spain's
semiautonomous regions, which conservatives warn will tear apart
the nation.
All of these issues have left Spain polarized. Enrique Monreal,
35, a publishing company employee, expects the confrontational
climate to continue.
"It will take several years for things to calm down. Right now
it is so tense you are nervous even talking to your neighbor,"
Monreal said outside a polling station in Madrid.
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AP correspondents Daniel Woolls and Ciaran Giles in Madrid, and
Harold Heckle in Bilbao contributed to this report.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)