1993 Spanish general election#Senate

{{Short description|none}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1993 Spanish general election

| country = Spain

| type = parliamentary

| ongoing = no

| previous_election = 1989 Spanish general election

| previous_year = 1989

| next_election = 1996 Spanish general election

| next_year = 1996

| outgoing_members =

| elected_members =

| seats_for_election = All 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies and 208 (of 256) seats in the Senate
176 seats needed for a majority in the Congress of Deputies

| opinion_polls = Opinion polling for the 1993 Spanish general election

| registered = 31,030,511 File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg4.8%

| turnout = 23,718,816 (76.4%)
File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg6.7 pp

| election_date = 6 June 1993

| image1 = 170x170px

| leader1 = Felipe González

| party1 = Spanish Socialist Workers' Party

| leader_since1 = 28 September 1979

| leaders_seat1 = Madrid

| last_election1 = 177 seats, 40.1%{{efn|name="PSOE+EE"|Results for PSOE (39.6%, 175 deputies) and EE (0.5%, 2 deputies) in the 1989 Congress election.}}

| seats1 = 159

| seat_change1 = File:Red Arrow Down.svg18

| popular_vote1 = 9,150,083

| percentage1 = 38.8%

| swing1 = File:Red Arrow Down.svg1.3 pp

| image2 = 170x170px

| leader2 = José María Aznar

| party2 = People's Party (Spain)

| leader_since2 = 4 September 1989

| leaders_seat2 = Madrid

| last_election2 = 107 seats, 25.8%

| seats2 = 141

| seat_change2 = File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg34

| popular_vote2 = 8,201,463

| percentage2 = 34.8%

| swing2 = File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg9.0 pp

| image3 = 170x170px

| leader3 = Julio Anguita

| party3 = United Left (Spain)

| leader_since3 = 12 February 1989

| leaders_seat3 = Madrid

| last_election3 = 17 seats, 9.1%

| seats3 = 18

| seat_change3 = File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg1

| popular_vote3 = 2,253,722

| percentage3 = 9.6%

| swing3 = File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg0.5 pp

| image4 = 170x170px

| leader4 = Miquel Roca

| party4 = Convergence and Union

| leader_since4 = 4 July 1982

| leaders_seat4 = Barcelona

| last_election4 = 18 seats, 5.0%

| seats4 = 17

| seat_change4 = File:Red Arrow Down.svg1

| popular_vote4 = 1,165,783

| percentage4 = 4.9%

| swing4 = File:Red Arrow Down.svg0.1 pp

| image5 = 170x170px

| leader5 = Iñaki Anasagasti

| party5 = Basque Nationalist Party

| leader_since5 = 1986

| leaders_seat5 = Biscay

| last_election5 = 5 seats, 1.2%

| seats5 = 5

| seat_change5 = File:Arrow Blue Right 001.svg0

| popular_vote5 = 291,448

| percentage5 = 1.2%

| swing5 = File:Arrow Blue Right 001.svg0.0 pp

| image6 = 170x170px

| leader6 = Luis Mardones

| party6 = Canarian Coalition

| leader_since6 = 18 April 1986

| leaders_seat6 = Santa Cruz de Tenerife

| last_election6 = 1 seats, 0.3%

| seats6 = 4

| seat_change6 = File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg3

| popular_vote6 = 207,077

| percentage6 = 0.9%

| swing6 = File:Green Arrow Up Darker.svg0.6 pp

| map = {{Switcher

| File:1993 Spanish election - Results.svg

| Vote winner strength by constituency (Congress)

| File:1993 Spanish election - AC results.svg

| Vote winner strength by autonomous community (Congress)

| File:1993 Spanish general election map.svg

| Election results by constituency (Congress)

}}

| title = Prime Minister

| posttitle = Prime Minister after election

| before_election = Felipe González

| before_party = Spanish Socialist Workers' Party

| after_election = Felipe González

| after_party = Spanish Socialist Workers' Party

}}

A general election was held in Spain on Sunday, 6 June 1993, to elect the members of the 5th {{lang|es|Cortes Generales|italic=no}}. All 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies were up for election, as well as 208 of 256 seats in the Senate.

Felipe González's third term in office had seen Spain completing projects like the Madrid–Seville high-speed rail line and hosting events such as the Seville Expo '92 and the Barcelona '92 Summer Olympics, which contributed to the modernization of the country's international image. Some corruption scandals affecting the ruling Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) were uncovered during this period: deputy prime minister Alfonso Guerra resigned in 1991 after his brother was accused of nepotism and tax evasion, and a judicial probe was started on the alleged illegal funding of PSOE campaigns (the "Filesa case"). The outset of the early 1990s recession and its impact on the Spanish economy (amid unemployment growth and rising inflation) forced the government to devalue the peseta three times in nine months. As a result of mounting crises and rising political tension, González chose to call a snap election for June 1993.

Amid a large voter turnout of 76.4%, González's PSOE emerged as the largest party for the fourth consecutive time, though it lost the overall majority it had held since 1982 and fell to 159 deputies. In contrast, José María Aznar's People's Party (PP) gained from the collapse of the Democratic and Social Centre (CDS) and made significant inroads, increasing its support to 34.8% of the vote and 141 seats. However, the party fell short of opinion poll predictions that gave it the most seats, which was attributed to González being perceived as decisively defeating Aznar in the second of two head-to-head debates held during the campaign. United Left (IU) remained stagnant, with party leader Julio Anguita having suffered a stroke in the week previous to the election that prevented him from campaigning.

For the first time since 1979, the election brought in a hung parliament, but parliamentary arithmetics meant that the PSOE remained the only party able to form a government. González was forced to seek the support of Catalan and Basque nationalist groups—such as Convergence and Union (CiU) and the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV)—in order to renew his tenure, in exchange for regional concessions. His fourth government was a minority one, in spite of coalition offerings made to CiU and PNV being rejected.

Background

The 175-seat victory of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) in the 1989 general election, exactly half of Congress, allowed it to govern with a de facto absolute majority or with minor support from other parties, depending on Herri Batasuna's policy of abstentionism.{{cite news |last=De la Cuadra |first=Bonifacio |date=11 June 1990 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1990/06/11/espana/645055202_850215.html |title=La llave de la mayoría absoluta |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=18 March 2025}}{{cite news |date=22 June 1990 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1990/06/22/espana/646005602_850215.html |title=Los socialistas tendrán que buscar más apoyo de sus socios |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=18 March 2025}} Due to election irregularities reported in a number of constituencies, only 332 deputies were sworn in by Felipe González's investiture as prime minister,{{cite news |last=Valdecantos |first=Camilo |date=13 April 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/04/13/espana/734652002_850215.html |title=La impugnación de las elecciones marcó la legislatura desde el inicio |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=18 March 2025}} prompting him to submit a motion of confidence on his government in April 1990,{{cite news |date=5 December 1989 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1989/12/05/espana/628815604_850215.html |title=González acepta crear una comisión parlamentaria que investigue con rigor el censo electoral |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=18 March 2025}}{{cite news |last=Galán |first=Javier |date=30 August 2016 |url=https://elpais.com/politica/2016/08/30/actualidad/1472549784_532521.html |title=Felipe González, diciembre de 1989, antesala a la cuestión de confianza |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=18 March 2025}} which he won.{{cite news |date=6 April 1990 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1990/04/06/portada/639352802_850215.html |title=La cuestión de confianza mostró la distancia del Gobierno con IU y PP |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=18 March 2025}}

Internationally, Spain would participate in the coalition formed in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, in the context of the Gulf War (which led to an increase in conscientious objectors to compulsory military service),{{cite news |url=https://www.defensa.gob.es/misiones/en_exterior/historico/listado/primera-guerra-del-golfo.html |title=Primera guerra del Golfo |language=es |publisher=Ministry of Defence |access-date=20 March 2025}}{{cite news |last1=Mora |first1=Miguel |last2=J. Campo |first2=Ramón |date=26 February 1991 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/02/26/espana/667522820_850215.html |title=Una guerra dentro de la guerra |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=20 March 2025}} and in the signing of the Maastricht Treaty, which established the European Union (EU) and provided a roadmap towards a common currency.{{cite news |url=https://www.exteriores.gob.es/es/PoliticaExterior/Paginas/EspanaUE.aspx |title=España y la Unión Europea |language=es |publisher=Ministry of Foreign Affairs |access-date=20 March 2025}} The establishment of a "European citizenship" required a constitutional reform—the first since the approval of the 1978 Spanish Constitution—to introduce active and passive suffrage in local elections for nationals of EU member states.{{cite news |agency=EFE |date=28 August 2022 |url=https://www.rtve.es/noticias/20220828/treinta-anos-primera-reforma-constitucional/2398684.shtml |title=La primera reforma constitucional cumple 30 años a la espera de la tercera |language=es |publisher=RTVE |access-date=18 March 2025}}{{cite web |url=https://app.congreso.es/consti/constitucion/reforma/primera_reforma.htm |title=Primera Reforma Constitucional (1992) |language=es |publisher=Congress of Deputies |access-date=20 March 2025}} Internally, the 1990 liberalization of the television market saw the first private channels in Spain—Antena 3, Telecinco and Canal+—challenging RTVE's monopoly until then.{{cite news |date=29 May 2018 |url=https://www.rtve.es/rtve/20180529/llegan-cadenas-privadas/1741700.shtml |title=Llegan las cadenas privadas |language=es |publisher=RTVE |access-date=21 March 2025}} The approval of a new law of citizen security protection—aimed at repealing the public order legislation in force since the Franco's dictatorship and combating drug-related crimes—came under criticism due to its empowerment to law enforcement to enter a home without the need for a warrant or judicial authorization.{{cite news |date=26 September 1991 |url=https://www.servimedia.es/noticias/magistrado-tribunal-constitucional-critica-ley-corcuera/1410759522 |title=Un magistrado del Tribunal Constitucional critica la "Ley Corcuera" |language=es |publisher=Servimedia |location=Seville |access-date=20 March 2025}}{{cite news |date=31 January 2019 |url=https://www.lasexta.com/programas/donde-estabas-entonces/mejores-momentos/la-ley-corcuera-o-como-el-gobierno-permitia-en-1992-que-la-policia-entrara-en-una-casa-sin-la-autorizacion-de-un-juez-video_201901315c536fd80cf2be7ee48445d0.html |title=La 'ley Corcuera' o cómo el Gobierno permitía en 1992 que la Policía entrara en una casa sin la autorización de un juez |language=es |publisher=laSexta |access-date=20 March 2025}} These provisions (which earned the bill the nickname "kick-in-the-door law") would be eventually overturned by the Constitutional Court in November 1993, prompting the resignation of the law's promoter, interior minister José Luis Corcuera.{{cite news |last1=González Ibañez |first1=Juan |last2=De la Cuadra |first2=Bonifacio |last3=Díez |first3=Anabel |date=19 November 1993 |title=Corcuera comunica a González su decisión de dimitir |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/11/19/espana/753663618_850215.html |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=20 March 2025}}{{cite news |last=Herrera |first=Elena |date=9 April 2021 |url=https://www.eldiario.es/politica/treinta-anos-ley-corcuera-frustrada-patada-puerta-resurgido-plena-pandemia_1_7393265.html |title=Treinta años de la ley Corcuera, la frustrada 'patada en la puerta' que ha resurgido en plena pandemia |language=es |newspaper=elDiario.es |access-date=20 March 2025}}

