Valencia (EFE).- The Valencia Provincial Council and a seat from Les Corts are the focus of the 28M count. The definitive scrutiny of the municipal and regional elections on May 28 begins this Friday, with attention focused on the provincial deputy of Ontinyent, key to whether it is the right or the left who governs the Valencia Provincial Council, and on the last regional deputy for Alicante, which went to Vox but the PSOE came very close to winning it.
After the provisional scrutiny on electoral night, the final count begins on the fifth day of the elections, in which the ballots of Valencians who live abroad and have sent their vote are counted at the Electoral Boards, and the ballots are reviewed. tally sheets and possible errors are verified at the request of the parties.
The future of the Valencia Provincial Council, at stake in the 28M count
In the Valencia Provincial Council, and after the dance on the website of the Ministry of the Interior, which on election night no provincial deputy awarded to Ens Uneix and did so the next day after taking it away from the PP, at the moment there is a tie between the right (the PP has 13 deputies and Vox, 2) and the left (the PSPV has 12 and Compromís, 3).
The key to breaking the tie in the institution that the PSPV has chaired in coalition with Compromís for the last two legislatures is held by the deputy of the Ontinyent judicial party, which on Monday was attributed to Ens Uneix, the party founded by the previous president, Jorge Rodríguez, after being expelled from the PSPV for the Alquería case -from which he has been acquitted according to the sentence made public this Tuesday-.
Those 16 votes are the difference between Ens Uneix and the PP in the municipalities of Bufali and Beniatjar, where they voted with open lists and the calculation for each candidacy was made by dividing the votes for each component by the number of candidates on the list up to a maximum of four. If they are asked to verify those votes and there are changes in the calculation, the future of the Provincial Council could change.
The last deputy of Alicante
Another count that will be followed closely is that of the autonomous ones in the Alicante constituency, where the last of the 35 deputies at stake was taken by Vox, although the PSOE was 283 ballots away from winning it and is going to fight to try to make it so, taking into account that traditionally the majority of the vote abroad tends to go to the left.
In the event that this last deputy for Alicante was for the PSOE (which would rise to 12 in this province) and not for Vox (which would drop to 4), the correlation of majorities in Les Corts would not be altered, where the right obtained the Sunday 53 deputies (40 the PP and 13 Vox) and the left 46 (31 the PP and 15 Compromís), although the difference between blocks would be reduced by one seat.
The tie between Gestalgar and Alcocer
The municipal elections left two municipalities tied in the number of votes: Gestalgar (Valencia), where both the PP and the PSOE obtained 207 votes each, and in Alcocer de Planes (Alicante), where these two parties obtained 68 ballots each.
The tiebreaker is going to be attempted in the recount, where for example in Gestalgar the PSOE is going to ask that two votes that were invalid be admitted as valid (one with a line, but not in the names, and another with a break in the white part of the ballot paper) and two votes cast abroad are expected to have arrived.
If the tie persists, the affected parties will present allegations, and if after the claims none of them are finally proclaimed the winner, a draw will have to be made to decide who will receive the control rod.
Deadlines for claims and appeals after the 28M count
Officially, the final scrutiny is held until June 5 in the Zone Electoral Boards in the case of the municipal ones and in the Provincial Electoral Boards the autonomous ones -if it does not end tomorrow it will continue on Monday-, after which claims can be presented before these Meetings on June 6, which will be resolved on the 7th, and against which the Central Electoral Board (JEC) can be appealed the following day.
The JEC resolves the appeals on June 13 and the following day the elected councilors and regional deputies are proclaimed, in order to constitute the new Town Halls on June 16 (if no electoral dispute is presented, which would postpone it until July 7) and the new Corts on June 26.
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