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The regional governments have been changing throughout these dThe socialists were the first to color the map , almost completely, in the mid-1980s. The situation changed at the beginning of the 90s, with the refoundation of Alianza Popular in the Popular Party chaired by José María Aznar, who not in vain presided over the Government of Castilla y León before making the leap to La Moncloa. Only one year before its victory against Felipe González, the Popular Party conquered the Community of Madrid for the first time, which until then had been presided only by Joaquín Leguina. The PSOE managed to recover ground after more than a decade in decline to practically dye the regional map red towards the end of the 2000s, with José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero in the Government, conquering such SW Business Directory emblematic places as Catalonia, Galicia, the Balearic Islands or Basque Country, agreements through. The situation changed again shortly afterwards, with Rajoy in La Moncloa, with Spain practically dyed blue in 2014 . Since then, however, the PSOE has regained power, obtaining the governments of Extremadura, Castilla-La Mancha, the Valencian Community and the Balearic Islands. In 2018, the PP managed to wrest the Andalusian Government from the PSOE for the first time since the Transition thanks to the support of Ciudadanos and Vox in a formula that will surely be repeated in different autonomies over the coming weeks. This is how the regional map could look after the elections held this May 26: Aragón ─ Javier Lambán, PSOE (24 seats) with the support of Ciudadanos (12 seats): pact with absolute majority (36/67 seats). Asturias ─ Adrián Barbón, PSOE (20 seats) with the support and/or abstention of Podemos (4 seats) and IU (2 seats): simple majority (20/45 seats) or pact with absolute majority (26/45 seats). Balearic Islands ─ Francina Armengol, PSOE (19 seats) with the support of Podemos (6 seats) and Més (7 seats): absolute (32/59 seats). |
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