Polls Suggest Solid Win For Isabel Diaz Ayuso, Spanish Anti-lockdown Leader

Although Madrid has suffered Spain's highest numbers of infections and deaths, Ayuso has consistently defied calls to shut restaurants, turning her into the heroine of the hospitality sector.

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Madrid residents voted Tuesday in a regional election expected to hand a comfortable victory to its hardline leader who has soared in prominence for stubbornly resisting virus restrictions.

After voting closed at 8:00 pm (1800 GMT), the results of two polls taken in the days running up to the ballot, were released, both suggesting a solid win for Isabel Diaz Ayuso, a rising star in the right-wing Popular Party (PP).

At the helm of Spain’s richest region for just over 18 months, Ayuso has been one of the leading critics of Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s leftist government and its handling of the pandemic.

An outspoken hardliner, she has won widespread support for resisting government pressure to impose tighter restrictions on the local economy.

Madrid is the only major European capital that has kept bars, restaurants and theatres open since the national lockdown ended in June 2020.

Just over 5.1 million people were eligible to vote in Tuesday’s election, which comes after a bitterly-fought and divisive campaign in a region that has been ruled by the PP for more than 25 years.

From the early hours, there were long queues outside polling stations, with turnout at just over 69 percent an hour before the close, some 11 percentage points higher than in 2019.

Although Madrid has suffered Spain’s highest numbers of infections and deaths, Ayuso has consistently defied calls to shut restaurants, turning her into the heroine of the hospitality sector.

A year into the pandemic, Ayuso caught the political establishment by surprise, calling a snap election in a bid to cash in on the political capital she has more than likely earned.

And polls suggest her gamble will pay off, with results from a final pre-vote survey by Gad3 suggesting Ayuso’s PP would take 62-65 seats in the 136-seat parliament, up from 30, while Sanchez’s Socialists would end up with 25-28, down from 37.

Another poll by Sociometrica predicted a similar outcome with the PP taking 58-62 seats and the Socialists between 26 and 29.


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