Spanish Socialist Workers' Party
Partido Socialista Obrero Español
AbbreviationPSOE
Secretary GeneralPedro Sánchez
Deputy Secretary GeneralMaría Jesús Montero
PresidentCristina Narbona
FounderPablo Iglesias Posse
Founded2 May 1879 (1879-05-02)
HeadquartersC/ Ferraz, 70
28008, Madrid
NewspaperEl Socialista
Student wingCampus Joven
Youth wingSocialist Youth of Spain
Trade unionGeneral Union of Workers
Membership (2022)Decrease 159,943[1]
IdeologySocial democracy[2]
Federalism[3]
Pro-Europeanism[4][5][6]
Political positionCentre-left[7][8]
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
International affiliationProgressive Alliance
Socialist International
European Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Colours  Red
Anthem
"Himno del PSOE"[9]
"Anthem of the PSOE"
Congress of Deputies
121 / 350
Senate
88 / 266
European Parliament (Spanish seats)
21 / 59
Regional Parliaments
324 / 1,261
Regional Governments
3 / 19
Local government
20,784 / 60,941
Election symbol
Website
www.psoe.es

The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (Spanish: Partido Socialista Obrero Español [paɾˈtiðo soθjaˈlista oˈβɾeɾo espaˈɲol] ; abbr. PSOE [peˈsoe] ) is a social-democratic[2][10] political party in Spain. The PSOE has been in government longer than any other political party in modern democratic Spain: from 1982 to 1996 under Felipe González, from 2004 to 2011 under José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, and since 2018 under Pedro Sánchez.

The PSOE was founded in 1879, making it the oldest party currently active in Spain. The PSOE played a key role during the Second Spanish Republic, being part of the coalition government from 1931 to 1933 and from 1936 to 1939, when the Republic was defeated by Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War. The party was then banned under Franco's dictatorship and its members and leaders were persecuted or exiled; the ban was only lifted in 1977 in the transition to democracy that followed Franco's death. Historically Marxist, it abandoned Marxism in 1979.[11] Like most mainstream Spanish political organizations since the mid-1980s, PSOE has been considered by experts to embrace a positive outlook towards European integration.[12][n. 1]

The PSOE has historically had strong ties with the General Union of Workers (UGT), a Spanish trade union. For a couple of decades, UGT membership was a requirement for PSOE membership. However, since the 1980s the UGT has frequently criticized the economic policies of the PSOE, even calling for general strikes against the PSOE governments on 14 December 1988,[13] 28 May 1992, 27 January 1994 and 29 September 2010, all jointly with the Workers' Commissions, another major trade union. Both the trade unions and the left have often criticized the economic policies of the PSOE for their economic liberal nature. They have denounced the policies of deregulation and the increase in precarious and temporary work, cuts in unemployment and retirement benefits, and the privatisation of big state-owned organisations and public services.[14] The party also strongly defended freedom and justice, taking over the fight for civil rights in Spain. It is also the party preferred by female voters by a wide margin. Society also recognizes it as the political party that recognized LGBT rights.[15][16][17][18]

The PSOE is a member of the Party of European Socialists, Progressive Alliance and the Socialist International.[13] The PSOE's 21 Members of the European Parliament sit in the Socialists and Democrats European parliamentary group.

History

Restoration regime (1879–1931)

Pablo Iglesias Posse addressing the workers during a 1905 demonstration in Madrid

The PSOE was founded by Pablo Iglesias on 2 May 1879 in the Casa Labra tavern in Tetuán Street near the Puerta del Sol at the centre of Madrid.[19][20] Iglesias was a typesetter who had become in contact in the past with the Spanish section of the International Workingmen's Association and with Paul Lafargue.[20] The first program of the new political party was passed in an assembly of 40 people on 20 July of that same year. The bulk of the growth of the PSOE and its affiliated trade union, the Unión General de Trabajadores (UGT) was chiefly restricted to the Madrid-Biscay-Asturias triangle up until the 1910s.[21] The obtaining of a seat at the Congress by Pablo Iglesias at the 1910 Spanish general election in which the PSOE candidates presented within the broad Republican–Socialist Conjunction became a development of great symbolical transcendence and gave the party more publicity at the national level.[22]

Julián Besteiro, Daniel Anguiano, Andrés Saborit and Francisco Largo Caballero in the prison of Cartagena in 1918

The PSOE and the UGT took a leading role in the general strike of August 1917 in the context of the events leading to the Spanish crisis of 1917 during the conservative government of Eduardo Dato. The strike was crushed by the army as a result of further undermining of the constitutional order.[23] The members of the organizing committee (Julián Besteiro, Francisco Largo Caballero, Daniel Anguiano and Andrés Saborit) were accused of sedition and sentenced to life imprisonment.[24] Sent to the prison of Cartagena,[24] they were released a year later after being elected to the Cortes in the 1918 Spanish general election. During the 1919−1921 crisis of the socialist internationals, the party experienced tensions between the members endorsing the Socialist International and the advocates for joining the Communist International. Two consecutive splits of dissidents willing to join the Communist International, namely the Spanish Communist Party in 1920[25] and the Spanish Communist Workers' Party in 1921,[26] broke away from the PSOE and soon merged to create the Communist Party of Spain (PCE). The PSOE was a member of the Labour and Socialist International between 1923 and 1940.[27]

