Jaume Collboni secures Barcelona mayoral position

Spain's Socialist PM Pedro Sanchez was given a last-minute consolation on Saturday when Barcelona's city council appointed a new Socialist mayor after a deal involving two rival parties.
FILE PHOTO: Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez pictured at a meeting at Moncloa Palace in Madrid, Spain May 30, 2023.
FILE PHOTO: Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez pictured at a meeting at Moncloa Palace in Madrid, Spain May 30, 2023. REUTERS/Juan Medina/File Photo
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BARCELONA (Reuters) - Spain's Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez was given a last-minute consolation on Saturday when Barcelona's city council appointed a new Socialist mayor after a deal involving two rival parties.

Despite pro-independence parties appearing certain to run Spain's second city, Jaume Collboni, the Socialist candidate, became mayor after the far-left Barcelona en Comu of the outgoing mayor Ada Colau gave him its support in a move supported by the conservative People's Party.

The decision was a boost for the Socialist Party, which leads the national government, after mostly poor results in local elections around the country on May 28.

The local results, along with a widespread loss of power in regions which were holding elections the same day, prompted Sanchez to bring forward to July 23 a national vote scheduled to take place by December.

Xavier Trias, 76, who represents the pro-business, pro independence party Junts per Catalunya, had been favourite to become mayor until the 11th-hour deal favouring Collboni.

"The decision has been made to avoid a Junts government that extends red carpets to lobbies and sectors favourable to right-wing policies," Barcelona en Comu said in a statement.

Collboni replaces Colau, who in her eight-year tenure had restricted the opening of new hotels in a bid to curb mass tourism and set strong targets for social housing.

The political shift in Barcelona is a further setback for Catalonia's pro-independence movement, which has faltered in recent years.

(Reporting by Graham Keeley and Joan Faus; Editing by David Holmes)

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