It has been a day of reflection in Spain ahead of the country’s tightest election in decades. <br /><br /> As voting stations prepare for Sunday’s ballot, there’s a ban on political campaigning and opinion polls.<br /><br /> A coalition with new smaller parties could be on the cards, with the ruling conservative People’s Party expected to win, but without an absolute majority. <br /><br /> One woman in Valencia said: “The truth is I don’t really know (what’s going to happen). I think they’ll have to form a coalition. But I don’t know who will form a coalition with who.”<br /><br /> Another voter said: “I think the People’s Party will win, with the Citizens party second, and they’ll form a coalition, and things will carry on much the same as now.”<br /><br /> Experts agree that Spain, which has been struggling economically, is witnessing the end of a long-established two-party system. <br /><br /> And it could give rise to future political uncertainty, with an easy marriage not likely between a mainstream right or left party and a smaller newco