Scrutiny of the vote in the Basque Region: Bildu garnering support in municipalities with a higher youth population and greater use of Euskera
News Article: Voting Trends in the Basque Country Reveal Key Influences on Nationalist Parties
In the recently concluded autonomous elections in the Basque Country, the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) emerged as the leading political force, but the voting trends reveal significant influences of income, age, and language usage on support for the PNV and EH Bildu, another major nationalist party.
The analysis, which involved the collaboration of Juanma Leralta (Infographic Designer/our website/Evoluciona), divided the municipalities based on variables such as net income per person, average age, use of Basque at home, and the percentage of foreigners.
Income
Typically, the PNV tends to attract voters from higher income brackets and more economically established profiles. As a centrist-nationalist party often seen as pragmatic and business-friendly, it is not surprising that it garners more support in municipalities with higher net income per person. In contrast, EH Bildu, a left-wing Basque nationalist coalition, tends to have stronger support among lower-income voters and working-class segments, reflecting its leftist and social justice-oriented platform.
Age
Age also impacts voting choices. EH Bildu often appeals more to younger voters who favor progressive and more radical Basque nationalism, while PNV enjoys broader support among older generations who may prefer a moderate and stability-oriented political approach.
Language Usage
Language plays a crucial cultural and identity role. Voters who use the Basque language regularly—especially those who consider it their primary language or have a strong Basque cultural identity—are more likely to vote for nationalist parties overall. Within this context, EH Bildu’s firmer Basque nationalist stance and more radical defense of Basque culture resonate with Basque-speaking voters with high linguistic and cultural attachment. PNV also benefits from Basque language speakers but tends to appeal more broadly, including bilinguals or Spanish-dominant voters supporting moderate nationalism.
Support for EH Bildu skews younger, lower income, and strongly Basque-speaking, whereas PNV’s base tends to be older, relatively affluent, and more moderate in Basque cultural-linguistic usage. These patterns align with the ideological differences between the social-democratic left-wing EH Bildu coalition and the centrist PNV.
Other Factors
The average age of municipalities has been grouped by those below 43 years, between 43 and 45, between 45 and 48, and over 48. The PNV generally obtains more support in low-income localities, loses support in medium-income ones, and improves again in high-income ones. EH Bildu improves its results in municipalities with higher income, up to the medium-high income range, but worsens in high-income localities.
The participation rate has exceeded 62% and has been above 71% in the municipalities with the least abstention. The least mobilized localities are below 59%, and the rest of the municipalities are grouped between 59 and 65% and between 65 and 71% of participants.
The PNV benefits more from high participation in the most mobilized municipalities. Although slightly, EH Bildu's results appear to worsen in most municipalities as the proportion of foreigners increases. EH Bildu seems to show the opposite trend: it obtains better results in municipalities with full employment and worsens where there are more unemployed people.
The PSE-EE did not prevail in any locality in the elections. The data for the analysis has been divided into four groups based on variables such as the use of Basque at home, average age of municipalities, net income per person, and the percentage of foreigners.
EH Bildu, a left-wing abertzale movement, gained significant growth and came close to 30,000 votes behind the PNV, obtaining the same seats in the Basque Parliament.
[1] Data and analysis based on provisional data from the Basque Government, Spanish Public Employment Service (SEPE) in March 2024, and other sources.
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