File:Sevilla Santa Justa station 1992 3.jpg temporarily weathered the impact of the early 1990s recession thanks to investments in the Seville Expo '92, the Barcelona Olympics or the Madrid–Seville high-speed rail line.]]

This period also saw Spain hosting events such as the Madrid Conference of 1991,{{cite web |last=Vacas |first=Constanza |date=30 October 2023 |url=https://historia.nationalgeographic.com.es/a/paz-entre-israel-y-palestina-pudo-haberse-firmado-madrid_20372 |title=Conferencia de Madrid: Un intento de paz para el conflicto palestino-israelí |language=es |publisher=National Geographic |access-date=21 March 2025}} the Seville Expo '92 and the Barcelona '92 Summer Olympics—which allowed the fledgeling democracy to present itself to the international community as a modern country, different from what it had been under the Francoist regime{{cite news |last=Echarri |first=Miquel |date=28 October 2015 |url=https://elpais.com/elpais/2015/10/26/icon/1445854444_919801.html |title=1992, el año en el que España subió a primera división |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=18 March 2025}}{{cite web |url=https://humanidades.com/espana-democratica/ |title=España democrática. Los gobiernos de Felipe González (1982-1996) |language=es |publisher=Enciclopedia Humanidades |access-date=18 March 2025 |quote="(...) En las elecciones de 1989, el PSOE volvió a ganar por mayoría absoluta. En esta tercera legislatura del PSOE (1989-1993), España celebró en 1992 dos acontecimientos internacionales, los Juegos Olímpicos de Barcelona y la Expo de Sevilla, que mostraron una imagen de país moderno muy diferente a la España de la dictadura de Franco."}}—as well as the completion of major infrastructure projects such as the Madrid–Seville high-speed rail line and the establishment of the first AVE service.{{cite news |last=Amiguet |first=Teresa |date=14 April 2022 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/hemeroteca/20220414/8198780/ave-emprende-vuelo.html |title=El AVE emprende el vuelo |language=es |newspaper=La Vanguardia |access-date=20 March 2025}} However, the Spanish economy was hit hard by the effects of the ongoing international recession: the large investments of those years had left public administrations and companies highly indebted, while the 1990 oil price shock, a consequence of the Gulf War, affected inflation (the rise of which forced the government to devalue the peseta three times in nine months; the last of which, on 13 May 1993, would become known as "Black Thursday"), leading to an increase of the unemployment rate.{{cite web |url=https://humanidades.com/espana-democratica/ |title=España democrática. Los gobiernos de Felipe González (1982-1996) |language=es |publisher=Enciclopedia Humanidades |access-date=18 March 2025 |quote="Sin embargo, la recesión mundial iniciada a principios de los años noventa golpeó duramente a España. La crisis económica disparó la inflación y el desempleo, que alcanzó la cifra de tres millones de desocupados."}}{{cite news |date=14 May 1993 |title='Jueves negro' para la economía española |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/05/14/economia/737330426_850215.html |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=20 March 2025}}{{cite news |last1=Maqueda |first1=Antonio |last2=Alonso |first2=Antonio |last3=Clemente Pomeda |first3=Yolanda |date=29 January 2021 |title=Las mayores crisis de la economía española |url=https://elpais.com/economia/2021-01-29/las-mayores-crisis-de-la-economia-espanola.html |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=20 March 2025}}

ETA intensified its attacks in the early 1990s in the run up to the Barcelona Olympics in order to try to gain worldwide attention; this saw the Sabadell bombing in 1990, the Vic and Mutxamel bombings in 1991, and the 1992 Madrid bombing, as well as a number of attacks in the Netherlands. In March 1992, the group leaders at the time—José Luis Álvarez Santacristina "Txelis", José Javier Zabaleta Elosegi "Baldo", Francisco Múgica Garmendia "Pakito" y José Arregi Erostarbe "Fitti"—were detained in the French commune of Bidart thanks to cooperation between Spanish and French forces.{{cite news |last=MEC |first=Borja |date=1 May 2006 |title=Bidart: la caída de la cúpula de ETA |url=https://www.expansion.com/especiales/20aniversario/20diasespana/eta.html |language=es |newspaper=Expansión |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}}

A succession of political scandals began to undermine the government's public image starting in 1991 and into 1992.{{cite news |last1=Díez |first1=Anabel |last2=González Ibáñez |first2=Juan |date=23 March 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/03/23/espana/701305225_850215.html |title=Del caso de Juan Guerra a Ibercorp |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}} Alfonso Guerra resigned as deputy prime minister in January 1991,{{cite news |last=González Ibáñez |first=Juan |date=13 January 1991 |title=Guerra afirma que dimite para facilitar "un buen Gobierno" |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/01/13/espana/663721210_850215.html |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=18 March 2025}} following a scandal involving his brother Juan—amid accusations of nepotism and tax evasion{{cite news |last=Méndez |first=Juan |date=13 January 1991 |title=El 'caso Juan Guerra', elemento clave de la caída |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/01/13/espana/663721205_850215.html |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Seville |access-date=18 March 2025}}—which had been ongoing for over a year.{{cite news |date=6 April 1990 |title=El PP e IU exigen de nuevo la dimisión de Guerra |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1990/04/06/espana/639352807_850215.html |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=18 March 2025}}{{cite news |last=Rosell |first=Francisco |date=18 October 2007 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/especiales/2007/10/comunicacion/18elmundo/juanguerra.html |title=Juan Guerra abre despacho en el patio de monipodio |language=es |newspaper=El Mundo |access-date=17 March 2025}} In May, it was revealed that a number of PSOE-linked companies had been paid hundreds of millions for consultancy works that were never carried out (funds which were allegedly used to illegally fund the party's campaigns in 1989) in what would come to be known as the "Filesa case".{{cite news |last1=González Ibáñez |first1=Juan |last2=Díez |first2=Anabel |date=30 May 1991 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/05/30/espana/675554423_850215.html |title=El fiscal del Estado ordena investigar a dos firmas que financiaron irregularmente al PSOE |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}}{{cite news |date=1 December 2000 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2000/12/1/espana/975687028.html |title=Un grupo de sociedades financiaron ilícitamente campañas del PSOE en 1989 |language=es |newspaper=El Mundo |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}}{{cite news |last=Ramírez |first=L. |date=1 May 2006 |url=https://www.expansion.com/especiales/20aniversario/20diasespana/filesa.html |title=Estalla el "caso Filesa" |language=es |newspaper=Expansión |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}} Several months later, health minister Julián García Valverde was forced to abandon politics after revelations that RENFE—a state-owned company which he had presided between 1985 and 1991—had purchased lands at an inflated price that suggested a possible embezzlement.{{cite news |date=14 January 1992 |title=García Valverde dimite como ministro de Sanidad por el escándalo de Renfe|url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/01/14/espana/695343617_850215.html |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=18 March 2025}}{{cite news |date=14 January 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/01/14/espana/695343603_850215.html |title=Operaciones sospechosas en San Sebastián de los Reyes |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=18 March 2025}}

File:Alfonso Guerra con los ministros de Asuntos Exteriores, Cultura y Agricultura, en el Congreso de los Diputados (cropped).jpeg's resignation as deputy prime minister.]]

