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  1. In the 2015 Spanish general elections, Podemos won 69 seats, becoming the country's third largest political force; 300,000 votes behind the main Spanish left-wing party, the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party. On 9 May 2016, Podemos formed the Unidos Podemos electoral alliance with the United Left, Equo, and regionalist left-wing parties.

  2. This page was last changed on 5 June 2023, at 16:50. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License and the GFDL; additional terms may apply.

  3. Political parties. Elections. The Socialists' Party of Aragon ( Aragonese: Partiu d'os Socialistas d'Aragón; Spanish: Partido de los Socialistas de Aragón, PSOE–Aragón) is the regional branch in Aragon of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), main centre-left party in Spain since the 1970s.

  4. Reinforced from the referendum result, the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) sought to take advantage of the favorable political situation. The election resulted in the PSOE winning a second consecutive—albeit diminished—majority with 184 out of 350 seats.

  5. People's Socialist Party (Spain) The People's Socialist Party ( Spanish: Partido Socialista Popular, PSP) was a Spanish political party of socialist ideology, led by Enrique Tierno Galván. Founded under Francoism, it merged into the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party shortly after the 1977 general election .

  6. Socialist Workers' Party (Greece) Socialist Workers Party (India) Socialist Workers Network Until 2018, the Irish Socialist Workers' Party was known as the SWP. Socialist Workers' Party (Mexico) Socialist Workers' Party (Netherlands, 1959) Socialist Workers Party (Palestine) Socialist Workers Party (Peru), founded 1971, member of LIT-CI.

  7. The Spanish Socialist WorkersParty (Partido Socialista Obrero Español – PSOE) was founded in Madrid in 1879. It was the largest party on the left during the Second Republic (1931–36), and provided the Republic with two prime ministers during the Spanish Civil War, Francisco Largo Caballero (1936–37) and Juan Negrín (1937–39).