KEY POINTS
  • With all votes counted, Spain's conservative Partido Popular party secured 136 parliamentary seats, followed by the incumbent socialist party PSOE with 122 seats.
  • Ahead of the election, there was speculation that PP could join forces with Vox to form a right-wing coalition. However, their combined 169 seats remain below the 176 required.
  • "Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez will have a shot at staying in power by negotiating a deal with far-left Sumar and smaller parties, although a repetition of elections is also a material possibility," one political risk analyst said.
The leader and candidate of conservative Partido Popular (People's Party) Alberto Nunez Feijoo.

Spain's election Sunday ended with no clear majority for either of the two main parties, throwing Europe's fourth-largest economy into political limbo.

With all votes counted, Spain's conservative Partido Popular party secured 136 parliamentary seats, followed by the incumbent socialist party PSOE with 122 seats. Far-right party Vox came third with 33 seats, while the leftish Sumar party got 31.