Other scandals saw the "Ibercorp case" that broke out in February 1992, in which it was unveiled that governor of the Bank of Spain Mariano Rubio owned stock shares in the Ibercorp investment bank, that he had concealed these from the National Securities Market Commission (CNMV) and that he had amassed a fortune by carrying out financial operations based on privileged information; while Rubio denied all accusations, he was replaced from his post in July.{{cite news |date=30 June 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/06/30/economia/709855205_850215.html |title=González nombra a Luis Ángel Rojo gobernador del Banco de España en sustitución de Mariano Rubio |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}}{{cite news |last=Justicia |first=Francisco |date=18 October 2007 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/especiales/2007/10/comunicacion/18elmundo/ibercop.html |title=La corrupción del poder económico y sus amigos |language=es |newspaper=El Mundo |access-date=16 March 2025}} In November that year, a scheme to collect illegal kickbacks from the awarding of contracts for the purchase of newsprint used by the Official State Gazette (BOE) printing presses was uncovered.{{cite news |last=De la Cuadra |first=Bonifacio |date=2 November 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/11/02/espana/720658807_850215.html |title=Una juez investiga a tres ex altos cargos del BOE por un presunto fraude de 1.010 millones |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}}{{cite news |last=De la Cuadra |first=Bonifacio |date=2 November 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/11/02/espana/720658804_850215.html |title=Una actuación contraria al "más elemental principio de economía" |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}} The scandal would bring about the arrest one year later of former BOE director, Carmen Salanueva,{{cite news |last1=Duva |first1=Jesús |last2=De la Cuadra |first2=Bonifacio |date=30 November 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/11/30/espana/754614016_850215.html |title=Detenida por orden judicial la ex directora del BOE por delitos vinculados a la compra de papel prensa |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}}{{cite news |last=De la Cuadra |first=Bonifacio |date=5 December 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/12/05/espana/755046003_850215.html |title=La inocencia de comprar dos objetos de plata en Navidad |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}} who was also accused of fraud by buying paintings at a low price invoking the name of Queen Sofía and Carmen Romero, spouse of then prime minister Felipe González.{{cite news |last=Hernández |first=José Antonio |date=16 June 1994 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1994/06/16/espana/771717610_850215.html |title=La policía investiga a Salanueva por presunta apropiación de cuadros |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}}{{cite news |agency=Europa Press |date=18 January 2000 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2000/01/18/espana/948199232.html |title=Muere de un cáncer Carmen Salanueva, ex directora general del BOE |language=es |newspaper=El Mundo |location=Madrid |access-date=17 March 2025}}

The growing unpopularity of the government sewed divisions within the ruling PSOE: starting in its 1990 congress, supporters of deputy secretary-general Alfonso Guerra (colloquially referred to as guerristas) clashed with supporters of prime minister Felipe González (renovadores, Spanish for "renovators") over party control.{{cite news |last=Redondo |first=Javier |date=30 September 2016 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/espana/2016/09/30/57ed7cb3468aebb8158b464b.html |title=El PSOE, un partido abonado a las luchas internas |language=es |newspaper=El Mundo |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}} Opposition to the Socialist government coalesced around the newly-amalgamated People's Party (PP)—formed in 1989 by several right-of-centre parties: the People's Alliance (AP), the Christian Democracy (DC) and the Liberal Party (PL)—and its new party leader, José María Aznar,{{cite news |last=González Ibáñez |first=Juan |date=31 March 1990 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1990/03/31/espana/638834413_850215.html |title=El PP inicia hoy un congreso diseñado para aclamar a Aznar como nuevo presidente |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}} particularly following the 1991 local and regional elections, which saw the PSOE losing important local governments such as Valencia and Seville,{{cite news |last=Prieto |first=Joaquín |date=28 May 1991 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/05/28/espana/675381619_850215.html |title=El PP gana 600.000 votos y el PSOE pierde más ciudades |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}}{{cite news |date=14 June 1991 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/06/14/espana/676850421_850215.html |title=El PSOE pierde las alcaldías de Sevilla y Valencia tras pactar el Partido Popular con los regionalistas |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}} as well as the collapse of the Democratic and Social Centre (CDS) and the farewell of its leader, Adolfo Suárez, from active politics.{{cite news |last=Martín del Pozo |first=Concha |date=27 May 1991 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/05/27/espana/675295225_850215.html |title=Adolfo Suárez dimite tras descalabro electoral del CDS |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}}

On 12 April 1993, Felipe González announced the dissolution of parliament and the calling of a snap election for 6 June, four months ahead of schedule, to solve "tensions in Spanish political life" that prevented his government from "addressing the economic crisis".{{cite news |date=13 April 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/04/13/portada/734652002_850215.html |title=González adelanta las elecciones al 6 de junio por el clima de crispación política |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=21 March 2025}}{{cite news |date=13 April 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/04/13/espana/734652005_850215.html |title=No se ha agotado ninguna legislatura |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}} The rising number of revelations of corruption scandal, internal party divisions, and the increasingly hostile opposition staged by the PP were also said to have González's decision.{{cite news |last=Díez |first=Anabel |date=17 December 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/12/17/espana/724546823_850215.html |title=Dirigentes del PSOE reconocen que el 92 es un año "catastrófico" por los casos de corrupción |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}}{{cite news |last1=Rodríguez Aizpeolea |first1=Luis |last2=Díez |first2=Anabel |date=13 April 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/04/13/espana/734652006_850215.html |title=La división en el PSOE ha estado a punto de deteriorar la autoridad de González |language=es |newspaper=El País |location=Madrid |access-date=21 March 2025}}

Overview

=Electoral system=

The Spanish {{lang|es|Cortes Generales|italic=no}} were envisaged as an imperfect bicameral system. The Congress of Deputies had greater legislative power than the Senate, having the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a prime minister and to override Senate vetoes by an absolute majority of votes. Nonetheless, the Senate possessed a few exclusive (yet limited in number) functions—such as its role in constitutional amendment—which were not subject to the Congress' override.{{harvp|Const. Esp.|1978|loc=tit. III, ch. I, art. 66}}.{{cite web |url=https://app.congreso.es/consti/constitucion/indice/sinopsis/sinopsis.jsp?art=66&tipo=2 |title=Sinopsis artículo 66 |language=es |publisher=Congress of Deputies |access-date=12 September 2020 |postscript=,}} summarizing {{harvp|Const. Esp.|1978|loc=tit. III, ch. I, art. 66}}. Voting for the {{lang|es|Cortes Generales|italic=no}} was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over 18 years of age and in full enjoyment of their political rights.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. I, ch. I, art. 2}}.{{sfn|Carreras de Odriozola|Tafunell Sambola|2005|p=1077}}

For the Congress of Deputies, 348 seats were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes—which included blank ballots—being applied in each constituency. Seats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of Spain, with each being allocated an initial minimum of two seats and the remaining 248 being distributed in proportion to their populations. Ceuta and Melilla were allocated the two remaining seats, which were elected using plurality voting.{{harvp|Const. Esp.|1978|loc=tit. III, ch. I, art. 68}}.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. II, ch. III, art. 162–164}}. The use of the electoral method resulted in an effective threshold based on the district magnitude and the distribution of votes among candidacies.{{cite web |last=Gallagher |first=Michael |date=30 July 2012 |url=http://www.tcd.ie/Political_Science/staff/michael_gallagher/ElSystems/Docts/effthresh.php |title=Effective threshold in electoral systems |publisher=Trinity College, Dublin |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170730092518/http://www.tcd.ie/Political_Science/staff/michael_gallagher/ElSystems/Docts/effthresh.php |access-date=22 July 2017 |archive-date=30 July 2017}}

As a result of the aforementioned allocation, each Congress multi-member constituency was entitled the following seats:{{cite journal |journal=Boletín Oficial del Estado |issue=88 |date=13 April 1993 |pages=10581–10582 |issn=0212-033X |title=Real Decreto 534/1993, de 12 de abril, de disolución del Congreso de los Diputados y del Senado y de convocatoria de elecciones |url=https://www.boe.es/boe/dias/1993/04/13/pdfs/A10581-10582.pdf |language=es}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:left;"
width="50"| Seats

! width="600"| Constituencies

align="center"| 34

| Madrid{{font color|green|(+1)}}

align="center"| 32

| Barcelona

align="center"| 16

| Valencia

align="center"| 12

| Seville

align="center"| 10

| Alicante, Málaga

align="center"| 9

| Asturias, Biscay{{font color|red|(–1)}}, Cádiz, La Coruña, Murcia

align="center"| 8

| Pontevedra

align="center"| 7

| Balearics{{font color|green|(+1)}}, Córdoba, Granada, Las Palmas, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Zaragoza

align="center"| 6

| Badajoz, Guipúzcoa{{font color|red|(–1)}}, Jaén, Tarragona{{font color|green|(+1)}}

align="center"| 5

| Almería, Cáceres, Cantabria, Castellón, Ciudad Real, Girona, Huelva, León, Lugo, Navarre, Toledo, Valladolid

align="center"| 4

| Álava, Albacete, Burgos, La Rioja, Lleida, Orense{{font color|red|(–1)}}, Salamanca

align="center"| 3

| Ávila, Cuenca, Guadalajara, Huesca, Palencia, Segovia, Soria, Teruel, Zamora

For the Senate, 208 seats were elected using an open list partial block voting system, with electors voting for individual candidates instead of parties. In constituencies electing four seats, electors could vote for up to three candidates; in those with two or three seats, for up to two candidates; and for one candidate in single-member districts. Each of the 47 peninsular provinces was allocated four seats, whereas for insular provinces, such as the Balearic and Canary Islands, districts were the islands themselves, with the larger—Majorca, Gran Canaria and Tenerife—being allocated three seats each, and the smaller—Menorca, IbizaFormentera, Fuerteventura, La Gomera, El Hierro, Lanzarote and La Palma—one each. Ceuta and Melilla elected two seats each. Additionally, autonomous communities could appoint at least one senator each and were entitled to one additional senator per each million inhabitants.{{harvp|Const. Esp.|1978|loc=tit. III, ch. I, art. 69}}.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. II, ch. III, art. 162 & 165–166}}.

The law did not provide for by-elections to fill vacated seats; instead, any vacancies that occurred after the proclamation of candidates and into the legislature's term were to be covered by the successive candidates in the list and, when needed, by the designated substitutes, of which the list was required to include three.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. I, ch. VI, art. 46 & 48}}.

=Election date=

The term of each chamber of the {{lang|es|Cortes Generales|italic=no}}—the Congress and the Senate—expired four years from the date of their previous election, unless they were dissolved earlier. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the date of expiry of parliament and published on the following day in the Official State Gazette (BOE), with election day taking place between the fifty-fourth and the sixtieth day from publication.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. I, ch. V, art. 42}}. The previous election was held on 29 October 1989, which meant that the legislature's term would expire on 29 October 1993. The election decree was required to be published in the BOE no later than 5 October 1993, with the election taking place on the sixtieth day from publication, setting the latest possible election date for the {{lang|es|Cortes Generales|italic=no}} on Saturday, 4 December 1993.{{cite news |date=18 November 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/11/18/espana/722041205_850215.html |title=El 3 de diciembre de 1993, última fecha posible para las elecciones generales |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=19 March 2019}}

The prime minister had the prerogative to propose the monarch to dissolve both chambers at any given time—either jointly or separately—and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process, no state of emergency was in force and that dissolution did not occur before one year had elapsed since the previous one.{{harvp|Const. Esp.|1978|loc=tit. IV, art. 115–116}}. Additionally, both chambers were to be dissolved and a new election called if an investiture process failed to elect a prime minister within a two-month period from the first ballot.{{harvp|Const. Esp.|1978|loc=tit. IV, art. 99}}. Barred this exception, there was no constitutional requirement for simultaneous elections to the Congress and the Senate. Still, as of {{Currentyear}}, there has been no precedent of separate elections taking place under the 1978 Constitution.

