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Velasco
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« Reply #125 on: February 18, 2014, 11:42:07 AM »
« edited: March 04, 2014, 03:00:26 AM by Velasco »

After seven months, new updates with regional elections.

This map shows the combined strength of the nationalist forces in the Galician parliamentary election held in October 2012. The Galician Left Alternative (AGE)*, a coalition between Anova (BNG split led by Xosé Manuel Beiras), EU (United Left in Galicia), Equo (greens) and the Galician Ecosocialist Space (a little BNG split) was the big surprise of this election, getting 13.9% of the vote and 9 (+9) seats. The Galician Nationalist Bloc (BNG) got 10.1% (-5.9%) of the vote and 7 (-5) seats. Compromise for Galicia (CxG), a new coalition made by some BNG splinters (the socialdemocratic Mais Galiza was the most important) and small center-right regionalist forces, only got 1% of the vote.

*Including IU and Equo, two national forces, AGE was a coalition between Galician independentists, nationalists and federalists

Discarding the vote from abroad, the three nationalist forces got 25.16% of the votes cast in Galicia. The AGE was particularly strong in the urban centers, displacing PSOE from the second place in A Coruña (AGE 20.6%; PSOE 19.5%; BNG 7.6%) and Santiago de Compstela (AGE 21.8%; PSOE 16.5%; BNG 8.5%). To the contrary, BNG performed pretty bad in the most populated municipalities and only surpassed the AGE in Pontevedra (PSOE 18.8%; BNG 18.6%; AGE 13.1%), a nationalist stronghold with a BNG mayor. BNG results improved a bit in small and medium-sized towns (e.g. Carballo: BNG 19.9%, PSOE 16.4%, AGE 10.1%). The nationalist strength tends to be higher in the coastal Galicia, whereas it declines the interior countryside, specially in Lugo and Ourense provinces. Aside a few nationalist strongholds in Ourense (Allariz and A Bola, won by BNG; Vilar de Santos, the only municipality in Galicia won by the CxG), some areas where nationalism is stronger are the municipalities around El Ferrol (e.g. Fene, a mixed rural-industrial town where AGE got 24.3% and BNG 14.5%) and Santiago de Compostela (Teo has an Anova mayor and AGE got its best result in Galicia with 26.9%), the Barbanza region (SW of A Coruña province) and O Morrazo, a comarca placed in the north shore of the Vigo Ria with capital in Cangas (AGE 23.2%; BNG 15.3%), a town which economy is based on fishing and the manufacturing of tinned food and is traditionally a left-wing nationalist stronghold.

 

Here, results by party and district in the city of Barcelona in the Catalan elections held in November 2012. Soon, I'll make some maps of the city by quarter.



I've edited the maps of local and parliamentary elections of Madrid, Barcelona and Valencia posted in pages 2 and 3 of this thread, using the same colour scale with 2.5% steps like the map above. Maybe, I'll post later Seville and Saragossa.
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Velasco
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« Reply #126 on: September 21, 2014, 12:58:51 AM »
« Edited: October 13, 2014, 05:15:28 AM by Velasco »

Given that the result of the past EP elections marks some interesting trends -with an eye in the forthcoming municipal, regional and parliamentary elections in Spain- and I made some maps, I proceed to make an update for this thing.

Leading parties by province:



I have plenty of provincial maps, showing the territorial strength of the 10 lists which got representation in Strasbourg posted here:

http://saintbrendansisland.wordpress.com/2014/08/03/elecciones-europeas-de-2014-en-espana/

Anyway, it'd be more interesting focusing on municipality, district or even neighborhood levels in certain places where key electoral battles are going to take place next year. I was making some Madrid maps and likely I'll do Barcelona as well.

2014 EP Elections in the Region of Madrid:



The boundary of the Madrid supermunicipality, which occupies a large section in the centre of the region, is lined in yellow and showed with its 21 inner subdivisions or districts.  

