Spanish election: Polls close in fourth vote in four years Published duration 10 November 2019

image copyright Reuters image caption Politicians had urged voters to turn out to cast their ballot and break months of political deadlock

Voters in Spain returned to the polls for the fourth general election in as many years.

In the last election in April, the governing Socialist Party won the most seats but fell short of a majority and was unable to form a coalition.

Spain has not had a stable government since 2015.

Polls closed at 20:00 local time (19:00 GMT), but the election was overshadowed by unrest in Catalonia and the rise of the far-right Vox party.

Results are expected on Sunday evening.

After April's vote, Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez entered coalition talks with the leftist Podemos party, but talks collapsed - causing them to miss a September deadline to form a new government.

At a closing rally on Friday, Mr Sánchez had told supporters: "There are only two options: either vote for the Socialists so that we have a government, or vote for any other party to block Spain from getting a progressive government."

image copyright AFP image caption The five main candidates are PP leader Pablo Casado, Pedro Sánchez, Vox leader Santiago Abascal, Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias, and Ciudadanos leader Albert Rivera

image copyright EPA image caption Thousands of people held a rally in Barcelona on the eve of the election

Mr Sanchez is thought to be at an advantage given his current position as caretaker leader, despite having never won a parliamentary majority.

But the latest opinion polls before voting began showed none of the parties winning a majority.

Instead, they showed Socialist Party (PSOE) in the lead again, but with fewer votes than in April's election, and the conservative People's Party (PP) and Vox making gains.

media caption Who are Spain's far-right party?

The election comes less than a month after Spain's Supreme Court handed out lengthy jail sentences to nine Catalan independence leaders, over their role in organising an outlawed referendum in 2017.

The move triggered protests and violence on the streets of Barcelona and other cities in Catalonia.

The Catalan crisis dominated the election campaign, with parties on the right - Vox, the PP and the centre-right Ciudadanos - taking a hardline anti-separatist stance.

media caption Bel, student, 20: 'We are living demonstrations'

Support for Vox surged in the last election, with the party winning 24 seats in parliament with more than 10% of the vote. Meanwhile, the PP suffered its worst-ever general election performance.