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Perez Rubalcaba's campaign seems clearly aimed at averting an outright stampede by Socialist supporters disillusioned with Zapatero's EU-mandated austerity program, and advocates a new tax on the super-wealthy and on banks, among other measures to free up money that would be used to encourage firms to hire. The campaign has been dull and static, with Rajoy simply trying to avoid rocking the boat and coast to victory and Rubalcaba tainted by having been part of the government that led Spain to where it is now. Even the bombshell announcement Oct. 20 by the weakened Basque separatist group ETA that it is giving up violence
-- something for which Rubalcaba can rightfully claim some credit for his work as interior minister and thus head of the security forces
-- failed to give the Socialists a boost. In the last Parliament the Socialists had 169 seats in the 350-seat lower chamber and the PP 154. A Metroscopia poll released last weekend by the newspaper El Pais said the PP might jump to as many as 196 seats
-- a record for that party in Spain's post-Franco democracy -- while the Socialists could plummet to as low as 110. In percentage points, the cushion is about 14. The margin of error in the telephone poll of some 9,700 eligible voters is 1.5 points. Rajoy's platform includes plans for business tax cuts to encourage hiring and lower the country's staggering unemployment rate. He has also said he will meet Spain's commitments to the EU on deficit reduction, although with economic growth at a standstill hardly anybody thinks the current government's goal of cutting it to 6.0 percent of GDP this year from 9.2 in 2010 is achievable. More austerity and tens of billions of euros in spending cuts or tax hikes on top of ones Zapatero has undertaken are almost certainly on the way. But on the campaign trail, Rajoy has avoided specifics, so as not to scare away voters. "We are going to have to be brave, but also prudent," he told the newspaper El Mundo. He said it was important to reassure investors here and abroad that they can trust Spain with their money. "Outside Spain, the message is that we are serious people, that we are going to do things right," Rajoy said.
[Associated
Press;
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