EDIT: Colour upgraded one tone. Source: MIR election archive, official results.
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Zanas
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« Reply #127 on: September 21, 2014, 04:42:10 AM »

Its very interesting, but while I can easily spot Vallecas and its surroundings as left-wing power zones, I can't determin if PSOE, Podemos or IU since their light shades are all the same. Could you possibly use colors easier to tell apart ?
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« Reply #128 on: September 21, 2014, 06:56:51 AM »

Is the south-west Socialist stronghold Alcorcon? Also, what are the potential university districts and how do students tend to vote in Madrid?

This thread is a gold mine btw, really impressive work!
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Velasco
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« Reply #129 on: September 21, 2014, 11:16:58 AM »
« Edited: September 27, 2014, 01:50:41 AM by Velasco »

Its very interesting, but while I can easily spot Vallecas and its surroundings as left-wing power zones, I can't determin if PSOE, Podemos or IU since their light shades are all the same. Could you possibly use colors easier to tell apart ?

It's an option, but there are too many parties in Spain and not so many colours. I could upgrade the scale one tone as well, so hopefully the purple (Podemos) could distinguish better from the red (PSOE). I'll think about that. In any case, Podemos won a plurality in the following two municipalities:

Rivas-Vaciamadrid: Located 15 KM to the SE from Puerta del Sol, in the centre of Madrid. It's one of the fastest growing municipalities in Spain (around 80k nowadays) and it attracts people from the capital and the metropolitan area due to high standards of living, environment and public services. The two bigger neighbourhoods were built by cooperatives linked to the two main Spanish labour unions: Covibar by CC.OO (traditionally linked to PCE) and Pablo Iglesias by UGT (PSOE). Note that the latter is named after Pablo Iglesias Posse (1850-1925), a printer who founded PSOE in 1879 and UGT in 1888. I don't have evidence that Pablo Iglesias Turrión, the leader of Podemos born in 1978, has family links with the elder socialist leader. As far as I know, he was named Pablo because his parents are socialist activists and Iglesias is a relatively common family name. Iglesias' girlfriend, the IU regional deputy Tania Sánchez Melero, is from Rivas. The town is very singular, sociologically speaking. It has a high standard of living and it appears to be a mixture of 'aristocratic' working class (the cooperative members) and progressive bobo population attracted from other places. Also, Rivas is known because of a natural park which covers 3/4 of the municipal area and the municipality was awarded for being "the most sustainable city". It has been governed by IU since 1991. Likely the most outstanding mayor was José Masa.

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rivas-Vaciamadrid

Results: Podemos 21.1%, IU 17.2%, PSOE 17.1%, PP 15%, UPyD 12.1%, Cs 4.3%, PE (Equo) 2.3%, Vox 1.8%.

La Hiruela: A small village (pop. 51 in 2013) in La Sierra Norte. The result was kinda weird: Podemos got 8 votes (29.6%), Vox 6 (22.2%), PP 4 (14.8%), IU 3 (11.1%), UPyD 2 (7.4%), PSOE and other two lists 1 each (3.7%).

IU won a plurality (21.4%) in Torremocha de Jarama (pop. 892 in 2013), located to the NE of the region in the Guadalajara province border.

The rest of the municipalities are PSOE pluralities, being the most relevant the 'red belt' municipalities located S of Madrid (Getafe, Leganés, Parla). PSOE pluralities were low in those working class towns (between 20% and 30%) and both Podemos and IU had high performances. Same in the southern districts in the Madrid municipality (I'll post a district map, which I hope it'll be clearer). I should expand on metropolitan municipalities in a later post.

Is the south-west Socialist stronghold Alcorcon? Also, what are the potential university districts and how do students tend to vote in Madrid?

This thread is a gold mine btw, really impressive work!

Thanks. I don't think so, since PP won a plurality in Alcorcón. The town is indeed to the SW of Madrid, but is contiguous to the capital and not in the SW fringe of the region. You can see the location of Alcorcón in Wikipedia:

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcorc%C3%B3n

Likely that PSOE stronghold you are referring to is the rural municipality of Cenicientos, in the border with Toledo and Ávila provinces.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cenicientos

As for "potential university districts". I guess you are referring to places with a high student population, isn't it? I'll try to answer that later, since I have to search in neighbourhood results.
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Velasco
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« Reply #130 on: September 27, 2014, 02:56:57 AM »


This map is a projection. If the result of the next elections to the Madrid Regional Assembly in May 2015 was replicating the the EP elections result, the 129 seats would be distributed as follows:

PP 48, PSOE 30, Podemos 18, UPyD 17, IU 16.

