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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Partido Popular

Common sense prevails as Bildu is allowed to run in elections

May 6, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Just as the campaign leading up to the May 22 local elections was starting, the Constitutional Tribunal ruled on Friday that the Bildu Basque nationalist coalition should be allowed to take part. A vote of six votes to five reflects the intense political pressure surrounding this landmark vote. While there will inevitably be outraged voices in Madrid, the ruling is an encouraging sign that Spain’s highly politicised courts can take tough decisions based on the evidence before them, rather than vague suspicions that ETA terrorists must be at work behind the scenes. The izquierda abertzale, the pro-independence Basque left, has made substantial moves to prove its own democratic … [Read more...] about Common sense prevails as Bildu is allowed to run in elections

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: 22 mayo, Basque, Basque country, elections, ETA, izquierda abertzale, may 22 elections, Partido Popular, Politics, popular party, spain, spain economy, spain news, spanish news, spanish politics, terrorism

Who cares about corruption anyway?

April 26, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 4 Comments

With the May 22 local elections looming, we now know the content of political parties’ electoral lists. El País’ assertion that over 100 of the candidates on those lists are under investigation for alleged corruption may be shocking, but it’s hardly surprising. There a several main reasons for the enormous wave of political corruption in Spain in recent years, which I explored in an article last year: the mad money generated by the real estate bubble; the country’s system of autonomous regions, where local politicians can hoard power; a laissez-faire attitude on the part of many voters, who refuse to punish their corrupt representatives; and a media that rarely indulges in profound … [Read more...] about Who cares about corruption anyway?

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: 22 mayo, corruption, Francisco Camps, Gurtal, madrid, Partido Popular, popular party, PP, Socialists, spain corruption, spain local elections, spain news, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish news

A shift in the Basque Country despite Sortu’s prohibition

April 11, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

On the face of it, the Supreme Court’s March 23 decision to deem the new Basque nationalist party Sortu illegal was yet another instance of Spain’s justice system refusing to give an inch to those it suspected of having links to the terrorist group ETA. Sortu had hoped to represent the birth of new hope for those wanting an independent Basque Country. The new formation unveiled itself in February, insisting it was not simply a continuation of Batasuna, ETA’s outlawed political wing. To prove this, the party’s statutes explicitly rejected the use of violence, including that of ETA, an unprecedented move for a group representing the izquierda abertzale, or radical Basque left. But on … [Read more...] about A shift in the Basque Country despite Sortu’s prohibition

Filed Under: Featured, Politics Tagged With: Basque, Basque country, elections, ETA, Partido Popular, popular party, sortu, sortu banned, sortu ilegalizado, spain economy, spain politics, spanish news, spanish politics, terrorism, zapatero

Spain and Portugal’s right shun austerity and Brussels – for now

March 29, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

It’s easy to see parallels between the governments of Spain and Portugal of recent years. José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero and José Sócrates were both fresh-faced Socialists when they took power in 2004 and 2005 respectively, promising social reforms as well as economic stability. Both were voted in for second terms before running aground on the challenges that arose following the world economic crisis. Like their Socialist counterpart in Greece, Georgios Papandreou, both men have been forced by circumstances to repress their political instincts and introduce heavy spending cuts and painful reforms. In Portugal, where the economic outlook is worse, the opposition’s withdrawal of support for a … [Read more...] about Spain and Portugal’s right shun austerity and Brussels – for now

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: austerity plan, economy, european union, greece, jose socrates, Partido Popular, popular party, portugal economy, portuguese economy, rajoy, recession, Sócrates, spain economy, spain politics, spanish news, zapatero

Aznar lets his hair down

February 16, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

Question: who works for Rupert Murdoch, leads a prestigious think-tank, is an accomplished long-distance runner and learned to speak fluent English in his early fifties? Answer: José María Aznar, prime minister of Spain between 1996 and 2004. The above description is highly selective, of course, but it gives an idea of the man we are talking about – probably just the kind of idea Aznar himself would like us to have of him: an active figure on the right-leaning world stage whose discipline and motivation have given him influence and a well-honed body. Aznar, 57, has become something of a fetish figure for many on the Spanish right, and with good reason. He governed for two … [Read more...] about Aznar lets his hair down

Filed Under: Featured, Politics Tagged With: aznar, faes, Felipe González, former spanish prime minister, george w. bush, georgetown, José María Aznar, Mariano Rajoy, news corp., Partido Popular, Politics, popular party, rajoy, Rodrigo Rato, rupert murdoch, spain, spain news, spain politics, spanish prime minister