After the death of Pablo Iglesias in 1925, Julián Besteiro replaced him as president of both the PSOE and the UGT. During the 1923–1930 dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera, corporatist PSOE and UGT elements were willing to engage in limited collaboration with the regime, against the political stance defended by other socialists such as Indalecio Prieto and Fernando de los Ríos, who instead advocated a closer collaboration with republican forces.[28] The last years of the dictatorship saw a divergence emerge among the corporatist which was personified by Francisco Largo Caballero, who began to endorse the rapport with bourgeois republicans; and Julián Besteiro, who continued to show great distrust towards them.[29] Besteiro's refusal to participate in the Revolutionary Committee led to his resignation as president both of the party and the trade union in February 1931.[30] He was replaced as president of the party by Remigio Cabello.[31]

Second Republic and Civil War (1931–1939)

The PSOE entered the provisional government of the Second Republic in 1931 with Indalecio Prieto, Fernando de los Ríos and Largo Caballero as ministers

After the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic on 14 April 1931, three PSOE members were included in the cabinet of the provisional government, namely Indalecio Prieto (Finance), Fernando de los Ríos (Education) and Francisco Largo Caballero (Labour). The socialist presence remained in the rest of cabinets of the Social-Azañist Biennium (1931–1933).

After the November 1933 general election which marked a win for the centre-right forces in a climate of increasing polarization and growing unemployment, along with a desire to make amends for the mistake of not having sided with the republicans in the election against the united right, Largo Caballero adopted a revolutionary rhetoric, calling for violent revolution and a transitionary dictatorship of the proletariat.[32][33] Indalecio Prieto had also participated in the increasingly aggressive rhetoric, having already condemned the heavy-hand repression of the December 1933 largely anarchist uprising by the government, that has been cheered on by the CEDA leaders on parliament.[34] The Socialist Youth of Spain (JSE) also engaged into a shrilling revolutionary rhetoric while Besteiro firmly opposed the insurrectionary drift of the militancy.[35]

The formation of a new cabinet that included CEDA ministers in October 1934 was perceived among the left as a reaction,[36] with the CEDA party being indistinguishable from contemporary fascism to most workers[37] while CEDA leader Gil-Robles had advocated the establishment of a corporative state already in the 1933 electoral campaign.[38] The UGT called for a nationwide general strike for 5 October which developed into a full-blown insurrection (the Revolution of 1934) in the mining region of Asturias which was vocally supported by socialists such as Largo Caballero and Prieto. After the end of the revolt, whose repression was entrusted to Generals Francisco Franco and Manuel Goded, most PSOE and UGT leaders were jailed.[39]

Francisco Largo Caballero chairing a meeting of the Council of Ministers during wartime

A growing rift between Prieto and Largo Caballero (with disparate views of politics, albeit sharing a general pragmatist approach) formed in 1935 while Besteiro's hold on the party diminished significantly.[40] Followers of Indalecio Prieto would ultimately become "estranged from the party left".[41] The PSOE formed part of the broad left-wing Popular Front electoral coalition that stood for election in the 1936 Spanish general election and achieved a victory in seats over the right.

In September 1936, a few months into the Spanish Civil War (which lasted until 1939), a cabinet presided over by Largo Caballero was formed (he also held the functions of Minister of War). In November, Largo Caballero succeeded in bringing some CNT members into his government. The left socialist caballeristas were revolutionary in rhetoric, although in reality they proposed moderate reformist policies while in government.[41] The May Days of 1937 in Barcelona destabilised the government which was replaced by a new cabinet led by Juan Negrín, another socialist.

Clandestinity and exile (1939–1974)

Rodolfo Llopis led the PSOE in exile for nearly three decades

With the PSOE reduced to clandestinity during the Francoist dictatorship, its members were persecuted, with many leaders, members and supporters being imprisoned or exiled and even executed. Prime Minister Negrín fled to France in March 1939 after the final collapse of the Republican front and his fall from office.[42] The aging and ill Julián Besteiro, who preferred to stay in Spain over exile, died in a Francoist prison in 1940. Julián Zugazagoitia, government minister in 1937–1938, was captured in exile by the Gestapo, handed over to Spain and executed in 1940. The party was legalized again only in 1977 during the Spanish transition to democracy.

Disputes between the followers of Indalecio Prieto (who had exiled to Mexico) and Juan Negrín over the political strategy of the Republican government in exile soon arose. Negrín, whose 1937–1939 spell at the government in wartime was seen negatively by large elements of both caballerista and prietista extraction, had become vilified.[43] The party was re-organized along new lines in 1944 in the 1st Congress in Exile that took place in Toulouse and in which Rodolfo Llopis became the party's new secretary-general.[44]

The PSOE congresses in exile during the post-war period were marked by strong anti-communist positions as a reflection of how the exiles remembered the last events of the Civil War (which featured bitter strifes with the communists) and in line with the stance of other parties of the Socialist International during the Cold War, neglecting any kind of rapprochement with the Communist Party of Spain (PCE).[45] The relative void left in Spain by the PSOE, with a Toulouse-based direction lacking in dynamism and innovation, was filled by the PCE and other new clandestine organizations such as the Agrupación Socialista Universitaria (ASU), the Popular Liberation Front (FELIPE) or later the Enrique Tierno Galván's Socialist Party of the Interior.[46] The Toulouse executive board became increasingly detached from the party in Spain in the 1960s an insurmountable chasm between the former and the party in the interior was already defined by 1972.[47]

Return to democracy

González leadership (1974–1996)