The {{lang|es|Cortes Generales|italic=no}} were officially dissolved on 13 April 1993 after the publication of the dissolution decree in the BOE, setting the election date for 6 June and scheduling for both chambers to reconvene on 29 June.

Parliamentary composition

The tables below show the composition of the parliamentary groups in both chambers at the time of dissolution.{{cite web |last=Lozano |first=Carles |url=https://www.historiaelectoral.com/grups.html |title=Grupos Parlamentarios en el Congreso de los Diputados y el Senado |language=es |website=Historia Electoral.com |access-date=29 October 2022}}{{cite web |last=Lozano |first=Carles |url=https://www.historiaelectoral.com/senado7.html |title=Composición del Senado 1977-{{year}} |language=es |website=Historia Electoral.com |access-date=29 October 2022}}

{{col-begin|width=auto}}

{{col-break}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:left;"

|+ Parliamentary composition in April 1993{{cite web |url=https://www.congreso.es/web/guest/grupos/composicion-en-la-legislatura |title=Grupos parlamentarios |language=es |website=Congress of Deputies |access-date=7 December 2020}}

colspan="6"| Congress of Deputies
rowspan="2" colspan="2"| Groups

! rowspan="2" colspan="2"| Parties

! colspan="2"| Deputies

Seats

! Total

width="1" rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}"|

| rowspan="2"| Socialist Group of the Congress

| width="1" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}"|

| PSOE

| 155

| rowspan="2"| 175

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Socialists' Party of Catalonia}}"|

| PSC

| 20

rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}"|

| rowspan="2"| People's Parliamentary Group in the Congress

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}"|

| PP

| 104

| rowspan="2"| 106

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Navarrese People's Union}}"|

| UPN

| 2

rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Convergence and Union}}"|

| rowspan="2"| Catalan Parliamentary Group
(Convergence and Union)

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}"|

| CDC

| 13

| rowspan="2"| 18

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic Union of Catalonia}}"|

| UDC

| 5

rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}"|

| rowspan="2"| United Left–Initiative for Catalonia
Parliamentary Group

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}"|

| IU

| 14

| rowspan="2"| 17

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Initiative for Catalonia}}"|

| IC

| 3

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}"|

| CDS Parliamentary Group

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}"|

| CDS

| 12

| 12

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}"|

| Basque Parliamentary Group (PNV)

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}"|

| EAJ/PNV

| 5

| 5

rowspan="9" bgcolor="gray"|

| rowspan="9"| Mixed Parliamentary Group

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}"|

| HB

| 4

| rowspan="9"| 17

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andalusian Party}}"|

| PA

| 2

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian Union}}"|

| UV

| 2

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Eusko Alkartasuna}}"|

| EA

| 2

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Euskadiko Ezkerra}}"|

| EE

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Euskal Ezkerra}}"|

| EuE

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Aragonese Party}}"|

| PAR

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Canarian Independent Groups}}"|

| AIC

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Independent politician}}"|

| INDEP

| 3{{efn|Carlos Revilla and Antoni Fernández Teixidó, former CDS legislators; Felipe Baeza, former PP legislator.}}

{{col-break|gap=1em}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:left;"

|+ Parliamentary composition in April 1993{{cite web |url=https://www.senado.es/web/composicionorganizacion/gruposparlamentarios/gruposparlamentariosdesde1977/index.html |title=Grupos Parlamentarios desde 1977 |language=es |website=Senate of Spain |access-date=7 December 2020}}

colspan="6"| Senate
rowspan="2" colspan="2"| Groups

! rowspan="2" colspan="2"| Parties

! colspan="2"| Senators

Seats

! Total

width="1" rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}"|

| rowspan="2"| Socialist Parliamentary Group

| width="1" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}"|

| PSOE

| 120

| rowspan="2"| 128

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Socialists' Party of Catalonia}}"|

| PSC

| 8

rowspan="3" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}"|

| rowspan="3"| People's Parliamentary Group in the Senate

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}"|

| PP

| 88

| rowspan="3"| 91

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Navarrese People's Union}}"|

| UPN

| 2

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Majorcan Union}}"|

| UM

| 1

rowspan="2" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Convergence and Union}}"|

| rowspan="2"| Convergence and Union's
Catalan Parliamentary Group in the Senate

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}"|

| CDC

| 11

| rowspan="2"| 14

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic Union of Catalonia}}"|

| UDC

| 3

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}"|

| Basque Nationalist Senators' Parliamentary Group

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}"|

| EAJ/PNV

| 6

| 6

rowspan="9" bgcolor="gray"|

| rowspan="9"| Mixed Parliamentary Group

| style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}"|

| IU

| 3

| rowspan="9"| 15

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}"|

| HB

| 3

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Canarian Independent Groups}}"|

| AIC

| 3

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}"|

| CDS

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Eusko Alkartasuna}}"|

| EA

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Aragonese Party}}"|

| PAR

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Majorera Assembly}}"|

| AM

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Independent Herrenian Group}}"|

| AHI

| 1

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian Nationalist Left}}"|

| ENV

| 1

{{col-end}}

Parties and candidates

=Eligibility=

Spanish citizens of age and with the legal capacity to vote could run for election, provided that they were not sentenced to imprisonment by a final court's decision nor convicted by a judgement, even if not yet final, which imposed a penalty of forfeiture of eligibility or of specific disqualification or suspension from public office under specific offences: rebellion and terrorism when involving crimes against life, physical integrity or freedom of persons. Other general causes of ineligibility were imposed on members of the Spanish royal family; the president and members of the Constitutional Court, the General Council of the Judiciary, the Supreme Court, the Council of State, the Court of Auditors and the Economic and Social Council; the Ombudsman; the State's Attorney General; high-ranking members—undersecretaries, secretaries-general, directors-general and chiefs of staff—of Spanish government departments, the Prime Minister's Office, government delegations, the Social Security and other government agencies; heads of diplomatic missions in foreign states or international organizations; judges and public prosecutors in active service; Armed Forces and police corps personnel in active service; members of electoral commissions; the chair of RTVE; the director of the Electoral Register Office; the governor and deputy governor of the Bank of Spain; the chairs of the Official Credit Institute and other official credit institutions; and members of the Nuclear Safety Council; as well as a number of territorial-level officers in the aforementioned government bodies and institutions being barred from running, during their tenure of office, in constituencies within the whole or part of their respective area of jurisdiction.{{harvp|Const. Esp.|1978|loc=tit. III, ch. I, art. 70}}.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. I, ch. II, art. 6}}. Disqualification provisions for the Cortes Generales extended to any employee of a foreign state and to members of regional governments, as well as the impossibility of running simultaneously as candidate for both the Congress and Senate.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. II, ch. I, art. 154}}.

The electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.{{harvp|LOREG|1985|loc=tit. I, ch. VI, art. 44 & tit. II, ch. V, art. 169}}.

=Main candidacies=

Below is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:

class="wikitable" style="line-height:1.35em; text-align:left;"
colspan="2" rowspan="3"| Candidacy

! rowspan="3"| Parties and
alliances

! colspan="2" rowspan="3"| Leading candidate

! rowspan="3"| Ideology

! colspan="4"| Previous result

! rowspan="3"| {{abbr|Gov.|Government}}

! rowspan="3"| {{abbr|Ref.|References}}

colspan="2"| Congress

! colspan="2"| Senate

Vote %

! Seats

! Vote %

! Seats

width="1" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}"|

| align="center"| PSOE

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE)

| Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC)

}}

| 50px

| Felipe González

| Social democracy

| align="center"|
40.1%
{{efn|name="PSOE+EE"}}

| {{big|177}}

| align="center"|
40.7%
{{efn|Results for PSOE (40.1%, 107 senators) and EE (0.5%, 0 senators) in the 1989 Senate election.}}

| {{big|107}}

| {{ya|15}}

| {{cite news |date=12 September 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/09/12/espana/716248819_850215.html |title=El PSOE proclama candidato a la presidencia a González pese a que este mantiene la incógnita |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=19 March 2019}}
{{cite news |date=1 January 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/01/10/espana/726620405_850215.html |title=Socialistas y Euskadiko Ezkerra ponen en marcha su proyecto de fusión |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=19 March 2019}}
{{cite news |date=22 February 1993 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/02/22/espana/730335604_850215.html |title=318 afiliados de Euskadiko Ezkerra aprueban la fusión con el PSE-PSOE |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=19 March 2019}}

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="center"| PP

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| People's Party (PP)

| Navarrese People's Union (UPN)

}}

| 50px

| José María Aznar

| Conservatism
Christian democracy

| align="center"| 25.8%

| {{big|107}}

| align="center"| 26.1%

| {{big|78}}

| {{na|15}}

| {{cite news |date=18 March 1991 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1991/03/18/espana/669250801_850215.html |title=El PP desaparece en Navarra al fusionarse con Unión del Pueblo Navarro |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=19 March 2019}}
{{cite news |date=30 November 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/11/30/espana/723078014_850215.html |title=Aznar será proclamado candidato del PP a La Moncloa el 16 de enero |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=19 March 2019}}

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Convergence and Union}}"|

| align="center"| CiU

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Democratic Convergence of Catalonia (CDC)

| Democratic Union of Catalonia (UDC)