An hypothetical left-wing alliance falls short of a majority by only 1 seat. PP would need 17 additional votes, which is precisely the number of seats the projection gives to UPyD.

The EP elections official result in the region of Madrid was: PP 29.98%, PSOE 18.95%, Podemos 11,38%, UPyD 10.59%, IU 10.57%, Cs 4.81%, Vox 3.67%, PE 2%.

With a little variation in the result, the allocation of seats may vary substantially. UPyD, for instance, placed 4th ahead of IU by a tiny 0.02% margin, winning one seat more than the left-wing party in the projection. Ciudadanos (Cs) is only at 0.2% of reaching the 5% threshold needed to get seats in the Regional Assembly; by surpassing it, the party could win at least 6 or 7 seats.

The main curiosity of this map is that projects the result into the electoral districts planned in a proposal of electoral reform made by the PP regional government, which intended to introduce a mixed-member proportional electoral system. The proposal only considers 43 electorates (1/3 of the total) and its application wouldn't affect the allocation of seats in the Assembly, according to this projection. It is unlikely to be passed, given that opposition parties are against and the bill needs a vote of 2/3 of the Assembly. The proposed districts follow municipal-district borders and don't have a similar population, although they give an idea of how it is distributed across the region. PP might win 33 districts, PSOE 9 and Podemos 1 (Rivas-Vaciamadrid).
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Velasco
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« Reply #131 on: October 01, 2014, 01:28:09 AM »

Results of the 2014 EP Elections in Madrid municipality by district and party:



Result in Madrid municipality, according to figures provided by the delegation of the government and the city council:

PP 32.68%, PSOE 18.19%, Podemos 10.6%, IU 10.37%, UPyD 9.7%, Cs 4.74%, Vox 4.24%, PE 2.24%.

Podemos, IU and Equo (PE) will likely run in a "civic front" called Ganemos ("Let's win") in the 2015 municipal elections, while Podemos might run in its own in the regional elections, if this autumn's Podemos foundational convention approves a proposal made by the Pablo Iglesias' team. Note that "Ganemos" coalition has potential to get more votes than PSOE.

Madrid is divided in 21 municipal districts, each one subdivided in several "administrative neighbourhoods". Summary of best and worst districts by party:

PP: Best: Salamanca 46.8%, Chamartín 46%, Chamberí 42.7%. Worst: Puente de Vallecas 18.2%, Villa de Vallecas 19%, Vicálvaro 20.7%.

PSOE: Best: Puente de Vallecas 29.3%, Villaverde 27.1%, Usera 26,2%. Worst: Chamartín 10.5%, Salamanca 10.9%, Chamberí 12.1%.

Podemos: Best: Vicálvaro 16.1%, Centro 16%, Villa de Vallecas 14.9%. Worst: Chamartín 5.7%, Salamanca 5.8%, Chamberí 7.5%.

IU: Best: Puente de Vallecas 16.3%, Villa de Vallecas 16%, Centro 14.8%. Worst: Chamartín 5.4%, Salamanca 5.7%, Chamberí 7.1%.

UPyD: Best: Vicálvaro 12.7%, Villa de Vallecas 12.2%, Barajas 11.4%. Worst: Centro 7.8%, Salamanca 8.2%, Chamberí 8.2%.

Ciudadanos (Cs)Sad Best: Chamartín 6.8%, Barajas 6.3%, Salamanca 6%. Worst: Puente de Vallecas 2.4%, Usera 2.9%, Villaverde 2.9%.

Vox: Best: Chamartín 8.3%, Salamanca 8.1%, Chamberí 7.3%. Worst: Puente de Vallecas 1.4%, Villaverde 1.6%, Vicálvaro 1.6%.

