2003 Madrid City Council election

2003 Madrid City Council election

← 1999 25 May 2003 2007 →

All 55 seats in the City Council of Madrid
28 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered2,483,123 Red arrow down0.2%
Turnout1,711,613 (68.9%)
Green arrow up8.8 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón Trinidad Jiménez Inés Sabanés
Party PP PSOE IU
Leader since 16 October 2002 2 June 2002 23 June 1998
Last election 28 seats, 49.5% 20 seats, 36.0% 5 seats, 8.7%
Seats won 30 21 4
Seat change Green arrow up2 Green arrow up1 Red arrow down1
Popular vote 874,264 625,148 123,015
Percentage 51.3% 36.7% 7.2%
Swing Green arrow up1.8 pp Green arrow up0.7 pp Red arrow down1.5 pp

Mayor before election

José María Álvarez del Manzano
PP

Elected Mayor

Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón
PP

The 2003 Madrid City Council election, also the 2003 Madrid municipal election, was held on Sunday, 25 May 2003, to elect the 7th City Council of the municipality of Madrid. All 55 seats in the City Council were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with regional elections in thirteen autonomous communities and local elections all throughout Spain.

The People's Party (PP) under President of the Community of Madrid Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón, who was succeeding the retiring José María Álvarez del Manzano, managed to revert the near-tie situation predicted by opinion polls between his party and the PSOE-IU bloc. Gallardón went on to win a comfortable absolute majority both in votes and seats, reverting the 1999 result in which it had seemed that party's support had begun to decline. The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) under Trinidad Jiménez obtained its best result since it was ousted from power in 1989, despite it not being enough to recover the mayoralty. United Left (IU) continued on its long-term decline and lost another seat, scoring its worst result since 1987.

A remarkable event for this election was that both main parties' contenders (Ruiz-Gallardón and Jiménez) were cousins, despite belonging to opposing parties.