}}

| 50px

| Miquel Roca

| Catalan nationalism
Centrism

| align="center"| 5.0%

| {{big|18}}

| align="center"| 5.3%

| {{big|10}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}"|

| align="center"| IU

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| United Left (IU)
{{smaller|– Communist Party of Spain (PCE)
Socialist Action Party (PASOC)
Republican Left (IR)
Collectives for the Unity of Workers (CUT)
Galician Left (EG)}}

| Initiative for Catalonia (IC)
{{smaller|– Unified Socialist Party of Catalonia (PSUC)}}

}}

| 50px

| Julio Anguita

| Socialism
Communism

| align="center"| 9.1%

| {{big|17}}

| align="center"| 8.8%

| {{big|1}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}"|

| align="center"| CDS

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Democratic and Social Centre (CDS)

}}

| 50px

| Rafael Calvo Ortega

| Centrism
Liberalism

| align="center"| 7.9%

| {{big|14}}

| align="center"| 7.6%

| {{big|1}}

| {{na|15}}

| {{cite news |date=20 September 1992 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1992/09/20/espana/716940010_850215.html |title=Calvo Ortega, candidato |language=es |newspaper=El País |access-date=19 March 2019}}

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}"|

| align="center"| EAJ/PNV

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Basque Nationalist Party (EAJ/PNV)

}}

| 50px

| Iñaki Anasagasti

| Basque nationalism
Christian democracy

| align="center"| 1.2%

| {{big|5}}

| align="center"| 1.3%

| {{big|4}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}"|

| align="center"| HB

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Popular Unity (HB)
{{smaller|– Basque Nationalist Action (EAE/ANV)
Patriotic Socialist Committees (ASK)}}

}}

| 50px

| Jon Idigoras

| Basque independence
Abertzale left
Revolutionary socialism

| align="center"| 1.1%

| {{big|4}}

| align="center"| 1.1%

| {{big|3}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andalusian Party}}"|

| align="center"| PA

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Andalusian Party (PA)

}}

| 50px

| Salvador Pérez Bueno

| Andalusian nationalism
Social democracy

| align="center"| 1.0%

| {{big|2}}

| align="center"| 1.2%

| {{big|0}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian Union}}"|

| align="center"| UV

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Valencian Union (UV)

}}

| 50px

| Vicente González Lizondo

| Blaverism
Conservatism

| align="center"| 0.7%

| {{big|2}}

| align="center"| 0.6%

| {{big|0}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Eusko Alkartasuna}}"|

| align="center"| EAEuE

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Basque Solidarity (EA)

| Basque Left (EuE)

}}

| 50px

| Xabier Albistur

| Basque nationalism
Social democracy

| align="center"| 0.7%

| {{big|2}}

| align="center"| 0.7%

| {{big|0}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Aragonese Party}}"|

| align="center"| PAR

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Aragonese Party (PAR)

}}

| 50px

| José María Mur

| Regionalism
Centrism

| align="center"| 0.4%

| {{big|1}}

| align="center"| 0.4%

| {{big|0}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Canarian Coalition}}"|

| align="center"| CC

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Canarian Independent Groups (AIC)
{{smaller|– Tenerife Group of Independents (ATI)
– La Palma Group of Independents (API)
– Gomera Group of Independents (AGI)
Independents of Fuerteventura (IF)
Lanzarote Independents Party (PIL)}}

| Nationalist Canarian Initiative (ICAN)

| Independent Canarian Centre (CCI)

| Canarian Nationalist Party (PNC)

| Independent Herrenian Group (AHI)

| Majorera Assembly (AM)

}}

| 50px

| Lorenzo Olarte

| Regionalism
Canarian nationalism
Centrism

| align="center"|
0.3%
{{efn|name="AIC"|Results for AIC in the 1989 election.}}

| {{big|1}}

| align="center"|
0.2%
{{efn|name="AIC"}}

| {{big|4}}

| {{na|15}}

|

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Republican Left of Catalonia}}"|

| align="center"| ERC

| {{Collapsible list

| title = List

| bullets = on

| Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC)

}}

| 50px

| Pilar Rahola

| Catalan independence
Left-wing nationalism
Social democracy

| align="center"| 0.4%

| {{big|0}}

| align="center"| 0.4%

| {{big|0}}

| {{na|15}}

|

Campaign

=Election debates=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

|+ 1993 Spanish general election debates

rowspan="3"| Date

! rowspan="3"| Organisers

! rowspan="3"| Moderator(s)

! colspan="4"| {{smaller|  }} {{Colors|black|#90FF90| P }} {{smaller|Present{{efn|Denotes a main invitee attending the event.}}  }} {{Colors|black|#D0F0C0| S }} {{smaller|Surrogate{{efn|Denotes a main invitee not attending the event, sending a surrogate in their place.}}  }}

scope="col" style="width:5em;"| PSOE

! scope="col" style="width:5em;"| PP

! rowspan="2" scope="col" style="width:5em;"| Audience

! rowspan="2"| {{abbr|Ref.|References}}

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}};"|

! style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}};"|

style="white-space:nowrap; text-align:left;"| 24 May

| style="white-space:nowrap; text-align:left;"| Antena 3

| style="white-space:nowrap; text-align:left;"| Manuel Campo Vidal

| {{Yes|P
{{smaller|González}}}}

| {{Yes|P
{{smaller|Aznar}}}}

| 61.8%
{{smaller|(9,625,000)}}

| {{cite news |date=13 October 2015 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/enredados/2015/10/13/561d1f9646163f102b8b4639.html |title=Cinco debates en 11 elecciones: del 'desastre' de Felipe a la 'niña' de Rajoy |language=es |work=El Mundo |access-date=23 January 2019}}
{{cite news |date=21 February 2008 |url=https://www.formulatv.com/noticias/6878/los-debates-gonzalez---aznar-entre-las-emisiones-mas-vistas-de-la-historia-de-antena-3-y-telecinco/ |title=Los debates González - Aznar, entre las emisiones más vistas de la historia de Antena 3 y Telecinco |language=es |work=FormulaTV |access-date=23 January 2019}}

style="white-space:nowrap; text-align:left;"| 31 May

| style="white-space:nowrap; text-align:left;"| Tele 5

| style="white-space:nowrap; text-align:left;"| Luis Mariñas

| {{Yes|P
{{smaller|González}}}}

| {{Yes|P
{{smaller|Aznar}}}}

| 75.3%
{{smaller|(10,526,000)}}

|

;Opinion polls

class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%; text-align:center;"

|+ Candidate viewed as "performing best" or "most convincing" in each debate

rowspan="2"| Debate

! rowspan="2"| Polling firm/Commissioner

! style="width:45px;"| PSOE

! style="width:45px;"| PP

! style="width:45px;" rowspan="2"| Tie

! style="width:45px;" rowspan="2"| None

! style="width:45px;" rowspan="2"| {{Qmark}}

style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}};"|

! style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}};"|

rowspan="3" align="left"| 24 May

| align="left"| Demoscopia/El País{{cite news |title=Triunfo claro de Aznar en el primer debate |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/05/26/espana/738367204_850215.html |language=es |work=El País |date=26 May 1993}}

| 21.0

| {{Party shading/PP}}| 50.0

| colspan="3"| 29.0

align="left"| Opina/La Vanguardia{{cite web |title=Aznar superó a González en el debate |url=http://hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com/preview/1993/05/26/pagina-11/33719388/pdf.html |language=es |work=La Vanguardia |date=26 May 1993}}

| 18.4

| {{Party shading/PP}}| 42.5

| 8.1

| 13.9

| 17.2

align="left"| Sigma Dos/El Mundo{{cite web |title=Las encuestas de "El Mundo", "La Vanguardia" y "El País" dan el triunfo a Aznar |url=http://hemeroteca.abc.es/nav/Navigate.exe/hemeroteca/madrid/abc/1993/05/26/027.html |language=es |work=ABC |date=26 May 1993}}

| 28.0

| {{Party shading/PP}}| 49.8

| colspan="3"| 22.2

rowspan="2" align="left"| 31 May

| align="left"| Demoscopia/El País{{cite news |title=Victoria neta de González sobre Aznar en el segundo cara a cara televisivo |url=https://elpais.com/diario/1993/06/02/espana/738972046_850215.html |language=es |work=El País |date=2 June 1993}}

| {{Party shading/PSOE}}| 48.0

| 18.0

| colspan="3"| 34.0

align="left"| Opina/La Vanguardia{{cite web |title=González ganó por 20,9 puntos a Aznar |url=http://hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com/preview/1993/06/02/pagina-11/34720219/pdf.html |language=es |work=La Vanguardia |date=2 June 1993}}

| {{Party shading/PSOE}}| 36.2

| 15.3

| 17.4

| 13.6

| 17.5

Opinion polls

{{Main|Opinion polling for the 1993 Spanish general election}}

{{Opinion polling for the 1993 Spanish general election (Graphical summary)}}

Results

=Congress of Deputies=

{{For|results by autonomous community/constituency|Results breakdown of the 1993 Spanish general election (Congress)}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:right;"

|+ Summary of the 6 June 1993 Congress of Deputies election results

colspan="7"| File:SpainCongressDiagram1993.svg
style="text-align:left;" rowspan="2" colspan="2" width="525"| Parties and alliances