PE (Equo)Sad Best: Centro 5.6%, Arganzuela 3.7%, Retiro 2.7%. Worst: Villaverde 1.2%, Usera, Puente de Vallecas and San Blas 1.5%.

It's dubious that I'll have the time to make a neighbourhood map. Anyway I have the data downloaded, so if someone curiosity on a particular neighbourhood in Madrid...

Also, what are the potential university districts and how do students tend to vote in Madrid?


I'm afraid that you are not going to find "university district" patterns. I guess that's because students from other places living in student residences in Madrid don't vote there, unless they register as official residents. Also, students or university staff cannot afford high rent apartments in the affluent districts where are located many university campuses. It's possible that many of them live in Centro or in other cheaper districts or neighbourhoods, but I ignore if there's data avalaible on rented student apartments. For instance, Podemos won a plurality in the Embajadores (Lavapiés) neighbourhood belonging to the Centro district. Some universities (Carlos III, for instance) have campuses in working class municipalities such as Getafe.

The Complutense University is the most important higher educational institution in Madrid, measured in number of students. It's also a left-wing fiefdom and many members of the founding core of Podemos, including Pablo Iglesias, are teachers in that university. It has two campuses. The main campus is located the Ciudad Universitaria neighbourhood (Moncloa-Aravaca district) and includes several student residences.

The result in Ciudad Universitaria follows the general pattern of the Moncloa-Aravaca district.

PP 41.96%, PSOE 12.4%, UPyD 8.9%, Vox 7.3%, IU 7.2%, Podemos 6.8%, Cs 6.2%, PE 2.8%.

The second campus is located in Pozuelo de Alarcón (84k in 2013), a very affluent suburban municipality located west of Madrid and contiguous to the Moncloa-Aravaca district.

Result in the Pozuelo municipality: PP 41.8%, PSOE 11.3%, UPyD 10%, Vox 8.9%, Cs 7.8%, Podemos 6.3%, IU 4.8%, PE 1.8%.

It'd be illustrative searching in Google Maps the Ciudad Universitaria and the UCM Campus de Somosaguas in Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid (or the Carlos III campus in Getafe).
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« Reply #132 on: October 01, 2014, 06:07:50 AM »

Thanks for the maps, Dani. And you won't find "university districts... I study in the UAM and nobody who comes from other provinces votes here in Madrid.

I'm still waiting for your email in response to my last one Smiley
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Tetro Kornbluth
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« Reply #133 on: October 01, 2014, 06:18:03 AM »

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I would be interested in the results of Lavapiés in Centro. My old stomping ground...
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Velasco
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« Reply #134 on: October 01, 2014, 09:33:36 AM »

I would be interested in the results of Lavapiés in Centro. My old stomping ground...

I guess you won't be surprised to know that your old stomping ground is a left-wing bastion. Lavapiés belongs to an administrative neighbourhood called Embajadores.

Embajadores (Centro): Podemos 20.14%, PP 19.5%, IU 16.73%, PSOE 16.51%, UPyD 7,15%, PE/Equo 6.24%, Cs 2.96%, Vox 1.72%. Valid votes cast: 14511.

It was the highest result for both Podemos and Equo in Madrid and the only one where the Pablo Iglesias list won a plurality in the EP elections. Besides, it was one of the strongest IU results with more votes than PSOE. Lavapiés is clearly leaning to the alternative/radical left.

Thanks for the maps, Dani. And you won't find "university districts... I study in the UAM and nobody who comes from other provinces votes here in Madrid.

I'm still waiting for your email in response to my last one Smiley

I've been once or twice in Ciudad Universitaria, but never in the UAM campus. Well, I can tell you the results in the nearby El Goloso neighbourhood, in the Fuencarral-El Pardo district. Perhaps you know the reason why UPyD, Cs and Vox are so strong there.

PP 30.9%, UPyD 15.23%, PSOE 9,99%, Cs 8.98%, Vox 8.77%, Podemos 8.3%, IU 7.6%, PE 2.48%. Valid votes cast: 5725.

