2023 Spanish local elections

2023 Spanish local elections

← 2019 28 May 2023
26 November 2023 (re-runs)
2027 →

All 66,976 councillors in 8,132 municipal councils
All 1,424 provincial/island seats in 44 provinces[a]
Opinion polls
Registered35,534,425 0.7%
Turnout22,714,076 (63.9%)
1.3 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo Pedro Sánchez Santiago Abascal
Party PP PSOE Vox
Leader since 2 April 2022 18 June 2017 20 September 2014
Last election 20,382 c., 22.7%
417 p. seats
22,377 c., 29.4%
548 p. seats
547 c., 3.7%
13 p. seats
Popular vote 7,077,604 6,298,423 1,605,961
Percentage 31.6% 28.1% 7.2%
Swing 8.9 pp 1.3 pp 3.5 pp
Councillors 23,451 20,805 1,671
Councillors +/– 3,069 1,572 1,124
Prov. seats 527 492 49
Prov. seats +/– 110 56 36

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Ione Belarra Laura Borràs Oriol Junqueras
Party Unidas Podemos JxCat ERC
Leader since 13 June 2021 4 June 2022 17 September 2011
Last election 2,665 c., 8.8%
70 p. seats
2,804 c., 2.5%
35 p. seats
3,125 c., 3.6%
47 p. seats
Popular vote 1,406,170 553,872 526,242
Percentage 6.3% 2.5% 2.4%
Swing 2.5 pp 0.0 pp 1.2 pp
Councillors 1,938 2,687 2,906
Councillors +/– 721 117 219
Prov. seats 31 40 36
Prov. seats +/– 39 5 11

Provincial results map for municipal elections

The 2023 Spanish local elections were held on Sunday, 28 May 2023, to elect all 66,976 councillors in the municipalities of Spain, all 1,191 provincial seats in 41 provinces (including 38 provincial deputations and three Basque General Assemblies) and 233 seats in eleven island councils (seven Canarian island cabildos and four Balearic island councils). The elections were held simultaneously with regional elections in twelve autonomous communities, as well as local elections in the three foral deputations of the Basque Country, the four island councils in the Balearic Islands and the seven island cabildos in the Canary Islands.

The elections took place following a period of instability dominated by the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020 and its political and economical consequences, including the worst worldwide recession since the Great Depression resulting from the massive lockdowns enforced to reduce the spread of SARS-CoV-2, as well as the economic impact of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The People's Party (PP) emerged as the first force and, despite winning the popular vote to the ruling Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) by just three percentage points, was able to flip the control of a large number of major cities. This outcome prompted Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez to call a snap general election for July, which led to an insufficient PP victory and to Sánchez's re-election as PM.
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