Felipe González during a speech in 1977

The 25th party congress was held in Toulouse in August 1972. In 1974, Felipe González was elected Secretary-General at the 26th party congress in Suresnes, replacing Llopis. González was from the reform wing of the party and his victory signaled a defeat for the historic and veteran wing of the party. The direction of the PSOE shifted from the exiles to the young people in Spain who had not fought the war.[13] Llopis led a schism to form the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (historic). González showed intentions to move the party away from its Marxist and socialist background, turning the PSOE into a social-democratic party, similar to those of the rest of western Europe. In 1977, the PSOE became the unofficial opposition leading party with 29.2% of the vote and 118 seats in the Cortes Generales (which until then it had been the PCE, leading more aggressively among a larger representation of underground parties since the last free popular vote during the Civil War on Republican territory). Their standing was further boosted in 1978 when the Popular Socialist Party agreed to merge into the PSOE.

At the 27th party congress in May 1979, González resigned because the party would not abandon its Marxist character. In September of that year, the extraordinary 28th congress was called in which González was re-elected when the party agreed to move away from Marxism. Western European social-democratic parties supported González's stand and the Social Democratic Party of Germany granted them money. PSOE party symbol was changed from the anvil with the book to the social democratic fist and rose created in the French Socialist Party, redrawn for the PSOE by José María Cruz Novillo. In the 1978 Spanish constitutional referendum, the PSOE supported the Spanish constitution which was approved. In the 1979 Spanish general election, the PSOE gained 30.5% of the vote and 121 seats, remaining the main opposition party. In the 1982 Spanish general election, the PSOE was victorious with 48.1% of the vote (10,127,392 total). González became Prime Minister of Spain on 2 December, a position he held until May 1996.

Although the party had opposed NATO, most party leaders supported keeping Spain inside the organisation after reaching the government. The González administration organised a referendum on the question in 1986, calling for a favourable vote, and won. The administration was criticised for avoiding the official names of North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and NATO, using the unofficial Atlantic Alliance terms. A symbol of this U-turn is Javier Solana who campaigned against NATO but ended up years later as its Secretary General. The PSOE supported the United States in the Gulf War (1991). PSOE won the 1986, 1989 and 1993 general elections. Under the Gonzalez administration, public expenditure on education, health, and pensions rose in total by 4.1 points of the country's GDP between 1982 and 1992.[48]

Economic crisis and state terrorism (GAL) against the violent separatist group ETA eroded the popularity of González. In the 1996 Spanish general election, the PSOE lost to the conservative People's Party (PP) (PP). Between 1996 and 2001, the PSOE weathered a crisis, with Gonzalez resigning in 1997. The PSOE suffered a heavy defeat in the 2000 Spanish general election, with 34.7% of the popular vote. However, the PSOE remained as the ruling party in the autonomous communities of Andalusia, Asturias, Castilla-La Mancha and Extremadura.

Zapatero and Rubalcaba leadership (2000–2014)

In 2000, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero was elected as the new Secretary-General, renewing the party. Later, the PSOE won the 2003 Spanish local elections. The PSOE strongly opposed the Iraq War which was supported by the Aznar government.

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero during the 2010 Progressive Governance Conference

In the 2003 Catalan regional election, the PSOE's Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC) increased its vote total, but ended up in second place after Convergence and Union. After a period of negotiations, the party formed a pact with the Initiative for Catalonia Greens, the Republican Left of Catalonia and the United and Alternative Left, governing Catalonia until 2010.

In the 2004 Spanish general election, the PSOE won with almost 43% of the votes following the 11-M terrorist (11 March) attacks. It was alleged that the PSOE, with the help of the national newspaper El Pais, did not observe the "reflection journey" which forbade political parties from trying to sway public opinion (forbidden by Spanish law), calling the opposing political party "assassins" and blaming the terrorist attack on them. The PSOE maintained their lead in the 2004 European Parliament election.[49][50]

In 2005, the PSOE called for a yes vote on the European Constitution. The PSOE also favoured the negotiations between the government and the ETA during the 2006 cease-fire which had a de facto end with the Barajas Airport terrorist attack. In the 2008 Spanish general election, the PSOE won again, with Zapatero remaining prime minister. The PSOE increased their share of seats in the Congress of Deputies from 164 to 169 after the latest election.

PSOE leading figures during the 38th federal congress in which Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba (center) was elected Secretary-General

After waning popularity throughout their second term, mainly due to their handling of the worsening economic climate in Spain in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, the PSOE was defeated in the 2011 Spanish general election by the conservative People's Party. Shortly after, an extraordinary congress was held in which Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, former Deputy to Zapatero and Minister of the Interior, was elected Secretary-General defeating Carme Chacón, the other candidate, who stood for the Zapatero platform. This victory caused huge internal divisions and weakened the party's external image.

In 2013, the PSOE held a political conference which introduced a completely new platform, widely seen as a move to the left in an attempt to regain votes from parties such as the United Left, whose popularity rose steadily due to the general discontent with the two-party system and spending cuts. That platform was the basis for the 2014 European Parliament election manifesto, promoted as a solid alternative to the conservative plan for Europe. The expectations inside the party which chose Elena Valenciano as their election candidate were optimistic, but the PSOE suffered another defeat due to the appearance of new parties such as Podemos which managed to gain the support of left-wing voters, with PSOE winning 14 seats. Shortly thereafter, Rubalcaba resigned as Secretary-General and an Extraordinary Congress was convoked.

