(Bloomberg) -- Spain's People's Party, unseated by
fallout from the 2004 Madrid train bombing, has closed the gap
with the ruling Socialist Party by branding Prime Minister Jose
Luis Rodriguez Zapatero a traitor whose policy on terrorism
threatens to tear the country apart.
The PP heads into the May 27 local elections, the biggest
test of strength before national voting next year, in a
statistical dead heat with Zapatero's Socialists. Political
violence is on the rise and relations between the parties are at
their worst since Spain's return to democracy three decades ago.
Read more at Bloomberg Currencies News
fallout from the 2004 Madrid train bombing, has closed the gap
with the ruling Socialist Party by branding Prime Minister Jose
Luis Rodriguez Zapatero a traitor whose policy on terrorism
threatens to tear the country apart.
The PP heads into the May 27 local elections, the biggest
test of strength before national voting next year, in a
statistical dead heat with Zapatero's Socialists. Political
violence is on the rise and relations between the parties are at
their worst since Spain's return to democracy three decades ago.
Read more at Bloomberg Currencies News
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