The Data10 survey for OKDIARIO shows that Alberto Núñez Feijóo’s PP continues to be the preferred government option for Spaniards and that the events of the last month -including the controversy over the supposed anti-abortion protocol in Castilla y León, fueled by the social-communist Executive- have not made too much of a dent in the electorate. If anything, the one who wins is the Popular Party, because in the last month it has grown three seats and stands at 134 compared to 96 for the PSOE, which repeats results. The increase in the PP occurs at the expense of Vox, which goes from 53 seats to 50. Podemos, for its part, remains at 25 seats.
Since last summer, the demoscopic X-ray has not changed much: the PP continues to lead the PSOE by more than 6 points and Pedro Sánchez has not managed to come back, despite deploying a whole range of propaganda offers that have not penetrated the electorate. It is as if the Spanish had already decided their vote in large numbers and did not allow themselves to be carried away excessively by the issues that mark the daily news. In any case, the growth of the popular is no longer at the expense of the PSOE, which seems to have bottomed out at around 25% in intention to vote -Podemos, for its part, ranges between 10% and 11%-, but that its slight rise is at the expense of the formation of Santiago Abascal, which drops three tenths in a month. The oscillations, in any case, are already slight and seem to configure a stable scenario in which the most outstanding thing is to underline that the PP would have more seats than the sum of PSOE and Podemos (121). Of course, the sum of popular plus Vox configures a comfortable absolute majority of 184 seats, which would go to 186 with Navarra Suma. It is something that has been repeated for more than half a year.
In conclusion, time advances and Pedro Sánchez each has less margin to reverse the course of some surveys that show remarkable stability.