Sánchez leadership (2014–present)

This party congress was the first to use a primary election system with three candidates, namely Pedro Sánchez, Eduardo Madina and José Antonio Pérez Tapias. Sánchez was elected with 49% of the vote of the affiliates and therefore became Secretary-General on 27 July 2014.

In the 2015 Spanish municipal elections, the PSOE won 25% of the vote, one of its worst results in since the restoration of democracy. Together with the fall of the People's Party which won 27% of votes, it meant the end of the two-party system in Spain in favor of new parties. The PSOE alone lost 943 councilors. The 2015 Spanish general election produced an hung parliament broken into four major parties. Due to the large increase for parties such as Podemos (left) and Citizens (centre-right), the PSOE got about 20% of the vote, its worst result since democracy was restored. The parliament was so fragmented, no government could be formed and six months later new elections were held. The 2016 Spanish general election resulted in the PSOE losing a further five seats despite gaining 0.6% of the vote (still the party's second-worst popular vote total after 2015 since the restoration of democracy), leaving the party with 85 seats in the parliament, their lowest total since the restoration of democracy and the fewest since the 1933 in Republican Spain left the party with 59 seats in the 473-member parliament.

Pedro Sánchez (who led the party through its crisis in 2016) singing The Internationale after winning the 2017 primary election for Secretary-General

With the exception of the 2015 Andalusian regional election, elections held during the early leadership of Sánchez were losses for the PSOE. In addition, the policy of pacts conducted by Sánchez after the 2016 general election, based on Sánchez's outright refusal to facilitate a People's Party government, caused a faction within the party critical of Sánchez to gain momentum, led by President of Andalusia Susana Díaz. On 28 September 2016, the Secretary of Federal Policy Antonio Pradas went to the party's headquarters and presented the en bloc resignation of 17 members of the Federal Executive and the demands of those who resigned for the party to be run by an interim manager and to pressure Sánchez to resign as secretary-general. The Executive later lost two more members in the en bloc resignation, bringing the total number of resignations to 19. Resigning executives included the president of the party Micaela Navarro, the former Minister Carme Chacón, the President of Valencia Ximo Puig and the President of Castilla–La Mancha Emiliano García-Page. This launched the 2016 PSOE crisis. On the afternoon of 1 October 2016, after holding a tense Federal Committee meeting, Sánchez resigned as party General-Secretary, forcing an extraordinary party congress to choose a new General-Secretary. That night, it was reported that an interim manager would be chosen, later confirmed to be the President of Asturias Javier Fernández Fernández. Sánchez announced his intention to run for General-Secretary of the party as did Susana Díaz (one of the leaders of the anti-Sánchez faction of the party) and Patxi López, former President of the Basque Autonomous Community. At the 39th federal congress in June 2017, Díaz received 48.3% of endorsements, outpacing both Sánchez (43.0% of endorsements) and López (8.7% of endorsements), but Sánchez won an absolute majority of the party's popular vote at 50.3% (Díaz received 39.9% and López 9.8%). Both Díaz and López withdrew before the delegate vote, returning Sánchez as the General-Secretary and ending the crisis. Sánchez won every region of Spain except for the home regions of López and Díaz.

In mid-2018, the National Court found that the conservative People's Party profited from the illegal kickbacks-for-contracts scheme of the Gürtel case, confirming the existence of an illegal accounting and financing structure that ran in parallel with the party's official one since 1989 and that sentenced that the PP helped to establish "a genuine and effective system of institutional corruption through the manipulation of central, autonomous and local public procurement". The PSOE Parliamentary Group in the Congress of Deputies filed a motion of no confidence against the government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, presenting Sánchez as alternative candidate. The PSOE's motion passed with the support of Unidos Podemos (UP), Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC), Catalan European Democratic Party (PDeCAT), Basque Nationalist Party (PNV), Coalició Compromís, EH Bildu and New Canaries (NCa), bringing down the Rajoy government. The PP voted against the proposal, joined by Citizens (C's), the Navarrese People's Union (UPN) and the Asturias Forum (FAC). The Canarian Coalition (CC) abstained. Following the successful motion of no confidence, Sánchez became prime minister on 2 June 2018 in a minority government. In December 2018, the PSOE's branch in Andalusia was defeated in the 2018 Andalusian regional election for the first time since the restoration of democracy, with a centre-right coalition of PP, C's and the resurgent right-wing nationalists Vox taking power in the region.

For most of his first term as prime minister, Sánchez relied on support from the UP and the NC to get his agenda passed, occasionally being forced into negotiating with the Catalan separatist parties the ERC and the PDeCAT and the PNV on individual issues. In February 2019, the ERC, the PDeCAT and En Marea withdrew their support of Sánchez's government by voting against and helping defeat the 2019 General State Budget and Sánchez called an early election for 28 April 2019. The April 2019 Spanish general election resulted in victory for the PSOE, with the party winning 123 seats on 28.7% of the vote in the Cortes and an absolute majority of 139 in the Senate, gains of 38 and 79 seats respectively. The PSOE also finished eight percentage points ahead of the PP which finished second in both seats and in the popular vote. At election night, party supporters demanded Sánchez to reject any coalition with Cs.[51] On the same day as the April 2019 general election, the 2019 Valencian regional election resulted in the Valencian branch of the PSOE being re-elected in coalition with the Valencianist party Compromís and UP.

