The results of the exit polls carried out for Televisión Canaria by Ipsos Ecoconsulting give between 25-28 seats to the Canarian Socialist Party (PSC-PSOE), which would obtain 36 percent of the votes, although it would not achieve an absolute majority and would need an agreement with Coalición Canaria or the Popular Party to be able to govern.
According to the survey, based on some 12,000 interviews, the second most voted force would be the Popular Party (PP) with 22 percent of the votes and between 14 and 16 seats.
Finally, Coalición Canaria (CC), despite obtaining fewer votes (21 percent), would be left with between 17 and 20 seats.
These would be the only three parties that would enter the Parliament of the Canary Islands according to the survey, which shows strong advances of the PSOE in Gran Canaria, Tenerife, La Palma and Lanzarote.
The survey prepared by Ipsos Ecoconsulting in the results for the Parliament of the Canary Islands grants the following seats per island:
In Gran Canaria, the PSOE would have between 7 and 8 deputies, the same as the PP, which is also between 7 and 8 deputies. The Ipsos survey gives Coalición Canaria between 0 and one seat.
In Tenerife, the PSOE would win the elections by obtaining between 6 and 7 deputies to Parliament, followed by Coalición Canaria with 5-6 deputies, while the PP would be left with 2-3 deputies.
In Lanzarote, the PSOE would obtain between 3 and 4 seats, as would CC (3-4), while the PP would obtain 0-1 seats. The PIL-CCN is left out of Parliament.
In Fuerteventura, CC would obtain between 3 and 4 seats, the PSOE would be between 1 and 2 deputies, the same as the PP (1-2 deputies).
In La Palma, the PSOE would have between 3 and 4 deputies, as would Coalición Canaria, while the PP would be left with between 0 and 1 deputies.
In La Gomera, the PSOE would win between 2 and 3 seats, and CC would follow with one or two deputies.
In El Hierro, finally, CC would obtain between two and three deputies, while PSOE and PP would be with between 0 and 1 deputy.
ACN Press