Enrique Rodríguez de la Rubia |
Madrid (EFE) Move on to the nomination for Vice President.
Sumar has appeared for the first time in the barometer of the Center for Sociological Research (CIS) for this month of April, with an estimated 10.6 percent of the vote, well ahead of United We Can, which falls from 10 percent in March to 6.7 this month.
The crosses by memory of the CIS vote throw an indentation in the space of United We Can practically without precedents.
Only 33.7 percent of those who chose the purple ballot in the 2019 general elections say they would repeat it and, in fact, there are more who would now opt for Sumar, which rises to 36.1 percent of the total number of former voters. of We can.
The CIS has explained that Sumar’s estimated vote has been made “according to the direct responses of those surveyed” and the aggregation of those parties and organizations that have publicly expressed their support for Yolanda Díaz’s platform.
These formations include Izquierda Unida, Compromís, En Comú, Más País and EQUO, which is also reflected in the responses of those surveyed.
Voters of Más País more on the side of Sumar than of Podemos
59.4 percent of the former voters of Más País confess that they will choose the Sumar ballot, and only 7.3 percent will opt for Podemos. A relevant percentage of the voters of Íñigo Errejón’s party, 18 percent, confess that they still do not know who they will support.
But the entry of Sumar into the CIS is not explained only by the transfers from United We Can since 7.8 percent of those who voted for the PSOE in 2019 now opt for Yolanda Díaz, the largest transfer of votes to Sumar beyond the purple.
In fact, 14.5 of socialist voters prefer Díaz to be the next president of the Government, a percentage that rises to 49.3 among those of United We Can.
In this section of those preferred to govern the country, the CIS does not include the general secretary of Podemos, Ione Belarra. However, 12.8 percent of Podemos voters in 2019 say that their preferred option to preside over the Government is “another”.
The good image of Yolanda Díaz in wide spaces on the left is reflected in the note given to her by the CIS respondents.
Díaz gets an average grade of 4.87 out of ten, a rating that rises to 7.50 among Podemos voters; 7.75 for Más País, and 6.20 among the Socialists.
Sumar wins among voters 25-54 and women
By age, Sumar has its main barn of votes between 25 and 54 years old and among women.
If in the group of Spaniards, the vice president obtains a 4.87, among women it rises to 5.06 out of ten. Identical score given by those surveyed between 65 and 74 years of age, who are the ones who give it the best rating.
Cities with more than a million inhabitants are also Sumar’s main breadbasket, with a direct vote – without the CIS estimate – of 11.5 percent, far from the 7.0 percent of the smallest populations.
A similar phenomenon occurs when respondents are asked to rate Yolanda Díaz. The vice president obtains a 5.13 in the most populated cities, and a 4.49 in towns with fewer than 2,000 inhabitants.
Sumar gets its best result among voters with higher education, 11.1 percent, compared to 3.8 percent of those surveyed without studies.
However, citizens without studies or with primary studies are the ones who give it the best grade, 5.07 and 5.35 respectively.
As for the employment situation, things are very distributed. The President of the Government and leader of the PSOE, Pedro Sánchez, is the favorite for retirees, “elementary occupations”, “unpaid domestic work”, medium-level technicians and service workers, operators and craftsmen.
The leader of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, is among directors and managers, farmers and field workers, while Yolanda Díaz, triumphs in the section of “scientific and intellectual professionals”, while Santiago Abascal, of Vox, it does so with the military and the agents of the security forces.