On 26 May 2019, the PSOE became the largest Spanish party in the European Parliament following the 2019 European Parliament election. The PSOE gained six seats to bring their total to 20 and won all but eight provinces in the country. 26 May also saw regional elections for every region in the country except Valencia, Catalonia, Andalusia, the Basque Country and Galicia. In every region, the PSOE gained seats and votes from the 2015 regional elections. The PSOE finished first in terms of votes and seats in every region except for Cantabria, where the Regionalist Party of Cantabria (PRC) finished first and the PSOE third behind the PP; and Navarra, where the conservative regionalist NA+ finished first and the Socialist Party of Navarre finished second. PSOE governments were re-elected in Castilla-La Mancha and Extremadura, with the party receiving an absolute majority of seats in both regions. The party took over the Presidency of the Canary Islands with the support of New Canaries and Podemos, ending 26 years of Canarian Coalition government. On the same date, the PSOE became the largest party in the municipalities following the local elections.

Following months of political deadlock, Sánchez called a second general election in seven months. In the November 2019 Spanish general election, the PSOE lost only three members of parliament and 0.7% of the popular vote in the election, but the PP and VOX gained 23 and 28 seats respectively, further worsening the deadlock. As of 23 December, there was still no government in place, although members of PSOE, PSC and UP have voted overwhelmingly to join in a coalition government, agreed to by Sánchez and UP Secretary-General Pablo Iglesias Turrión. On 5 January 2020, the PSOE–UP government failed its first investiture vote, with 166 votes in favor and 165 opposed with 18 abstentions and one UP parliamentarian absent, therefore the government fell short of an absolute majority. On 7 January, the investiture motion, this time requiring only a simple majority, passed with 167 votes in favour and 165 against. PSOE, UP, En Comú Podem, Grupo Común da Esquerda, PNV, Más País, Compromís, NCa, the Galician Nationalist Bloc (BNG) and Teruel Existe (TE) voted in favor of the government, with PP, Vox, Cs, Together for Catalonia (JxCat), the Popular Unity Candidacy (CUP), NA+, CC, PRC and FAC voting against while ERC and EH Bildu both abstained.

On 2021, PSOE started a podcast called Donde hay partido.[52]

Political ideology

From Marxism to social democracy

Pablo Iglesias founded the party in 1879

The PSOE was founded with the purpose of representing and defending the interests of the proletariat formed during the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century. In its beginnings, the PSOE's main objective was the defense of worker's rights and the achievement of the ideals of socialism, emerging from contemporary philosophy and Marxist politics, by securing political power for the working class and establish a dictatorship of the proletariat in order to achieve social ownership of the means of production. The ideology of the PSOE has evolved throughout the 20th century according to relevant historical events and the evolution of Spanish society.

In 1979, the party abandoned its definitive Marxist thesis at the hands of its Secretary-General Felipe González, not before overcoming great tensions and two party congresses, the first of which preferred to maintain Marxism. Before this situation, notable internal leaders such as Pablo Castellano and Luis Gómez Llorente founded the internal faction of Left Socialists which included the militants who would not renounce Marxism. This allowed for the consolidation of the leftist forces in the PSOE. From this moment, the diverse events both outside and within the party led to projects that resembled those of other European social-democratic parties and acceptance of the defence of the market economy. The democratic socialist faction has been especially critical of the party's Third Way move to the centre starting in the 1980s for its economic liberal nature, denouncing the policies of deregulation, cuts in social benefits, and privatisations.

The PSOE defines itself as social democratic, left-wing and progressive.[53][54][55] It is grouped with other self-styled socialists, social democrats and labour parties in the Party of European Socialists, and supports pro-Europeanism.[56] During his shift to the left in 2017, party leader Pedro Sánchez stood for a refoundation of social democracy in order to transition to a post-capitalist society and end neoliberal capitalism[57] as well as for the indissoluble link between social democracy and Europe.[58]

Federalism

During the Second Spanish Republic, the matter of the conception of the state was open within the party, with two different views connected in discourse to the interests of the working class competed against each other, namely a centralist view as well as a federal one.[59] The late years of the Francoist dictatorship was a period in which the PSOE defended the right to "self-determination of the peoples of Spain" in that it was a reflection of both an ideological and a pragmatist approach.[60] Ultimately, the party, while sticking to a preference for a federal system, gradually ceased to mention the notion of self-determination during the Spanish transition to democracy.[61] Postulates coming from peripheral nationalisms that have been assumed by elements of the party, bringing an understanding of Catalonia, the Basque Country and Galicia as nations and thus deserving of a different treatment than the rest of regions, have been heavily criticised by other party elements as according to the latter they would undermine the principle of territorial equality among the autonomous communities.[3]

Electoral performance

Restoration and Republican Cortes

Restoration Cortes (1876–1923)
Republican Cortes (1931–1939)
Election Leading candidate Coalition Seats +/– Status
1907 Pablo Iglesias Posse None
0 / 404
0 No seats
1910 within CRS
1 / 404
1 Opposition
1914 within CRS
1 / 408
0 Opposition
1916 within CRS
1 / 409
0 Opposition
1918 within AI
6 / 409
5 Opposition
1919 within CRS
6 / 409
0 Opposition
1920 None
4 / 409
2 Opposition
1923 None
7 / 409
3 Opposition
1931 Francisco Largo Caballero within CRS
116 / 470
109 Coalition (1931–1933)
Opposition (1933)
1933 None
59 / 473
57 Opposition
1936 Indalecio Prieto within FP
99 / 473
40 Opposition (1936)
Coalition (1936–1939)