! colspan="3"| Popular vote

! colspan="2"| Seats

width="75"| Votes

! width="45"| %

! width="45"| ±pp

! width="35"| Total

! width="35"| +/−

width="1" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE)1

| 9,150,083

38.78style="color:red;"| –1.33

| 159

style="color:red;"| –18
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| People's Party (PP)

| 8,201,463

34.76style="color:green;"| +8.97

| 141

style="color:green;"| +34
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| United Left (IU)

| 2,253,722

9.55style="color:green;"| +0.48

| 18

style="color:green;"| +1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Convergence and Union}}"|

| align="left"| Convergence and Union (CiU)

| 1,165,783

4.94style="color:red;"| –0.10

| 17

style="color:red;"| –1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Democratic and Social Centre (CDS)

| 414,740

1.76style="color:red;"| –6.13

| 0

style="color:red;"| –14
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}"|

| align="left"| Basque Nationalist Party (EAJ/PNV)

| 291,448

1.24±0.00

| 5

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Canarian Coalition}}"|

| align="left"| Canarian Coalition (CC)2

| 207,077

0.88style="color:green;"| +0.45

| 4

style="color:green;"| +3
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}"|

| align="left"| Popular Unity (HB)

| 206,876

0.88style="color:red;"| –0.18

| 2

style="color:red;"| –2
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Republican Left of Catalonia}}"|

| align="left"| Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC)

| 189,632

0.80style="color:green;"| +0.39

| 1

style="color:green;"| +1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Confederation of the Greens}}"|

| align="left"| The Greens (Verdes)3

| 185,940

0.79style="color:red;"| –0.11

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Aragonese Party}}"|

| align="left"| Aragonese Party (PAR)

| 144,544

0.61style="color:green;"| +0.26

| 1

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Eusko Alkartasuna}}"|

| align="left"| Basque SolidarityBasque Left (EA–EuE)

| 129,293

0.55style="color:red;"| –0.12

| 1

style="color:red;"| –1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Galician Nationalist Bloc}}"|

| align="left"| Galician Nationalist Bloc (BNG)

| 126,965

0.54style="color:green;"| +0.31

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian Union}}"|

| align="left"| Valencian Union (UV)

| 112,341

0.48style="color:red;"| –0.23

| 1

style="color:red;"| –1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andalusian Party}}"|

| align="left"| Andalusian Party (PA)

| 96,513

0.41style="color:red;"| –0.63

| 0

style="color:red;"| –2
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|The Ecologist Greens (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| The Ecologists (LE)

| 68,851

0.29style="color:red;"| –0.38

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Ruiz-Mateos Group}}"|

| align="left"| Ruiz-Mateos GroupEuropean Democratic Alliance (ARM–ADE)

| 54,518

0.23style="color:red;"| –0.84

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andalusian Progress Party}}"|

| align="left"| Andalusian Progress Party (PAP)

| 43,169

0.18New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian People's Union}}"|

| align="left"| Valencian People's Union (UPV)

| 41,052

0.17style="color:red;"| –0.03

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Workers' Socialist Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Workers' Socialist Party (PST)

| 30,068

0.13style="color:red;"| –0.27

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Union for the Progress of Cantabria}}"|

| align="left"| Union for the Progress of Cantabria (UPCA)

| 27,005

0.11New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Nationalist Left of the Balearic Islands Federation}}"|

| align="left"| Nationalists of the Balearic Islands (PSM–ENE)

| 20,118

0.09style="color:green;"| +0.05

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Party of Cantabria}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Party of Cantabria (PRC)

| 18,608

0.08New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Alavese Unity}}"|

| align="left"| Alavese Unity (UA)

| 16,623

0.07New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Liberal Independent Group}}"|

| align="left"| Liberal Independent Group (GIL)

| 16,452

0.07New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Party of Gran Canaria}}"|

| align="left"| Party of Gran Canaria (PGC)

| 15,246

0.06New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Leonese People's Union}}"|

| align="left"| Leonese People's Union (UPL)

| 13,097

0.06New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Natural Law Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Natural Law Party (PLN)

| 11,392

0.05New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Partíu Asturianista}}"|

| align="left"| Asturianist Party (PAS)

| 11,088

0.05style="color:green;"| +0.02

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Extremadura}}"|

| align="left"| United Extremadura (EU)

| 10,653

0.05±0.00

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain}}"|

| align="left"| Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain (PCPE)

| 10,233

0.04style="color:red;"| –0.27

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Majorcan Union}}"|

| align="left"| Majorcan, Menorcan and Pityusic Union (UMMP)

| 10,053

0.04New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Ecologist Party of Catalonia}}"|

| align="left"| Ecologist Party of Catalonia–VERDE (PEC–VERDE)

| 9,249

0.04style="color:red;"| –0.06

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Humanist Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Humanist Party (PH)

| 8,834

0.04style="color:red;"| –0.04

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Revolutionary Workers' Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Revolutionary Workers' Party (POR)

| 8,667

0.04±0.00

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Falange Española de las JONS (1976)}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Phalanx of the CNSO (FE–JONS)

| 8,000

0.03style="color:red;"| –0.09

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Coalition for a New Socialist Party}}"|

| align="left"| Coalition for a New Socialist Party (CNPS)4

| 7,991

0.03style="color:red;"| –0.03

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Riojan Party}}"|

| align="left"| Riojan Party (PR)

| 7,532

0.03New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Chunta Aragonesista}}"|

| align="left"| Aragonese Union (CHA)

| 6,344

0.03style="color:green;"| +0.01

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Galician Nationalist Convergence}}"|

| align="left"| Galician Nationalist Convergence (CNG)

| 4,663

0.02New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Commoners' Land}}"|

| align="left"| Commoners' Land–Castilian Nationalist Party (TC–PNC)

| 4,647

0.02New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Galician Alternative}}"|

| align="left"| Galician Alternative (AG)

| 3,286

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Democratic Republican Action}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Democratic Republican Action (ARDE)

| 3,063

0.01style="color:green;"| +0.01

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Unity of Castile and León}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Unity of Castile and León (URCL)

| 2,715

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Party of El Bierzo}}"|

| align="left"| Party of El Bierzo (PB)

| 2,681

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Extremaduran Regionalist Party}}"|

| align="left"| Extremaduran Regionalist Party (PREx)

| 2,086

0.01New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Health and Ecology in Solidarity (SEES)

| 1,959

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Madrilenian Independent Regional Party}}"|

| align="left"| Madrilenian Independent Regional Party (PRIM)5

| 1,917

0.01style="color:red;"| –0.01

| 0

±0
bgcolor="gray"|

| align="left"| Gray Panthers of Spain (ACI)

| 1,644

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian Nationalist Left}}"|

| align="left"| Valencian Nationalist Left (ENV)

| 1,517

0.01±0.00

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Falange Española Independiente}}"|

| align="left"| Independent Spanish Phalanx (FEI)

| 1,415

0.01style="color:green;"| +0.01

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| People's Palentine Group (APP)

| 1,410

0.01New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Rainbow (Arcoiris)

| 1,407

0.01New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| The Greens of the Alicantine Country (PVPA)

| 1,375

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Cantonal Party}}"|

| align="left"| Cantonal Party (PCAN)

| 1,300

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Party of the Leonese Country}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Party of the Leonese Country (PREPAL)

| 1,193

0.01±0.00

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Catholic Movement}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Catholic Movement (MCE)

| 1,178

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Tenerife Assembly (ATF)

| 1,159

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Socialist Party of the People of Ceuta}}"|

| align="left"| Socialist Party of the People of Ceuta (PSPC)

| 1,155

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Insular Group of Gran Canaria}}"|

| align="left"| Insular Group of Gran Canaria (AIGRANC)

| 1,009

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Castilianist Union}}"|

| align="left"| Castilianist Union (UC)

| 949

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andecha Astur}}"|

| align="left"| Andecha Astur (AA)

| 787

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Falange Española Auténtica}}"|

| align="left"| Authentic Spanish Phalanx (FEA)

| 747

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Alicantine Democratic Union (UniDA)

| 715

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Progressive Front of Spain (FPE)

| 641

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Union of Autonomies (UDLA)

| 594

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Socialist October}}"|

| align="left"| Socialist October (OS)

| 540

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Independent Council of Asturias (Conceyu)

| 528

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Integration Party for Almeria and its Peoples (PIAP)

| 466

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Spanish Balearic Alternative (ABE)

| 416

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Referendum Tolerant Independent Political Party (PITRCG)

| 408

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Party of The People (LG)

| 385

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Nationalist Party of Cantabria}}"|

| align="left"| Nationalist Party of Cantabria (PNC)

| 383

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Federated Independents of Aragon (IF)

| 303

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Radical Balearic Party (PRB)

| 282

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Tagoror Party (Tagoror)

| 278

0.00±0.00

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Party of Guadalajara}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Party of Guadalajara (PRGU)

| 267

0.00±0.00

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Social Democratic Spanish Christian Monarchy (MCES)

| 244

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Progressive Sorian Union (US)

| 98

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Nationalist Party of Castile and León}}"|

| align="left"| Nationalist Party of Castile and León (PANCAL)

| 70

0.00style="color:red;"| –0.01

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Initiative for Ceuta (INCE)

| 42

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Communist Unification of Spain}}"|

| align="left"| Communist Unification of Spain (UCE)

| 0

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Coalition for Free Canaries (CCL)

| 0

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Centrist Unity–Democratic Spanish Party (PED)

| 0

0.00style="color:red;"| –0.02

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Freixes Independent Group}}"|

| align="left"| Freixes Independent Group (Freixes)

| 0

0.00New

| 0

±0
align="left" colspan="2"| Blank ballots

| 188,679

0.80style="color:green;"| +0.11

| bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2"|

colspan="7" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"|
style="font-weight:bold;"

| align="left" colspan="2"| Total

| 23,591,864

bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2"|

| 350

±0
colspan="7" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"|
align="left" colspan="2"| Valid votes

| 23,591,864

99.46style="color:green;"| +0.20

| bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2" rowspan="5"|

align="left" colspan="2"| Invalid votes

| 126,952

0.54style="color:red;"| –0.20
style="font-weight:bold;"

| align="left" colspan="2"| Votes cast / turnout

| 23,718,816

76.44style="color:green;"| +6.70
align="left" colspan="2"| Abstentions

| 7,311,695

23.56style="color:red;"| –6.70
style="font-weight:bold;"

| align="left" colspan="2"| Registered voters

| 31,030,511

bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2"|
colspan="7" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"|
align="left" colspan="7"| Sources{{cite web |url=https://infoelectoral.interior.gob.es/es/elecciones-celebradas/resultados-electorales/ |title=Elecciones celebradas. Resultados electorales |language=es |publisher=Ministry of the Interior |access-date=15 April 2022}}{{cite web |last=Lozano |first=Carles |url=https://www.historiaelectoral.com/e1993.html |title=Elecciones Generales 6 de junio de 1993 |language=es |website=Historia Electoral.com |access-date=21 October 2021}}
colspan="7" style="text-align:left; max-width:790px;"| {{hidden|ta1=left|title=Footnotes:|content={{ubl

| 1 Spanish Socialist Workers' Party results are compared to the combined totals of Spanish Socialist Workers' Party and Basque Country Left in the 1989 election.

