Madrid (EFE) or 144 seats in Congress.
Said polls place the PSOE in second place, but they also offer different visions of its trend, since for some it rises in the polls and for others it falls; it would achieve 109 seats in the best of cases, or between 89 and 91 deputies.
According to some of the polls, Sumar, Yolanda Díaz’s platform, would break out with force with 35 seats or with between 28 and 30 parliamentarians, while United Podemos would drop to 31 deputies (El País), 8 parliamentarians (El Mundo), or between 3 and 5 (The Reason).
In the April barometer of 40db for El País and Cadena Ser, the PSOE would be only six tenths behind the PP in voting intentions, in a situation of practical tie, the newspaper states on its front page.
According to El País, the Socialists are reversing a negative trend that led them to be three points behind in November. Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s party stands at 28% of the vote, compared to 27.4% for the PSOE, which in seats translates into a projection of 122 for the PP and 109 for the PSOE.
Santiago Abascal’s party loses 10 seats compared to the 2019 elections and would stand at 42, and Unidas Podemos obtains 11.8% of the votes in the poll, and gives up four of its current seats, that is, it would go from 35 of 2019 to 31. This survey was carried out before Sumar’s presentation and does not offer data on Yolanda Díaz’s project.
El Mundo highlights on its front page that the Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez collapses after the launch of Sumar and has dropped to 22.7% -22.8% in voting intentions, and would stand at 91 seats (now it has 120 ).
The PP would also suffer a setback by achieving between 30.2% and 30.5% of the ballots, which would translate into 135 seats. Vox would obtain between 40 or 41 deputies, Sumar would achieve 35 seats and Unidas Podemos would stay with 8 seats.
The El Mundo survey has been prepared by Sigma Dos with 1,755 interviews conducted between April 3 and 5
According to the NC Report survey published by La Razón, the PP would win the elections today with 33.1% of the votes, and between 142 and 144 seats.
The popular ones grew three seats compared to the previous March poll and gained almost three million votes compared to the last elections, according to this poll that already includes the impact of Vox’s second motion of no confidence against Sánchez and the official irruption of the platform led by Vice President Yolanda Díaz.
For the La Razón survey, the PSOE would get from 89 to 91 seats, Vox from 41 to 43, Sumar from 28 to 30, ErC from 12 to 13 and Podemos would drop to 3 or 5 parliamentarians.