Cortes Generales

Cortes Generales
Election Leading candidate Congress Senate Government
Votes  % Seats +/– Seats +/–
1977 Felipe González 5,371,866 29.32 (#2)
118 / 350
54 / 207
Opposition
1979 5,469,813 30.40 (#2)
121 / 350
3
69 / 208
15 Opposition
1982 10,127,392 48.11 (#1)
202 / 350
81
134 / 208
65 Majority
1986 8,901,718 44.06 (#1)
184 / 350
18
124 / 208
10 Majority
1989 8,115,568 39.60 (#1)
175 / 350
9
107 / 208
17 Minority
1993 9,150,083 38.78 (#1)
159 / 350
16
96 / 208
11 Minority
1996 9,425,678 37.63 (#2)
141 / 350
18
81 / 208
15 Opposition
2000 Joaquín Almunia 7,918,752 34.16 (#2)
125 / 350
16
60 / 208
21 Opposition
2004 José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero 11,026,163 42.59 (#1)
164 / 350
39
89 / 208
29 Minority
2008 11,289,335 43.87 (#1)
169 / 350
5
96 / 208
7 Minority
2011 Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba 7,003,511 28.76 (#2)
110 / 350
59
54 / 208
42 Opposition
2015 Pedro Sánchez 5,545,315 22.00 (#2)
90 / 350
20
47 / 208
7 Snap election
2016 5,443,846 22.63 (#2)
85 / 350
5
43 / 208
4 Opposition (2016–2018)
Minority (2018–2019)
Apr. 2019 7,513,142 28.67 (#1)
123 / 350
38
123 / 208
81 Snap election
Nov. 2019 6,792,199 28.00 (#1)
120 / 350
3
93 / 208
30 Coalition
2023 7,821,718 31.68 (#2)
121 / 350
1
72 / 208
21 Coalition

European Parliament

European Parliament
Election Leading candidate Votes  % Seats +/–
1987 Fernando Morán 7,522,706 39.06 (#1)
28 / 60
1989 6,275,552 39.57 (#1)
27 / 60
1
1994 5,719,707 30.79 (#2)
22 / 64
5
1999 Rosa Díez 7,477,823 35.33 (#2)
24 / 64
2
2004 Josep Borrell 6,741,112 43.46 (#1)
25 / 54
1
2009 Juan Fernando López Aguilar 6,141,784 38.78 (#2)
23 / 54
8
2014 Elena Valenciano 3,614,232 23.01 (#2)
14 / 54
9
2019 Josep Borrell 7,369,789 32.86 (#1)
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Results timeline

Year Spain
ES
European Union
EU
Andalusia
AN
Aragon
AR
Asturias
AS
Canary Islands
CN
Cantabria
CB
Castilla–La Mancha
CM
Castile and León
CL
Catalonia
CT
Ceuta
CE
Extremadura
EX
Galicia (Spain)
GL
Balearic Islands
IB

RI
Community of Madrid
MD
Melilla
ML
Region of Murcia
MC
Navarre
NC
Basque Country (autonomous community)
PV
Valencian Community
CV
1977 29.3 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
1978
1979 30.4 18.9
1980 22.4      14.2
1981 19.6
1982 48.1 52.6
1983     46.8 52.0 41.5 38.4 46.7 44.4 53.0 34.7 47.2 50.5 52.2 35.6 51.4
1984           30.1           23.0  
1985 28.7
1986 44.1 47.0 22.0
1987   39.1   35.7 38.9 27.8 29.6 46.3 34.0 49.2     32.5 39.6 38.4 43.7 27.7    41.3
1988     29.8          
1989 39.6 39.6 32.7
1990   49.6         19.8
1991   40.3 41.0 33.0 34.8 52.2 36.4 54.2 30.1 42.4 36.6 45.3 33.4 42.8
1992        27.5               
1993 38.8   23.7   
1994   30.8 38.7 16.8
1995   25.7 33.8 23.1 25.1 45.7 29.7 24.9 13.1 43.9 24.0 34.1 29.7 19.9 31.9 20.9     34.0
1996 37.6 44.1            
1997    19.5
1998 17.4
1999 35.3 30.8 46.0 24.0 33.1 53.4 33.1 37.9 7.4 48.5 22.0 35.3 36.4 9.4 35.9 20.3 33.9
2000 34.2 44.3              
2001    21.8 17.8
2002
2003 37.9 40.5 25.4 30.0 57.8 36.8 31.2 8.7 51.7 24.5 38.2 40.0 12.0 34.1 21.2 36.0
                 39.0
2004 42.6 43.5 50.4
2005     33.2 22.5
2006 26.8   
2007 41.1 42.0 34.5 24.5 52.0 37.7     8.7 53.0 27.6 40.4 33.6 18.2 32.0 22.5 34.5
2008 43.9 48.4                  
2009   38.8       31.0      30.4
2010    18.4      
2011 28.8 29.0 29.9 21.0 16.4 43.4 29.7 11.7 43.4 21.4 30.3 26.3 8.6 23.9 15.9 28.0
2012 39.6 32.1    14.4 20.6    18.9
2013     
2014 23.0
2015 22.0 35.4 21.4 26.5 19.9 14.0 36.1 25.9 12.7 14.0 41.5 18.9 26.7 25.4 12.6 23.9 13.4 20.6
2016 22.6                  17.9     11.9   
2017    13.9      
2018   27.9
2019 28.7 32.9 30.8 35.3 28.9 17.6 44.1 34.8 25.6 46.8 27.4 38.7 27.3 14.4 32.5 20.6 24.2
28.0                                      
2020    19.4 13.5
2021 23.0 16.8       
2022 24.1 30.1
2023 31.7 29.6 36.5 27.2 20.6 45.1 21.0 39.9 26.5 31.9 18.2 10.7 25.6 20.7 28.7
2024    TBD      TBD     TBD
Year Spain
ES
European Union
EU
Andalusia
AN
Aragon
AR
Asturias
AS
Canary Islands
CN
Cantabria
CB
Castilla–La Mancha
CM
Castile and León
CL
Catalonia
CT
Ceuta
CE
Extremadura
EX
Galicia (Spain)
GL
Balearic Islands
IB