| 2 Canarian Coalition results are compared to Canarian Independent Groups totals in the 1989 election.

| 3 The Greens results are compared to the combined totals of Green List and Green Alternative–Ecologist Movement of Catalonia in the 1989 election.

| 4 Coalition for a New Socialist Party results are compared to Alliance for the Republic totals in the 1989 election.

| 5 Madrilenian Independent Regional Party results are compared to Regional Party of Madrid totals in the 1989 election.}}}}

{{bar box

|title=Popular vote

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=550px

|barwidth=500px

|bars=

{{bar percent|PSOE|{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}|38.78}}

{{bar percent|PP|{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}|34.76}}

{{bar percent|IU|{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}|9.55}}

{{bar percent|CiU|{{party color|Convergence and Union}}|4.94}}

{{bar percent|CDS|{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}|1.76}}

{{bar percent|EAJ/PNV|{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}|1.24}}

{{bar percent|CC|{{party color|Canarian Coalition}}|0.88}}

{{bar percent|HB|{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}|0.88}}

{{bar percent|ERC|{{party color|Republican Left of Catalonia}}|0.80}}

{{bar percent|PAR|{{party color|Aragonese Party}}|0.61}}

{{bar percent|EA–EUE|{{party color|Eusko Alkartasuna}}|0.55}}

{{bar percent|UV|{{party color|Valencian Union}}|0.48}}

{{bar percent|Others|#777777|3.97}}

{{bar percent|Blank ballots|#DDDDDD|0.80}}

}}

{{bar box

|title=Seats

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=550px

|barwidth=500px

|bars=

{{bar percent|PSOE|{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}|45.43}}

{{bar percent|PP|{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}|40.29}}

{{bar percent|IU|{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}|5.14}}

{{bar percent|CiU|{{party color|Convergence and Union}}|4.86}}

{{bar percent|EAJ/PNV|{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}|1.43}}

{{bar percent|CC|{{party color|Canarian Coalition}}|1.14}}

{{bar percent|HB|{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}|0.57}}

{{bar percent|ERC|{{party color|Republican Left of Catalonia}}|0.29}}

{{bar percent|PAR|{{party color|Aragonese Party}}|0.29}}

{{bar percent|EA–EUE|{{party color|Eusko Alkartasuna}}|0.29}}

{{bar percent|UV|{{party color|Valencian Union}}|0.29}}

}}

=Senate=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:right;"

|+ Summary of the 6 June 1993 Senate of Spain election results

colspan="7"| File:SpainSenateDiagram1993.svg
style="text-align:left;" rowspan="2" colspan="2" width="525"| Parties and alliances

! colspan="3"| Popular vote

! colspan="2"| Seats

width="75"| Votes

! width="45"| %

! width="45"| ±pp

! width="35"| Total

! width="35"| +/−

width="1" style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE)1

| 25,441,605

39.02style="color:red;"| –1.66

| 96

style="color:red;"| –11
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| People's Party (PP)

| 22,467,236

34.46style="color:green;"| +8.40

| 93

style="color:green;"| +15
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| United Left (IU)

| 6,172,255

9.47style="color:green;"| +0.70

| 0

style="color:red;"| –1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Convergence and Union}}"|

| align="left"| Convergence and Union (CiU)

| 3,458,419

5.30style="color:green;"| +0.01

| 10

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Democratic and Social Centre (CDS)

| 1,189,877

1.82style="color:red;"| –5.78

| 0

style="color:red;"| –1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}"|

| align="left"| Basque Nationalist Party (EAJ/PNV)

| 846,605

1.30style="color:red;"| –0.04

| 3

style="color:red;"| –1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}"|

| align="left"| Popular Unity (HB)

| 599,744

0.92style="color:red;"| –0.22

| 1

style="color:red;"| –2
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Confederation of the Greens}}"|

| align="left"| The Greens (Verdes)2

| 570,793

0.88style="color:green;"| +0.24

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Aragonese Party}}"|

| align="left"| Aragonese Party (PAR)

| 465,162

0.71style="color:green;"| +0.28

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Galician Nationalist Bloc}}"|

| align="left"| Galician Nationalist Bloc (BNG)

| 402,549

0.62style="color:green;"| +0.36

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Canarian Coalition}}"|

| align="left"| Canarian Coalition (CC)3

| 396,799

0.61style="color:green;"| +0.37

| 5

style="color:green;"| +1
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Eusko Alkartasuna}}"|

| align="left"| Basque SolidarityBasque Left (EA–EuE)

| 381,356

0.58style="color:red;"| –0.14

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian Union}}"|

| align="left"| Valencian Union (UV)

| 347,593

0.53style="color:red;"| –0.08

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andalusian Party}}"|

| align="left"| Andalusian Party (PA)

| 312,384

0.48style="color:red;"| –0.67

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Republican Left of Catalonia}}"|

| align="left"| Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC)

| 239,546

0.37style="color:red;"| –0.06

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Ruiz-Mateos Group}}"|

| align="left"| Ruiz-Mateos GroupEuropean Democratic Alliance (ARM–ADE)

| 180,139

0.28style="color:red;"| –0.43

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Union for the Progress of Cantabria}}"|

| align="left"| Union for the Progress of Cantabria (UPCA)

| 144,784

0.22New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian People's Union}}"|

| align="left"| Valencian People's Union (UPV)

| 138,183

0.21style="color:red;"| –0.03

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andalusian Progress Party}}"|

| align="left"| Andalusian Progress Party (PAP)

| 133,514

0.20New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|The Ecologist Greens (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| The Ecologists (LE)

| 70,589

0.11style="color:red;"| –0.43

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Liberal Independent Group}}"|

| align="left"| Liberal Independent Group (GIL)

| 60,071

0.09New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Leonese People's Union}}"|

| align="left"| Leonese People's Union (UPL)

| 57,797

0.09New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Ecologist Party of Catalonia}}"|

| align="left"| Ecologist Party of Catalonia (PEC)

| 52,053

0.08New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Alavese Unity}}"|

| align="left"| Alavese Unity (UA)

| 49,120

0.08New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|United Extremadura}}"|

| align="left"| United Extremadura (EU)

| 48,113

0.07style="color:red;"| –0.01

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Partíu Asturianista}}"|

| align="left"| Asturianist Party (PAS)

| 43,538

0.07style="color:green;"| +0.04

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Workers' Socialist Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Workers' Socialist Party (PST)

| 43,044

0.07style="color:red;"| –0.15

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Nationalist Left of the Balearic Islands Federation}}"|

| align="left"| Nationalists of the Balearic Islands (PSM–ENE)

| 40,478

0.06style="color:green;"| +0.03

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain}}"|

| align="left"| Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain (PCPE)

| 35,618

0.05style="color:red;"| –0.22

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Party of Gran Canaria}}"|

| align="left"| Party of Gran Canaria (PGC)

| 30,285

0.05New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Party of Cantabria}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Party of Cantabria (PRC)

| 28,769

0.04New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Chunta Aragonesista}}"|

| align="left"| Aragonese Union (CHA)

| 28,186

0.04style="color:green;"| +0.02

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Riojan Party}}"|

| align="left"| Riojan Party (PR)

| 27,383

0.04New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Majorcan Union}}"|

| align="left"| Majorcan, Menorcan and Pityusic Union (UMMP)

| 24,450

0.04New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Falange Española de las JONS (1976)}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Phalanx of the CNSO (FE–JONS)

| 22,845

0.04style="color:red;"| –0.09

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Commoners' Land}}"|

| align="left"| Commoners' Land–Castilian Nationalist Party (TC–PNC)

| 17,953

0.03New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Galician Nationalist Convergence}}"|

| align="left"| Galician Nationalist Convergence (CNG)

| 16,405

0.03New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Coalition for a New Socialist Party}}"|

| align="left"| Coalition for a New Socialist Party (CNPS)4

| 13,733

0.02style="color:red;"| –0.02

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Unity of Castile and León}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Unity of Castile and León (URCL)

| 13,041

0.02New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Party of the Leonese Country}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Party of the Leonese Country (PREPAL)

| 12,147

0.02style="color:red;"| –0.01

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Democratic Republican Action}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Democratic Republican Action (ARDE)

| 11,830

0.02style="color:green;"| +0.01

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Humanist Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Humanist Party (PH)

| 11,176

0.02style="color:red;"| –0.05

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Galician Alternative}}"|

| align="left"| Galician Alternative (AG)

| 10,849

0.02New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Falange Española Independiente}}"|

| align="left"| Independent Spanish Phalanx (FEI)

| 10,768

0.02style="color:green;"| +0.02

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Madrilenian Independent Regional Party}}"|

| align="left"| Madrilenian Independent Regional Party (PRIM)5

| 10,713

0.02style="color:red;"| –0.02

| 0

±0
bgcolor="gray"|

| align="left"| Gray Panthers of Spain (ACI)

| 10,681

0.02New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Revolutionary Workers' Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Revolutionary Workers' Party (POR)

| 10,258

0.02style="color:green;"| +0.01

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Extremaduran Regionalist Party}}"|

| align="left"| Extremaduran Regionalist Party (PREx)

| 10,253

0.02New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Green Social Unity (USV)

| 9,802

0.02New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|VERDE}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Vertex Ecological Development Revindication (VERDE)

| 9,704

0.01style="color:red;"| –0.17

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Spanish Catholic Movement}}"|

| align="left"| Spanish Catholic Movement (MCE)

| 9,507

0.01style="color:red;"| –0.02

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Rainbow (Arcoiris)

| 5,419

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Party of El Bierzo}}"|

| align="left"| Party of El Bierzo (PB)

| 5,151

0.01New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| People's Palentine Group (APP)

| 4,869

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Valencian Nationalist Left}}"|

