A lengthy political deadlock in Spain seems to have ended after Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez secured parliamentary backing to form a coalition government.
He got a wafer-thin majority of two votes with the support of lawmakers from smaller regional parties.
Sanchez won the backing of 167 of the 350 lower house legislators, while 165 voted against him and the remaining 18 abstained.
The development comes after nearly a year of caretaker governments.
Sanchez's Socialist party came first in two national elections in 2019, but had failed to get parliament's backing.
The new coalition government is expected to push for tax increases on high-income earners and companies and also roll back labour reforms passed by a previous conservative administration.


Palestinian teen shot dead in Israeli West Bank raid, Wafa reports
Libya says 17 migrants perish at sea, nine missing feared dead
Israel begins intercepting Gaza aid ships far from shores, army radio says
Trump urges Iran to sign a deal and discusses prolonged blockade
Seven people die in hospital wall collapse in southern India