Spain’s
Sánchez poised to remain in power — but at what cost?
The
Socialist leader will make his bid to form a new government, which is expected
to get the green light from parliament.
November
15, 2023 4:00 am CET
By Aitor
Hernández-Morales
https://www.politico.eu/article/spains-sanchez-is-posed-to-remain-in-power-but-at-what-cost/
MADRID —
Pedro Sánchez has achieved what many thought impossible.
When he
called a snap election after suffering heavy losses in May’s regional and local
votes, nearly everyone wrote the Spanish prime minister off as a political
cadaver.
But on
Wednesday, Sánchez will propose that Spain’s parliament let him form a new
government, a bid that a majority of lawmakers is expected to support.
While the
Socialist leader’s electoral gamble seems about to pay off, it comes at a heavy
price.
To have
his government confirmed by the fractured parliament, Sánchez needed to secure
the support of the Catalan separatist Junts group. In exchange for the group’s
backing, his Socialist Party this week filed a controversial bill to grant
amnesty to those involved in the Catalan separatist movement over the past
decade.
“Amnesties
in Spain have historically been applied after episodes of great violence or
when there is a regime change, as happened when the last one was passed in
1977,” said political scientist Pablo Simón. “But this one is impossible to
disassociate from the negotiation to form a government.”
Over the
past week, thousands of Spaniards have taken to the streets to protest. While
the outcry is expected to dissipate — as happened in 2021, when the pardoning
of imprisoned Catalan leaders sparked widespread anger — profound social
tensions are likely to remain.
The
center-right Popular Party has vowed to challenge the amnesty in the courts. If
the law were to be overturned, it would constitute a stunning rebuke of
Sánchez.
But even
if the amnesty passes judicial scrutiny, that result may prove just as
problematic for the Socialist leader.
The bill
would allow figures like former Catalan President Carles Puigdemont, who has
lived in Belgium since the failed 2017 Catalan independence referendum, to
return to Spain — and to the political fold.
It
remains to be seen if the de facto leader of Junts can still inspire the masses
that backed him six years ago, and whether he’ll be able to use them to exert
pressure on Sánchez.
Do-nothing
parliament?
Getting
parties in a fractured parliament to back the formation of a government is one
thing. Getting them to vote for its legislation is another.
The
various left-wing and separatist parties slated to back Sánchez on Thursday
have radically different political ideologies, and that could be a major
problem this term.
“It’s
going to be very difficult to pass any laws,” Simón said.
But
Sánchez, the quintessential comeback kid, has never been one to fear the odds.
Once his government passes a budget, moving his legislative agenda forward will
require him to do what he does best: negotiate.
“During
the last term, when the prime minister oversaw Spain’s first-ever coalition
government, we got major, socially progressive legislation passed despite the
pandemic and the war in Ukraine,” former Health Minister and Socialist Party of
Catalonia Secretary Salvador Illa told POLITICO.
“I think
this next term will be much more productive and stable than most people
predict.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário