Spain's acting Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez hopes his Socialists and allies can deny  conservative rival Alberto Nunez Feijoo in a parliamentary vote
Spain's acting Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez hopes his Socialists and allies can deny conservative rival Alberto Nunez Feijoo in a parliamentary vote AFP

The head of Spain's conservative opposition Popular Party (PP) will face a parliamentary vote to become prime minister in September even though he lacks the necessary support in the assembly.

Parliament speaker Francina Armengol said Wednesday the debate on PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo's bid to form a new government will start on September 26 and culminate in a vote the following day.

"I believe that this date gives more than enough time for the candidate to carry out the appropriate negotiations with the representatives of the different political formations," she said a day after Spain's King Felipe VI nominated Feijoo to try to form a government following an inconclusive July general election.

The PP won the most seats but neither it nor acting Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's Socialists emerged with a clear path to achieve the 176-seat majority needed to win an investiture vote and take office.

On the face of it, Feijoo will fall short as his PP has 137 parliamentary seats while potential allies far-right Vox and two small regional parties only have 35 between them.

If pooled, those would give a PP-led coalition only 172 votes -- four short.

The PP has in the past reached deals with Catalan and Basque separatist parties but its alliance with Vox -- which is fiercely opposed to separatism -- means they are not an option this time around.

The party "has very little chance" since it lacks options for enough support, said Moises Ruiz, a professor at the European University, echoing the view of many analysts.

Even though he will likely fail, Feijoo wants to face an investiture vote to "not disappoint his voters" and "in an attempt to strengthen his leadership" within the right, he told AFP.

If Feijoo fails to get a majority during a first investiture vote, he will face a second vote where just a simple majority of more yes than no votes are needed.

If he loses again, the king must pick a new candidate -- most likely Sanchez, whose party finished second.

Sanchez wants to return at the head of a "progressive" government of centre and radical left, and insists he could garner more votes than Feijoo.

He has the support of far-left formation Sumar and could cobble together a majority if he wins support from smaller regional parties, including Basque and Catalan pro-independence formations.

But Catalan separatist parties have set a high bar for their support, calling for a sweeping amnesty for hundreds of activists facing legal action for their role in a failed 2017 secession bid and the right to hold an independence referendum.

Analysts said Feijoo getting the first chance to form a government will give Sanchez more time to negotiate with other parties to win their support.

"It is the best scenario for Sanchez... because he is facing very difficult negotiations," Paloma Roman, a political scientist at Madrid's Complutense University, told AFP.

Sanchez's most difficult potential partner is hardline Catalan separatist party JxCat, led by Carles Puigdemont who is in exile in Belgium.

Puigdemont headed the regional government of Catalonia when it staged a referendum banned by Madrid on October 1, 2017, which was followed by a short-lived declaration of independence. He fled Spain shortly after to avoid prosecution.

Sanchez managed to secure enough support from other parties -- including JxCat -- to elect Armengol as parliament speaker last week.

"If there is someone who know show to move in this time of political confusion and complexities it is Pedro Sanchez," said Ruiz.

Sanchez governed in a coalition with far-left party Podemos -- now part of Sumar -- since 2020 and has secured the support of separatist parties to pass several laws.

If no candidate secures a majority within two months of the first investiture vote, new elections have to be called, which has happened with elections in both 2015 and 2019.