I was thinking that I replied your last e-mail. Anyway, I can send you another Wink Didn't I comment with you the results in La Castellana? You will adore them.

Castellana (Salamanca): PP 60.22%, Vox 11.1%, PSOE 6.56%, UPyD 5.82%, Cs 5.3%, Podemos 2.66%, IU 2.58%, PE 0.88%. Valid votes cast: 7145.
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« Reply #135 on: October 01, 2014, 12:10:00 PM »

I would be interested in the results of Lavapiés in Centro. My old stomping ground...

I guess you won't be surprised to know that your old stomping ground is a left-wing bastion. Lavapiés belongs to an administrative neighbourhood called Embajadores.

Embajadores (Centro): Podemos 20.14%, PP 19.5%, IU 16.73%, PSOE 16.51%, UPyD 7,15%, PE/Equo 6.24%, Cs 2.96%, Vox 1.72%. Valid votes cast: 14511.

It was the highest result for both Podemos and Equo in Madrid and the only one where the Pablo Iglesias list won a plurality in the EP elections. Besides, it was one of the strongest IU results with more votes than PSOE. Lavapiés is clearly leaning to the alternative/radical left.

Thanks for the maps, Dani. And you won't find "university districts... I study in the UAM and nobody who comes from other provinces votes here in Madrid.

I'm still waiting for your email in response to my last one Smiley

I've been once or twice in Ciudad Universitaria, but never in the UAM campus. Well, I can tell you the results in the nearby El Goloso neighbourhood, in the Fuencarral-El Pardo district. Perhaps you know the reason why UPyD, Cs and Vox are so strong there.

PP 30.9%, UPyD 15.23%, PSOE 9,99%, Cs 8.98%, Vox 8.77%, Podemos 8.3%, IU 7.6%, PE 2.48%. Valid votes cast: 5725.

I was thinking that I replied your last e-mail. Anyway, I can send you another Wink Didn't I comment with you the results in La Castellana? You will adore them.

Castellana (Salamanca): PP 60.22%, Vox 11.1%, PSOE 6.56%, UPyD 5.82%, Cs 5.3%, Podemos 2.66%, IU 2.58%, PE 0.88%. Valid votes cast: 7145.

I'll check my email again, maybe I just didn't see it (I receive lots of junk mail so sometimes I don't see some of the "good" ones haahaha).

LoL at La Castellana. I go through there almost every day, but didn't know it was such an ugly place. TBH, the Socialist Youth usually goes there to distribute propaganda. Maybe we should search another place... Which is the friendlier one for us in the centre-centre/north of Madrid?

I don't know why the people in El Goloso are so insane, but I can tell you that not many students live there... And people who come to the UAM from other provinces skew conservative (at least in my class, they look rich).
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Tetro Kornbluth
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« Reply #136 on: October 01, 2014, 05:38:14 PM »

I would be interested in the results of Lavapiés in Centro. My old stomping ground...

I guess you won't be surprised to know that your old stomping ground is a left-wing bastion. Lavapiés belongs to an administrative neighbourhood called Embajadores.

Embajadores (Centro): Podemos 20.14%, PP 19.5%, IU 16.73%, PSOE 16.51%, UPyD 7,15%, PE/Equo 6.24%, Cs 2.96%, Vox 1.72%. Valid votes cast: 14511.

It was the highest result for both Podemos and Equo in Madrid and the only one where the Pablo Iglesias list won a plurality in the EP elections. Besides, it was one of the strongest IU results with more votes than PSOE. Lavapiés is clearly leaning to the alternative/radical left.

Least shocking news I've heard in some time... I'd be amazed and disappointed if it weren't anything else.

Oh I briefly lived in Opañel in Carabanchel for one month. I imagine there the result was more conventional...
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Velasco
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« Reply #137 on: October 02, 2014, 04:25:39 AM »

Oh I briefly lived in Opañel in Carabanchel for one month. I imagine there the result was more conventional...

It was in the range of the Carabanchel district. PP plurality below the city average; PSOE, IU and Podemos slightly above average.