RI
Community of Madrid
MD
Melilla
ML
Region of Murcia
MC
Navarre
NC
Basque Country (autonomous community)
PV
Valencian Community
CV

Bold indicates best result to date.
  To be decided
  Present in legislature (in opposition)
  Junior coalition partner
  Senior coalition partner

Terms

  • Baron: unofficial term for the party's regional leaders. They can be very powerful, especially if they run an autonomous community. There have been conflicts between barons and the central directorate in the past. Some barons were Pasqual Maragall (Catalonia), who did not run for re-election in 2006; Juan Carlos Rodríguez Ibarra (Extremadura), who did not run for re-election in 2007; Manuel Chaves (Andalucia), who renounced Andalucia's presidency in 2009 to assume the Third Vice Presidency of the Spanish Government; and José Montilla (Catalonia). The term baron is more colloquial than official, representing the great power regional leaders have in the party, but it has been falling out of use since 2016.
  • Compañero ("companion", "comrade"): a term of address among Socialists, analogous to the English comrade and the Russian tovarisch.
  • There have been several currents or internal groups within the PSOE based on personal or ideological affinities. Some of them have ended with separation from the PSOE. The failed trial of primary elections for PSOE candidates was an attempt to conciliate currents. Examples of currents are Guerristas (followers of Alfonso Guerra), Renovadores (Renewers, right-wing of the party) or Izquierda Socialista (Socialist Left).

Leaders

The Secretary General is the head of the party as well as its parliamentary chair.

President Term
Pablo Iglesias 1879–1925
Julián Besteiro 1925–1931
Remigio Cabello 1931–1932
Francisco Largo Caballero 1932–1935
Indalecio Prieto 1935–1948
Trifón Gómez 1948–1955
Vacant 1955–1964
Pascual Tomás 1964–1967
Ramón Rubial 1967–1970
In exile 1970–1976
Ramón Rubial 1976–1999
Manuel Chaves 1999–2012
José Antonio Griñán 2012–2014
Micaela Navarro 2014–2016
Cristina Narbona 2017–present
Secretary-General Term
Ramón Lamoneda 1936–1944
Rodolfo Llopis 1944–1972
In exile 1972–1974
Felipe González 1974–1997
Joaquín Almunia 1997–2000
José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero 2000–2012
Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba 2012–2014
Pedro Sánchez 2014–2016;
2017–present
Deputy Secretary-General Term
Alfonso Guerra 1979–1997
Vacant 1997–2008
Pepe Blanco 2008–2012
Elena Valenciano 2012–2014
Vacant 2014–2017
Adriana Lastra 2017–2022
María Jesús Montero 2022–present
Prime Ministers of Spain Term
Francisco Largo Caballero 1936–1937
Juan Negrín López 1937–1939
Felipe González 1982–1996
José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero 2004–2011
Pedro Sánchez 2018–present

Regional secretary-generals

Notable members

Former logos

See also

References

Informational notes

  1. See also labels by Gibbons 1999, p. 48: "This was in line with the PSOE's strongly pro-European policies"; and Campoy-Cubillo 2012, p. 163: "The Saharawi cause was embraced not only by the Europeanist PSOE".

