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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Guy Hedgecoe

Mourinho’s mad magic loses its lustre

September 20, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

José Mourinho has always insisted that his antics, provocations and pre-match hyperbole are an unselfish gambit, aimed at drawing attention away from his players. Let’s take him at his word, and examine not the state of Real Madrid, but the state of their coach. Mourinho’s appearance has always seemed to speak volumes about his state of mind. When he started at Chelsea, he dressed like George Clooney, kept physically trim and his haircuts were frequently more fashionable than those of his players. When his relationship with the London club’s owner, Roman Abramovich, started to deteriorate and the team’s performances declined, not only did Mourinho start to look tetchy and disgruntled, his … [Read more...] about Mourinho’s mad magic loses its lustre

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Champions League, cristiano ronaldo, football, gerard pique, Guardiola, José Mourinho, la liga, Liga, Mourinho, mourinho real madrid, portugal, Real Madrid, real-barça, spain, Spain football, spain news, spanish news, Spanish soccer

Who’s in charge in Spain?

September 15, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

Question: Who is the leader of the PSOE? Answer: Now, I am. The leader of the PSOE, the leader of a party, is whomever it presents as a candidate at general elections. Question: I’d say that the leader of a party is whoever is in charge. Who’s in charge of the PSOE? Answer: In the Socialist Party, I’m in charge. Question: If you are the leader of the party that supports Zapatero in Parliament, one would suppose that he would consult you on major issues. Answer: One would suppose that. The above is a translated excerpt from the interview published on Sunday that El País editor Javier Moreno carried out with Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, the Socialist (PSOE) candidate in the … [Read more...] about Who’s in charge in Spain?

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: rubalcaba, spain, spain austerity, spain election, spain news, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish election, spanish news, spanish politics, zapatero

Truth is the casualty as Spain’s campaign heats up

September 13, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

The last few days haven’t been good ones for truth and accuracy on Spain’s political scene. In fact, for those who follow the news closely, it’s been downright confusing. Popular Party (PP) spokesman Esteban González Pons should shoulder at least some of the blame, after sheepishly backtracking on a pledge, made on September 7, that his party would create 3.5 million jobs over the next four years if it wins the November 20 general election. It was a target that meant slashing Spain’s unemployment rate by 70 percent. 3.5 million? Of course not, González Pons said the next day, after PP apparatchiks were left scrambling to make sense of his boast. What he meant to say, he explained, was … [Read more...] about Truth is the casualty as Spain’s campaign heats up

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: ABC, bailout, economy, election, european union, Partido Popular, popular party, PP, psoe, rajoy, spain, spain bailout, spain economy, Spain elections, spanish debt, spanish news, spanish politics, spanish socialist party, zapatero

In Basque Country, ETA’s silence is democracy’s gain

September 9, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 3 Comments

ETA: Whistling into the wind of public suspicion.

Over a year without murders or attacks, a drop in street violence and an end to the extortion of Basque businesses. Looking at those bald facts, ETA would seem to have come a long way since making its ceasefire announcement in September 2010 - an announcement that the organisation hoped would lead to a new peace process with the Spanish government. But ETA’s ambition of returning to the negotiating table currently looks as difficult to achieve as ever. The last year has seen some extraordinary developments in the Basque Country, yet the terrorist group appears to have been marginalised from the most momentous events. That ceasefire declaration itself was symptomatic of ETA’s … [Read more...] about In Basque Country, ETA’s silence is democracy’s gain

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Basque ceasefire, Basque country, Basque peace process, basque seperatism, basque seperatist, basque terrorism, basque terrorist, bildu, ETA, ETA ceasefire, ETA truce, izquierda abertzale, sortu, spain news, spanish news

Fear and resignation in Spain’s deficit cap

September 6, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

A swiftly agreed, bi-party accord to safeguard the Spanish economy’s future. It should be music to every Spaniard’s ears. The governing Socialists and opposition Popular Party have finally reached consensus on a major issue, putting aside their ideological differences and petty electoral interests to introduce a constitutional reform that puts a cap on the public deficit. Such statesmanship harks back to the spirit of the Transition. Or does it? Having heeded the plea by the French and German leaders for deficit controls to be enshrined in eurozone magna cartas, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero and Mariano Rajoy have responded. This extraordinary measure, they argue, will calm the jittery … [Read more...] about Fear and resignation in Spain’s deficit cap

