AP Explains: Polarized and undecided, Spain heads to polls

The leader of Spain’s socialist party Pedro Sanchez stands his wife Begona Gomez in the countryside one day before election day in Madrid, Spain, Saturday April 27, 2019. An uncertain outcome and the likelihood of the far right erupting into Spain’s Parliament looms over national elections on Sunday, when nearly 37 million Spaniards are called to cast ballots in the most highly polarized election in decades. (Inma Mesa/PSOE via AP)

A man walks beside an election campaign election poster for the Spanish Primer Minister Pedro Sanchez reading, ”Make It Happen’, in Pamplona, northern Spain, Saturday, April 27, 2019. (AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos)

Customers have lunch while Spain’s Prime Minister and Socialist candidate Pedro Sanchez appears on TV in a restaurant in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, April 27, 2019. An uncertain outcome and the likelihood of the far-right entering Spain’s Parliament looms over national elections on Sunday, when nearly 37 million Spaniards are called to cast ballots in the most highly polarized election in decades. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

BARCELONA, Spain — An uncertain outcome and the likelihood of a far-right party entering parliament are the backdrop for Spain’s most polarized national election in decades.

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