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News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

spanish news

Banality and pragmatism on Spain’s campaign trail

May 16, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

There's little room for doubt now that the May 22 regional and municipal elections will mark a hugely significant change for Spain’s political map. The Popular Party (PP) is heading for an overwhelming victory, as underlined by the latest poll published by Metroscopia. The pollster points to major gains across the country for the conservatives, but the fact they now look poised to take traditional Socialist strongholds such as Seville and Castilla-La Mancha is the most striking development. Given that such enormous changes are afoot, it is strange –and frustrating– that this election campaign has not been more compelling.  Instead of seeing the Socialists dig deep to fight for their … [Read more...] about Banality and pragmatism on Spain’s campaign trail

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: 22 mayo, 22-m, economy, may 22 elections, Partido Popular, popular party, spain, spain economy, spain local elections, spain news, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics, zapatero

Spain: Too big to fail?

May 12, 2011 by Andrew Eatwell 4 Comments

The European Union’s three victims-so-far of the global financial meltdown have, not incorrectly, been described as the economic bloc’s periphery. Their economies are relatively small and, though at times worries about their debts have undermined the euro currency, their problems – even taken in combination – are hardly likely to bring the bloc to its knees. Individually, they were sick from a debilitating cocktail of similar problems: bed-ridden with debt and weak from a bad diet of profligate government spending and loan-happy banks. Nothing, it seemed, that a dose of bailout money from the EU and IMF could not cure with a trip to the emergency ward. Spain is showing similar symptoms. … [Read more...] about Spain: Too big to fail?

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: austerity plan, bailout, banks, debt crisis, economy, EU, EU bailout, eu debt crisis, euro, european union, greece, greek crisis, Greek debt crisis, pigs, portugal, portugal ireland greece, recession, spain, spain economy, spain news, spanish debt, spanish economy, spanish news

Where do Mourinho and Guardiola go from here?

May 9, 2011 by Phil Minshull 2 Comments

La Liga and the Champions League are still to be decided but already pundits and the general public are talking about what will happen when the season comes to an end after the recent series of Barcelona and Real Madrid matches. At the start of April, there was speculation that if things went badly wrong for Real coach José Mourinho, he might leave at the end of the season. Well, apart from lifting the Copa del Rey on April 20, things could hardly have gone worse. The 1-1 draw at the Santiago Bernabéu on April 16 effectively handed the league title to Barcelona and the Catalans could close the issue with a draw in this week's game against Levante or if Real drop points against … [Read more...] about Where do Mourinho and Guardiola go from here?

Filed Under: Sports Tagged With: barcelona, Barcelona and Real Madrid, El Clásico, Guardiola, Mourinho, Mourinho and Guardiola, Real Madrid, real madrid and barcelona, spain, spain news, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish soccer

Seve: the charisma of a champion

May 7, 2011 by Joe McMahon 2 Comments

Seve Ballesteros brought brightness to golf when he appeared on the professional scene in 1976. That brightness has slowly dimmed since he was diagnosed with a brain tumour on October 5, 2008. Ballesteros died on May 7 at the age of 54 at his home in Pedreña in Northern Spain. He is survived by his ex-wife Carmen and their three children: Baldomero, Miguel and Carmen. Ballesteros, or “Seve”, as he was widely known, was more than a great golfer, he was an ambassador of golf, and he brought ingenuity and creativity to a game that was meant to be played by hitting straight shots from tee to green. Seve’s style was different and he made golf fun to watch. Tiger Woods said the Spaniard was … [Read more...] about Seve: the charisma of a champion

Filed Under: Featured, Sports Tagged With: golf, Jack Nicklaus, seve, Severiano Ballesteros, spain, spain news, spain sport, spanish news, Spanish sport, sport

Sábato, Argentina’s contradictory literary giant

May 6, 2011 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Ernesto Sábato, who died on April 30 at the age of 99, was, as Voltaire said of all great men and women, a mass of contradictions. And therein lies the strength of the Argentine’s writing: he always wrote what he understood to be true, according to his often contradictory experiences. He was chosen to head the committee (CONADEP) tasked with investigating the "disappearances" of thousands of people during Argentina’s dictatorship, yet had initially supported the military when it took over in 1976 at a time of mounting economic problems, social turmoil, and clashes with leftist guerrillas who carried out kidnappings and killings. He had joined other writers in a meeting with dictator … [Read more...] about Sábato, Argentina’s contradictory literary giant

Filed Under: Books, Culture, Featured Tagged With: argentina, CONADEP, ernesto sábato, military, sábato, science, society, spain news, spanish news, Spanish news in English

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

Floyd Patterson’s Spanish adventure

May 2, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

It’s not often that Spain is associated with boxing, particularly heavyweight boxing. The country has no tradition of producing top-flight fighters and some media do not cover the sport on principle. You certainly wouldn’t expect heavyweight great Floyd Patterson to have spent any time in Spain. But he did, under strange circumstances. In 1962, Sonny Liston fought title-holder Patterson for the world heavyweight belt. Despite his prowess in the ring, Patterson, a deeply insecure man, always kept a disguise in his fight bag in case he should lose and need to escape the venue incognito. Two minutes and six seconds into the Chicago fight, Liston had knocked the champ down and he didn’t … [Read more...] about Floyd Patterson’s Spanish adventure

Filed Under: Iberoblog, Sports Tagged With: boxing spain, Floyd Patterson, Idlewild Airport, madrid, Muhammad Ali, Sonny Liston, spain, spain news, spanish news

With almost five million out of work, Spain’s unemployment crisis rages on

April 29, 2011 by Andrew Eatwell Leave a Comment

In January 2009, Spain’s then Labour Minister Celestino Corbacho declared confidently that the number of jobless people in Spain would not surpass the four million mark. It took only three months for him to eat his own words as unemployment shot past that psychologically significant level. It has continued to tick upwards ever since. Corbacho lost his job in October last year. Now another minister, Elena Salgado, who holds the economy portfolio and serves as second deputy prime minister, is also putting her credibility on the line. In a press conference on Thursday, she said five-million plus job seekers is not on the cards. “In the opinion of the Economy Ministry that figure will not … [Read more...] about With almost five million out of work, Spain’s unemployment crisis rages on

Filed Under: Business, Featured Tagged With: corbacho, desempleo, elena salgado, EU, european union, labour market, paro, recession, spain, spain economy, spain news, spain unemployment, spanish economy, spanish news, unemployment

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

How did an independence vote become such a headache for Catalan nationalists?

April 12, 2011 by Guy Hedgecoe 8 Comments

Two very different interpretations can be made of the referendum organised on April 10 in Barcelona by a Catalan nationalist group. With just over 90 percent of votes backing the motion of an independent Catalonia, it could be argued this was an overwhelming success. But only one in five voters took part and the ballot is not legally binding, instead it is an attempt to promote separatism and the profile of those who want to break away from Spain. The organisers insisted that a 20-percent turnout was in fact a victory in itself, given that the series of similar referendums held in previous months across the region saw lower participation. Given the merely symbolic nature of this vote, … [Read more...] about How did an independence vote become such a headache for Catalan nationalists?

Filed Under: Iberoblog Tagged With: catalan, catalan independence, catalan nationalism, Catalan referendum, CiU, spain, spain news, spanish news, spanish politics

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