| align="left"| Valencian Nationalist Left (ENV)

| 4,617

0.01±0.00

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| The Greens of the Alicantine Country (PVPA)

| 4,439

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Natural Law Party (Spain)}}"|

| align="left"| Natural Law Party (PLN)

| 4,422

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Cantonal Party}}"|

| align="left"| Cantonal Party (PCAN)

| 4,333

0.01New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Federal Socialist Party (PSF)

| 4,168

0.01New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Health and Ecology in Solidarity (SEES)

| 4,083

0.01New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Centrist Unity–Democratic Spanish Party (PED)

| 4,047

0.01±0.00

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Alicantine Democratic Union (UniDA)

| 3,611

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Falange Española Auténtica}}"|

| align="left"| Authentic Spanish Phalanx (FEA)

| 3,408

0.01New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Andecha Astur}}"|

| align="left"| Andecha Astur (AA)

| 3,068

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Castilianist Union}}"|

| align="left"| Castilianist Union (UC)

| 3,013

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Tenerife Assembly (ATF)

| 2,638

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Spanish Action (AE)

| 2,595

0.00±0.00

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Independent Council of Asturias (Conceyu)

| 2,326

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Navarrese Regionalists (RN)

| 2,213

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Insular Group of Gran Canaria}}"|

| align="left"| Insular Group of Gran Canaria (AIGRANC)

| 2,098

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Socialist Party of the People of Ceuta}}"|

| align="left"| Socialist Party of the People of Ceuta (PSPC)

| 1,961

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Socialist October}}"|

| align="left"| Socialist October (OS)

| 1,751

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Regionalist Party of Guadalajara}}"|

| align="left"| Regionalist Party of Guadalajara (PRGU)

| 1,641

0.00±0.00

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Nationalist Party of Cantabria}}"|

| align="left"| Nationalist Party of Cantabria (PNC)

| 1,566

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Natural Culture}}"|

| align="left"| Natural Culture (CN)

| 1,557

0.00style="color:red;"| –0.01

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Blue Party of Progressive Rightwing (PADP)

| 1,086

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Integration Party for Almeria and its Peoples (PIAP)

| 1,026

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Tagoror Party (Tagoror)

| 1,016

0.00±0.00

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Social Democratic Spanish Christian Monarchy (MCES)

| 1,009

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Federated Independents of Aragon (IF)

| 842

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Spanish Balearic Alternative (ABE)

| 717

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Referendum Tolerant Independent Political Party (PITRCG)

| 583

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Proverist Party}}"|

| align="left"| Proverist Party (PPr)

| 467

0.00±0.00

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Radical Balearic Party (PRB)

| 460

0.00±0.00

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Nationalist Party of Castile and León}}"|

| align="left"| Nationalist Party of Castile and León (PANCAL)

| 352

0.00style="color:red;"| –0.02

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Progressive Sorian Union (US)

| 347

0.00New

| 0

±0
bgcolor="white"|

| align="left"| Initiative for Ceuta (INCE)

| 70

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Communist Unification of Spain}}"|

| align="left"| Communist Unification of Spain (UCE)

| 0

0.00New

| 0

±0
style="color:inherit;background:{{party color|Freixes Independent Group}}"|

| align="left"| Freixes Independent Group (Freixes)

| 0

0.00New

| 0

±0
align="left" colspan="2"| Blank ballots{{efn|The percentage of blank ballots is calculated over the official number of valid votes cast, irrespective of the total number of votes shown as a result of adding up the individual results for each party.}}

| 376,829

1.63style="color:red;"| –0.04

| bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2"|

colspan="7" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"|
style="font-weight:bold;"

| align="left" colspan="2"| Total

| 65,203,500

bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2"|

| 208

±0
colspan="7" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"|
align="left" colspan="2"| Valid votes

| 23,189,174

97.70style="color:green;"| +1.13

| bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2" rowspan="5"|

align="left" colspan="2"| Invalid votes

| 546,821

2.30style="color:red;"| –1.13
style="font-weight:bold;"

| align="left" colspan="2"| Votes cast / turnout

| 23,735,995

76.49style="color:green;"| +6.62
align="left" colspan="2"| Abstentions

| 7,294,516

23.51style="color:red;"| –6.62
style="font-weight:bold;"

| align="left" colspan="2"| Registered voters

| 31,030,511

bgcolor="#E9E9E9" colspan="2"|
colspan="7" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"|
align="left" colspan="7"| Sources{{cite web |last=Lozano |first=Carles |url=https://www.historiaelectoral.com/e1993comp.html#s |title=Elecciones al Senado 1993 |language=es |website=Historia Electoral.com |access-date=18 March 2025}}
colspan="7" style="text-align:left; max-width:790px;"| {{hidden|ta1=left|title=Footnotes:|content={{ubl

| 1 Spanish Socialist Workers' Party results are compared to the combined totals of Spanish Socialist Workers' Party and Basque Country Left in the 1989 election.

| 2 The Greens results are compared to the combined totals of Green List and Green Alternative–Ecologist Movement of Catalonia in the 1989 election.

| 3 Canarian Coalition results are compared to the combined totals of Canarian Independent Groups, Lanzarote Independents Group, Majorera Assembly and Independent Herrenian Group in the 1989 election.

| 4 Coalition for a New Socialist Party results are compared to Alliance for the Republic totals in the 1989 election.

| 5 Madrilenian Independent Regional Party results are compared to Regional Party of Madrid totals in the 1989 election.}}}}

{{bar box

|title=Popular vote

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=550px

|barwidth=500px

|bars=

{{bar percent|PSOE|{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}|39.02}}

{{bar percent|PP|{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}|34.46}}

{{bar percent|IU|{{party color|United Left (Spain)}}|9.47}}

{{bar percent|CiU|{{party color|Convergence and Union}}|5.30}}

{{bar percent|CDS|{{party color|Democratic and Social Centre (Spain)}}|1.82}}

{{bar percent|EAJ/PNV|{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}|1.30}}

{{bar percent|HB|{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}|0.92}}

{{bar percent|CC|{{party color|Canarian Coalition}}|0.61}}

{{bar percent|Others|#777777|6.52}}

{{bar percent|Blank ballots|#DDDDDD|1.63}}

}}

{{bar box

|title=Seats

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=550px

|barwidth=500px

|bars=

{{bar percent|PSOE|{{party color|Spanish Socialist Workers' Party}}|46.15}}

{{bar percent|PP|{{party color|People's Party (Spain)}}|44.71}}

{{bar percent|CiU|{{party color|Convergence and Union}}|4.81}}

{{bar percent|CC|{{party color|Canarian Coalition}}|2.40}}

{{bar percent|EAJ/PNV|{{party color|Basque Nationalist Party}}|1.44}}

{{bar percent|HB|{{party color|Herri Batasuna}}|0.48}}

}}

=Maps=

File:1993 Spanish general election map.svg|Election results by constituency (Congress).

File:1993 Spanish election - Results.svg|Vote winner strength by constituency (Congress).

File:1993 Spanish election - AC results.svg|Vote winner strength by autonomous community (Congress).

Aftermath

=Government formation=

{{See|Fourth government of Felipe González}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
colspan="3" align="center" bgcolor="#C0C0C0"| Investiture
Felipe González (PSOE)
colspan="2" width="150px"| Ballot →

! 9 July 1993

colspan="2"| Required majority →

| 176 out of 350 {{tick|15}}

width="1px" style="background:green;"|

| align="left"| {{Collapsible list | title = Yes

| • PSOE (159)

| • CiU (17)

| • PNV (5)

}}

| {{Composition bar|181|350|green|width=125px}}

style="color:inherit;background:red;"|

| align="left"| {{Collapsible list | title = No

| • PP (141)

| • IUIC (17)

| • CC (4)

| • ERC (1)

| • EA (1)

| • UV (1)

}}

| {{Composition bar|165|350|red|width=125px}}

style="color:inherit;background:gray;"|

| align="left"| {{Collapsible list | title = Abstentions

| • PAR (1)

}}

| {{Composition bar|1|350|gray|width=125px}}

style="color:inherit;background:black;"|

| align="left"| {{Collapsible list | title = Absentees

| • HB (2)

| • IUIC (1)

}}

| {{Composition bar|3|350|black|width=125px}}

align="left" colspan="3"| Sources{{cite web |last=Lozano |first=Carles |url=https://www.historiaelectoral.com/congresovota.html |title=Congreso de los Diputados: Votaciones más importantes |language=es |website=Historia Electoral.com |access-date=18 March 2025}}

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{reflist}}

Bibliography

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite act |italics=y |title=Constitución Española |type=Spanish Constitution |date=29 December 1978 |orig-date=version as of 28 August 1992 |reporter=Boletín Oficial del Estado |volume=311 |issn=0212-033X |id=BOE-A-1978-31229 |language=es |url=https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-1978-31229&tn=1&p=19920828 |access-date=27 December 2016 |ref={{harvid|Const. Esp.|1978}}}}
  • {{cite act |italics=y |title=Ley Orgánica 5/1985, de 19 de junio, del Régimen Electoral General |type=Organic Law |number=5/1985 |date=19 June 1985 |orig-date=version as of 3 November 1992 |reporter=Boletín Oficial del Estado |volume=147 |issn=0212-033X |id=BOE-A-1985-11672 |language=es |url=https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-1985-11672&tn=1&p=19921103 |access-date=28 December 2016 |ref={{harvid|LOREG|1985}}}}
  • {{cite book |last1=Carreras de Odriozola |first1=Albert |last2=Tafunell Sambola |first2=Xavier |year=2005 |orig-year=1989 |title=Estadísticas históricas de España, siglos XIX-XX |url=http://www.fbbva.es/TLFU/dat/autores.pdf |language=es |volume=1 |location=Bilbao |publisher=Fundación BBVA |pages=1072–1097 |edition=II |isbn=84-96515-00-1 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924010950/http://www.fbbva.es/TLFU/dat/autores.pdf |archive-date=24 September 2015 |df=dmy-all}}

{{refend}}