PP 30.67%; PSOE 21.59%; IU 12.55%, Podemos 11.28%, UPyD 8.65%, Cs 3.15%, Vox 2.63%, PE 1.74%. Valid votes cast: 10481.


LoL at La Castellana. I go through there almost every day, but didn't know it was such an ugly place. TBH, the Socialist Youth usually goes there to distribute propaganda. Maybe we should search another place... Which is the friendlier one for us in the centre-centre/north of Madrid?

La Castellana and Plaza de Colón are nodal transit points. I guess that's the reason why the Socialist Youth goes there to distribute leaflets. For obvious reasons, proselitism among residents in Castellana and Recoletos sounds like a waste of time. PP scored above 80% in La Castellana in the 2011 elections.

Recoletos (Salamanca): PP 57.15%, Vox 10.11%, PSOE 7.38%, Cs 6.45%, UPyD 5.85%, IU 3%, Podemos 2.94%, PE 1.33%. Valid votes cast: 6329.

The Vox Party came second in some Chamartín neighbourhoods, all of them obvious PP strongholds: El Viso (10.55%), Hispanoamérica (10.25%) and Nueva España (9.45%).

It's hard to find neighbourhoods north of the Madrid centre where PSOE scored above 20%. I'll make a summary of best neighbourhoods by district, including San Blas in the east periphery.

Centro (16.04% on average): No great differences between neighbourhoods. The best for PSOE were Embajadores (16.51%) and Justicia (16.4%).

Salamanca (10.95%): Fuente del Berro (15.16%).

Chamartín (10.53%): Prosperidad (13.77%).

Tetuán (17.2%): Almenara (21.2%), Berruguete (20.11%), Bellas Vistas (19.66%) and Valdeacederas (19.53%).

Chamberí (12.11%): Trafalgar (14.31%) and Arapiles (14.09%).

Fuencarral-El Pardo (16.25%): Barrio del Pilar (21.41%) and La Paz (18.58%).

Moncloa-Aravaca (13.4%): Valdezarza (18.33%).

Ciudad Lineal (17.68%): Pueblonuevo (21.81%) and Ventas (20.91%).

Hortaleza (17.48%): Pinar del Rey (21.04%) and Canillas (19.85%).

Barajas (16%): Aeropuerto (25.81%, plurality) and the Barajas old quarter (23.07%). Only 430 valid votes cast in the neighbourhood next to the airport.

San Blas-Canillejas (20.68%): Amposta (29.4%, plurality), Hellín (27.93%, plurality), Simancas (26.85%, plurality), Arcos (22.52%) and Rosas (21.52%).
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« Reply #138 on: October 02, 2014, 06:46:18 AM »

Thank you for the information. And yes, we go to the Castellana because students who come from the north of Madrid to the UCM or UCIII usually pick the bus there Tongue
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« Reply #139 on: October 04, 2014, 11:34:14 AM »

Results by district of the 2014 EP Elections in Barcelona:



Results in Barcelona municipality (2009-2014 change in brackets):

ERC 21.77% (+13.4%), CiU 20.86% (-0.85%), ICV-EUiA 12.62% (+4.65%), PSC-PSOE 12.22% (-20.49%), PP 11.96% (-8.72%), Ciutadans 6.98% (+6.57%), Podemos 4.73% (new), PACMA 1.27% (+0.72%), UPyD 1.1% (-0.07%).
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« Reply #140 on: October 17, 2014, 10:12:12 AM »

2014 EP elections in Barcelona by neighbourhood:



Family income by neighbourhood in 2012 (city average=100):


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« Reply #141 on: October 25, 2014, 06:08:25 AM »

2014 EP Elections: Leading party by municipality in Catalonia:


Credits: i-LabSo / El País.
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Velasco
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« Reply #142 on: November 29, 2014, 07:49:23 AM »

2014 EP elections in Valencia (city)Sad



Results (2009-2014 swing):

Partido Popular (PP) 28.27% (-25.54%)

Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE) 16.77% (-17.77%)

Esquerra Unida País Valencià – L’Esquerra Plural (EUPV-IP) 11.18% (+7.73%)