Rubalcaba to mitigate damage as Zapatero goes up in flames

February 4, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

So that’s that then. In the autumn, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero will announce his decision to make way for his interior minister, Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, as Socialist candidate in the spring 2012 general elections. This, at least, is the theory that has taken hold in much of the mainstream Spanish media in recent days, with El Mundo, La Vanguardia, El Periódico and Público all subscribing to it on the strength of reports emerging from the Socialist camp. Qorreo has heard similar reports from sources close to the prime minister, who also say Zapatero has informed at least four senior Socialists of his plans (and not just one, as the prime minister has claimed). Rubalcaba has … [Read more...] about Rubalcaba to mitigate damage as Zapatero goes up in flames

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: carme chacon, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, metroscopia, Partido Popular, popular party, psoe 2012, rubalcaba, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spanish socialist party, zapatero, zapatero 2012

Spain’s smoking ban: stubbing out freedom

November 10, 2010 by Nick Lyne 17 Comments

Time was when the smell of Spain was a heady blend of coffee, cologne, and tobacco. The coffee is still there, and one still gets the occasional whiff of Heno de Pravia, but the Ducados are increasingly being stubbed out; and when a ban on smoking in bars and restaurants comes into force in January 2011, they will be gone forever. Yes, Spain is finally extending its smoking ban to all public places. The initial smoking ban was first introduced in 2006, and was meant to apply to all public places. But the Popular Party’s Madrid boss, Esperanza Aguirre, played the regional card, challenging the government and saying that she wouldn’t be enforcing the law in the capital’s bars and … [Read more...] about Spain’s smoking ban: stubbing out freedom

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: anti-smoking law, ley anti-tabaco, Partido Popular, popular party, Spain smoking, Spain smoking ban, Spain Socialist Party

Bare-faced cheek gives Spain air of election fever

October 28, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe 5 Comments

Sexist taunts, allegations of extremism and the hint of an economic plan – it must be an election campaign. That, at least, is the overwhelming suspicion in the wake of Spanish politics’ recent “cheekgate” affair, which saw the Popular Party mayor of Valladolid, Javier de la Riva, comment of newly instated Health Minister Leire Pajín that “every time I see that face and those cheeks [pun intended], I have the same thought.”  De la Riva’s curious train of thought also led him to describe Pajín as “a very well prepared girl who is able and discreet, and will dish out condoms left and right wherever she goes.” Pajín, who at 34 is the youngest member of the Cabinet, has for some time been … [Read more...] about Bare-faced cheek gives Spain air of election fever

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Javier de la Riva, Leire Pajín, Mariano Rajoy, Partido Popular, PP, spain news, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics

The mystery of Rajoy and the Spanish economy

September 15, 2010 by Guy Hedgecoe 2 Comments

“I know about economics. I’m not an economist but I know about economics and I have aides whom I consult.” This comment, made during a recent television interview, is not very reassuring coming from a man who aspires to become Spain’s prime minister in the near future. But then Mariano Rajoy is rarely unequivocal in his handling of the conservative Popular Party (PP) he leads. According to many, his reluctance to be clear-cut and firm is typical of the ambiguous Galician character. One obvious example is Rajoy’s management of the ongoing corruption scandal rocking his party. The lack of a clear policy on this has meant that some PP politicians facing investigation for the Gürtel … [Read more...] about The mystery of Rajoy and the Spanish economy

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: Cristobal Montoro, Francisco Camps, Francisco Gonzalez, gurtel, Luis de Guindos, Mariano Rajoy, Partido Popular, popular party, Rodrigo Rato, spanish economy, Spanish recession, zapatero

Opposing Spain’s abortion law: don’t blame the Church

August 6, 2010 by Nick Lyne 1 Comment

On July 5, Spain introduced legislation bringing the country’s abortion laws into line with those across northern Europe. In essence, the new law allows the procedure without restrictions up to 14 weeks and gives 16-year-olds the right to have abortions without parental consent. Until now abortion had been illegal unless the woman could prove that she was raped, that the foetus was malformed, or that the pregnancy endangered her physical or mental health. In practice, the latter reason was used across a network of private clinics, which perform around 100,000 abortions a year. The issue has been reported in the international media as a battle between the secular Socialist Party … [Read more...] about Opposing Spain’s abortion law: don’t blame the Church

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: abortion, aznar, Catholic Church, ley de aborto, Partido Popular, popular party, PP, rajoy, Spain's abortion law, Spanish abortion law, Spanish government, vatican, zapatero

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