Citations

  1. Beatriz García: Cuatro partidos reducen sus ingresos por afiliados La Razón
  2. 1 2 Nordsieck, Wolfram (2023). "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Archived from the original on 26 January 2016. Updated as required.
  3. 1 2 Quiroga Fernández de Soto 2008, p. 108.
  4. "Democratización de las Instituciones en Una Europa Federal" (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 August 2023.
  5. "Resoluciones del 38 Congreso Federal del PSOE" (PDF).
  6. "Europe Elects Spain". Retrieved 12 August 2023.
  7. "APPENDIX A3: POLITICAL PARTIES". Documentation Report (PDF). Spain (Report) (3.0 ed.). European Social Survey. 2020. p. 121. ESS10. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 September 2015.
  8. Field, B.; Botti, A. (2013). Politics and Society in Contemporary Spain: From Zapatero to Rajoy. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 23. ISBN 978-1137306623. Aznar's PP government, which arrived at the Moncloa executive palace for the first time since the country's return to democracy, inaugurating the alternation between the center-left PSOE and center-right PP
  9. "Rumbero, rockero, gaitero u orquestal: el versionable himno del PSOE". abc. 20 May 2015. Archived from the original on 24 October 2018. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  10. The PSOE is described as a social-democratic party by numerous sources:
  11. "El Congreso Extraordinario del PSOE" (in Spanish). September 1979. Archived from the original on 9 November 2016.
  12. Ruiz Jiménez & Egea de Haro 2011, p. 110: "According to experts' judgement, most political organisations in Spain have been fairly or strongly in favour of European integration since the mid 1980s" (...) "Among nationwide parties, experts have systematically perceived PSOE, CDS and PP as exhibiting strong positive attitudes toward European integration, and these attitudes have also been perceived as stable over time (with small standard deviations)"
  13. 1 2 3 "History of PSOE" (in Spanish). PSOE own site. Archived from the original on 23 June 2007. Retrieved 11 July 2007.
  14. Aguiar, Fernando (15 October 2006). "The Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) 1879-1988 From Republican to Liberal Socialism" (PDF). Instituto de Estudios Sociales Avanzados de Andalucía (IESA-CSIC).
  15. www.psoe.es https://www.psoe.es/el-socialista/opina-en-el-socialista/por-la-libertad-y-la-justicia/. Retrieved 25 September 2023. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  16. "Sánchez bets big on women in Spanish campaign". POLITICO. 8 March 2019. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
  17. www.psoe.es https://www.psoe.es/actualidad/noticias-actualidad/el-psoe-destaca-que-la-ley-integral-contra-la-violencia-de-genero-es-adecuada-util-y-necesaria-y-funciona--43797/. Retrieved 25 September 2023. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  18. García, Violeta Molina Gallardo,Nacho (3 August 2023). "¿Qué movió a las mujeres a votar el 23J? Preferencia por el PSOE, rechazo a Vox y otras claves, según el CIS". elperiodicodeespana (in Spanish). Retrieved 25 September 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. Vadillo 2007, p. 32.
  20. 1 2 Álvarez Junco 2018, pp. 414–415.
  21. Tuñón de Lara 1990, p. 239.
  22. Robles Egea 2015.
  23. Romero Salvadó 2010, pp. 79–80.
  24. 1 2 Casanova & Gil Andrés 2014, p. 63.
  25. Heywood 2002, p. 56.
  26. Heywood 2002, p. 25.
  27. Kowalski, Werner (1985). Geschichte der sozialistischen arbeiter-internationale: 1923–1919. Berlin: Dt. Verl. d. Wissenschaften (in German). p. 325.
  28. Egido León 2011, pp. 29–30.
  29. Juliá 1983, p. 44.
  30. Heywood 2002, p. 117.
  31. Heywood 2002, p. 119.
  32. Preston 1978, pp. 94–95.
  33. "Archivo - Fundación Pablo Iglesias - ElSocialista Hemeroteca". archivo.fpabloiglesias.es. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  34. Preston 1978, p. 101.
  35. Preston 1978, pp. 102–105.
  36. Gil Pecharromán 2015, p. 14.
  37. Preston 1978, p. 100.
  38. Preston 1978, pp. 92–93.
  39. Preston 1978, pp. 129, 132–132.
  40. Preston 1978, p. 133.
  41. 1 2 Graham 1988, p. 177.
  42. Beevor 2006, p. 393.
  43. Hoyos Puente 2016, pp. 316–317.
  44. Hoyos Puente 2016, p. 318.
  45. Bueno Aguado 2016, pp. 334–335.
  46. Bueno Aguado 2016, pp. 335–336.
  47. Heywood 1987, pp. 198–199.
  48. Maravall Herrero, José María (1997). Regimes, Politics, and Markets: Democratization and Economic Change in Southern and Eastern Europe. Translated by Byrne, Justin. Oxford University Press. p. 183. ISBN 9780198280835. Archived from the original on 2 May 2016. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  49. "Editorial | Vuelco electoral". El País. 15 March 2004 via elpais.com.
  50. Torre, Antonio de la (10 March 2019). "#RecordandoEl11M - Trece años después del 11M y sigue... la "versión oficial"".
  51. "Spanish election results: What do the possible governing deals look like?". El País. 29 April 2019. ISSN 1134-6582. Archived from the original on 29 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  52. Digital, Confidencial (8 September 2021). "El PSOE apuesta por los pódcast". Confidencial Digital (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  53. PSOE officiel website. "Somos La Izquierda - El PSOE presenta el lema de su 39º Congreso Federal" [We are the left - the PSOE presents its motto of the 39th Federal Congress]. www.psoe.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  54. PSOE official website (1 July 2015). "Conócenos - Comisión Ejecutiva Federal" [Know us Federal Executive Congress]. www.psoe.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  55. Share, Donald (23 July 2023). "Spanish Socialist Workers' Party". Encyclopedia Britannica. Updated as required.
  56. Jiménez, Antonia M. Ruiz; Haro, Alfonso Egea de (1 March 2011). "Spain: Euroscepticism in a Pro-European Country?". South European Society and Politics. 16 (1): 105–131. doi:10.1080/13608741003594379. ISSN 1360-8746. S2CID 154858489.
  57. Castro, Irene; Carreño, Belén (20 February 2017). "Pedro Sánchez gira a la izquierda y elige al neoliberalismo como gran enemigo del PSOE". Eldiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  58. Estefanía, Joaquín (21 February 2019). "La ideología de Pedro Sánchez". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  59. Molina Jiménez 2013, p. 259.
  60. Quiroga Fernández de Soto 2008, p. 100.
  61. Quiroga Fernández de Soto 2008, p. 101.

Bibliography

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