Unión, Progreso y Democracia (UPyD) 9.54% (+6,27%)

Primavera Europea - Coalició Compromís (PE) 8.96%*

Podemos / Podem 8.56% (new)

Ciudadanos (Cs) 3.6% (+3.42%)**

Partido Vox (VOX) 3.06% (new)

Partido Antitaurino Contra el Maltrato Animal (PACMA) 1.59% (+1.35%)

* 2009: BLOC (CEU) 0.48%, ERPV-EV (EDP-V) 0.48%

** 2009: Libertas-Ciudadanos de Europa 0.18%

In the 2014 elections, PP won pluralities in 17 districts and PSOE in 2 (Pobles de l'Oest and Benicalap). PP won all districts in 2009 with >60% majorities in several central districts (Mestalla, l'Eixample, Extramurs or Ciutat Vella). The most conservative district is Pla del Real, where PP got 68.05% in 2009 and 41.41% in 2014 (Vox 8.13%, Cs 6.84%). PSOE's best result was in Pobles del Oest with 23.46%, getting >20% in a handful of districts (Benicalap, Rascanya, Olivereta, Jesús). IU (EUPV) did well in Poblats Maritims (the port district) getting 13.53%, as well in other working class districts located to the N (Algirós, Benimaclet, Rascanya) and the S (Jesús). Compromís is stronger in the Valencia's old quarter (it came second in Ciutat Vella, getting 11.31%) and in the rururban peripheral districts located N and S. As it happened in Madrid, Ciudadanos and Vox performed stronger results in those districts which traditionally lean to PP, while IU and Podemos performed better in districts where PSOE was usually stronger. There's not a clear socioeconomic pattern in the UPyD vote, neither in Madrid nor in Valencia.
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Velasco
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« Reply #143 on: December 08, 2014, 01:50:33 AM »

A couple of city maps to finish the EP elections series. PP governs Seville after winning a majority in the 2011 municipal elections, whereas PSOE governs Zaragoza in minority with the outside support of IU and the left-wing regionalist Aragonese Union (CHA). Juan Ignacio Zoido (PP) will have an uphill battle to retain the mayoralty in Seville. The mayor of Zaragoza Juan Alberto Belloch (PSOE) is not going to seek reelection in 2015.

Municipality of Seville by district:



PSOE 29.97% (-15.58%), PP 27,8% (-13.17%), Podemos 9.75% (new), IU 9.62% (+5.48%), UPyD 7.99% (+3.34%), Cs 2.27% (+2.17%), Vox 1.96% (new), PE (EQUO) 1.55% (+1.05%), Andalusian Party (PA) 1.41% (+0.63%), PACMA 1.08% (+0.78%).

Municipality of Zaragoza (Saragossa) by district:



PP 24.42% (-16.24%), PSOE 20.62% (-21.91%), Podemos 10.96% (new), IU 10.55% (+6.35%), UPyD 9.99% (+5.7%), PE (CHA-EQUO) 4.99% (+1.94%), Cs 3.64% (+3.48%), Vox 3.23% (new), Eb 2.32% (new)*, PACMA 1.53% (+1.26%), Partido X 1.41% (new).

Escaños en Blanco (roughly, "empty seats" or "none of the above") is a party founded in Barcelona that seeks recognition of protest vote in the form of empty seats. Eb got 0.74% nationwide
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Famous Mortimer
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« Reply #144 on: December 08, 2014, 11:59:32 PM »

Is there seriously no Spain general discussion section or 2015 thread? I'm stupid, help me.
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politicus
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« Reply #145 on: December 09, 2014, 12:02:00 AM »

Is there seriously no Spain general discussion section or 2015 thread? I'm stupid, help me.

There is a Spain GD, check the stickied GD thread on the IP board.
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Velasco
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« Reply #146 on: December 09, 2014, 06:40:15 AM »

Is there seriously no Spain general discussion section or 2015 thread? I'm stupid, help me.

Maybe someone should start a thread on the May 2015 regional and local elections next month, immediately followed by another on the November 2015 general elections. Also, there's the possibility of elections in Catalonia next year.
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