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: 15-m, deficit, economy, markets, popular party, rajoy, recession, rubalcaba, spain, spain economy, spain election, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics, spanish socialist party, zapatero

Zapatero: a pope’s best friend

August 19, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 4 Comments

A mock “Popemobile” was present at Wednesday evening’s demonstration in central Madrid against the pope’s visit. In it, a skinny man in late middle age dressed as the pontiff was blessing the crowd of protesters around him in jocular fashion. Then, looking slightly jaded, the faux-pope put down his crosier, pulled out a cigarette and smiled as he took a deep drag. It was a funny moment, but it seemed to me the real pope had every reason to be as satisfied during his marathon Spanish visit as this imposter. No doubt Benedict XVI and those who think like him will disagree. After all, it was he who decried Spain’s “aggressive secularism” last time he came to visit, less than a year ago. … [Read more...] about Zapatero: a pope’s best friend

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: Benedict XVI, Catholic Church, jmj, papa madrid, pope spain, pope's visit, society, spain, spain economy, spain news, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics, world youth day, zapatero

Spain’s woes fail to deter Africans from life-threatening crossing

August 8, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 3 Comments

The European economy is going through a rollercoaster ride right now, with Spain one of the biggest victims of the upheaval. And since German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s invitation earlier this year to Spanish professionals – particularly engineers – to go and find work in her country, many Spaniards are looking abroad as they consider their future. And yet, boatloads of Africans still make the incredibly dangerous journey across the Gibraltar Strait to the shores of Andalusia. The first half of this year saw around 1,000 come to the Spanish mainland (arrivals in the Canary Islands have dropped heavily). That doesn’t sound like a massive number, but the high season for crossing is only … [Read more...] about Spain’s woes fail to deter Africans from life-threatening crossing

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Africa, economic crisis, immigrant unemployment, immigrants, spain, spain economy, spain immigration, spain unemployment, strait of gibraltar

Who benefits from Spain’s early election?

August 3, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 2 Comments

Rubalcaba-Rajoy

The Spanish prime minister’s announcement that general elections will be held on November 20 rather than in the spring, as previously scheduled, was not altogether surprising. Pressure had been mounting on him for weeks to bring the date forward, especially from the opposition and the right-wing media. Another factor is Spanish voters, who rightly see Zapatero as a lame duck leader, especially since stepping aside to let Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba become Socialist candidate. But there was also pressure from within Zapatero’s own party to hold an autumn election, including from Rubalcaba himself. The former interior minister was concerned that any momentum his nomination as candidate … [Read more...] about Who benefits from Spain’s early election?

Filed Under: Featured, Politics Tagged With: november elections, popular party, rajoy, rubalcaba, socialist party, spain early elections, spain economy, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish politics

Celebrating Santiago’s ever-changing afterlife

July 25, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 2 Comments

santiago

When Spanish troops arrived in Iraq in 2004 to help the allied occupation of the country, they looked much like any other force of Western troops, wearing uniform and wielding guns. But a closer look showed them wearing something that spoke very clearly of their Spanish identity and history: the red cross of Santiago Matamoros, or Saint James the Moorslayer. It was a crass gesture, given the Muslim enemy they were going to fight, but Spain and particularly its military have used St James as a symbol of inspiration in different guises for the last 1,200 years. July 25 is the feast day of Spain’s patron saint, when he and the extravagant legend surrounding his afterlife are … [Read more...] about Celebrating Santiago’s ever-changing afterlife

Filed Under: Culture, Featured Tagged With: catholic spain, catholicism, moors, reconquista, santiago, Santiago de Compostela, spain culture, spain legend, spain religion, St James

¡Viva la corrupción!

July 22, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

The unthinkable has happened and Valencia regional premier Francisco Camps has stood down due to his imminent trial to face corruption charges. The decision, it seems, did not come from Camps himself, who had clung to his post like a limpet despite mounting evidence that he received around €14,000 worth of tailored clothes from businessmen in exchange for awarding lucrative contracts on behalf of the regional government. Instead, it was reportedly Popular Party leader Mariano Rajoy who pressured Camps to either step aside or declare himself guilty. Either option would avoid a damaging corruption trial of a high-profile PP baron in the autumn, when the party might be waging a general … [Read more...] about ¡Viva la corrupción!

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: corruption, Francisco Camps, gurtel, PP, spain corruption, spain news, spain politics, spanish news, Valencia

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