The Catalan Socialists would overtake the Republicans (now tied at 33), and the Junts would lose at least eight seats, always according to the Generalitat’s voting intentions survey.
He PSC would be the party with the most votes in Catalonia if regional elections were held now and came between them 39 and 45 seatssurpasses the 33 that he has in Parliament, and the independence (the sum of the ERC, Junts and the CUP) would lose the absolute majority, according to the latest barometer drawn up by the Center for Opinion Studies (CEO) of the Generalitat.
C.K.D It would be the second power, with 29-34 seats – now it has 33 – and Together would lose support in moving from the current 32 to 19-24. He The PPC would increase significant in support and would receive between 12 and 17 representatives – now there are 3 -, while the comuns would also see an upward trend: they would increase from the current 8 to between 10 and 14.
At the other end, Vox (10) and the CUP (9), both would drop and go to 6-9 and 4-8 seats respectively. The research predicts that Cs will disappear from parliament and lose his six deputies.
In this way, the independence movement would lose the absolute majority in the Catalan Chamber, even in the upper tiers of the demographic survey, which is the sum of ERC, JxCat and the CUP out of a total of 66 seatstwo among the above majority.
As explained by the CEO’s director, Jordi Muñoz, the PSC would be the party that would attract the most abstainers in a Catalan election, while the Junts would suffer from a context of greater participation by generally having a more mobilized electorate .
The survey, prepared by Gesop based on interviews with 2,000 people, was conducted between October 9 and November 7, before the contents of the amnesty law and the JxCat pact with the PSOE for the inauguration of Pedro Sánchez were known.
Source: EITB

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.