With 122 seats, two more than before the election but seven short of an absolute majority, Sánchez is set to remain in power and has vowed to form a government with the help of several smaller forces.
The Popular Party led by Pablo Casado also increased its seats in parliament, winning 136, while the far-right Vox lost 19 seats compared to four years earlier and secured only 10.5 percent of the vote. Prime minister Pedro Sánchez’s gamble to advance the election date paid off and his party took a jubilant victory. At least, that’s what the mainstream media wants you to believe.
However, many people in Spain are telling a different story. In one online poll that we found, more than 40 thousand people who voted believed there was election fraud. There are also reports of the Prime Minister buying votes and falsifying election data. As we always say at UNN politics is the Hollywood for ugly people and elections are always just for show. Elections are just “selections” and the results are determined by the script writers.
So, was the Spanish selection fraudulent? It was, as is every selection in every country. Hopefully, in the near future the script writers will be unemployed.