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Spain’s Pedro Sánchez wins new term as PM

After weeks of haggling, Socialist leader, Pedro Sánchez, has clinched a vote in parliament to lead Spain for another term as prime minister.

He has secured a four-seat majority in the 350-seat chamber, after sealing an amnesty deal for Catalans involved in a failed bid to secede from Spain.

The conservative Popular Party won elections in July, but leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, failed to form a majority.

Mr Sánchez told MPs that the amnesty deal would help “heal wounds”.

His reliance on two Catalan pro-independence parties to form a majority has infuriated oppo­nents, who argue his proposed amnesty deal for hundreds of politicians and activists will trigger another bid for secession and threaten Spain’s territorial unity.

Socialist MPs applauded their leader for several minutes when the result of the vote was confirmed but MPs were booed by protesters as they filed out of the Spanish Congress building.

Last weekend, tens of thousands of Spaniards took part in protests across Spain, and Mr Feijóo has accused the prime minister of pur­suing his own interests rather than his country’s.

The Popular Party leader shook his opponent’s hand after the vote but later declared to reporters: “I told the president of the govern­ment that this was a mistake but he is responsible for what he has just done.”

The Socialists were clearly in the hands of those who wanted “rec­ognition of a nation different from that of Spain and a referendum for self-determination”, Mr Feijóo declared.

—BBC

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