Spain's pop polarizer:
The unlikely rise of
Isabel Díaz Ayuso
The president of the Madrid region has found success
by never shying from a fight — or the far right.
By Aitor
Hernández-Morales in Madrid
Illustration
by Jess Suttner for POLITICO
June 13,
2022 4:01 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/isabel-diaz-ayuso-profile-spain-madrid-pop-polarizer-unlikely-rise/
COVID-19
should have ended Isabel Díaz Ayuso. Instead, it propelled her into the highest
echelons of Spanish politics.
When the
pandemic hit, the conservative politician had recently been elected as
president of the region of Madrid. Widely regarded as inexperienced, having
come into office almost by accident, she faced a challenge that would test even
the most grizzled administrator — and by any accounting of the numbers, it
didn’t go well.
The Spanish
capital would eventually register one of the highest excess mortality rates in
Europe, with many of those deaths arguably resulting from the measures taken by
Ayuso’s administration. Amnesty International called one of her
administration’s decisions — an effective ban on the transfer of infected
nursing home patients to regional hospitals —
a violation of “the right to health, life and non-discrimination of the
older people.” It is believed to have contributed to the more than 8,000 deaths
in the region’s nursing homes during the first months of the pandemic.
“It was all
surreal: the government would issue these orders and then disappear,” recalled
anesthesiologist Mónica García, spokesperson for the opposition Más Madrid
party in the regional parliament.
“It was
like a ship in a storm,” she added, “with the captain hiding in his cabin while
the sailors — in this case, the medical professionals — tried to keep the thing
afloat on their own.”
Whatever
the human toll, politically Ayuso kept right on sailing. Rather than accept
blame for the deaths, she seized on the unpopularity of Spanish Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez’s left-wing coalition and went on the attack, accusing the
national government of inaction and railing against its coronavirus lockdowns.
After the
national government ceded control over COVID rules to Spain’s regional
authorities, Ayuso brazenly disregarded the recommendations of the national
health experts and reopened the capital’s hospitality sector. It was a popular
position among the region’s restaurateurs, who hailed her as their “patron
saint.” When infections kept rising, Ayuso again pointed the finger at national
authorities, claiming they were failing to test foreigners arriving at
Madrid-Barajas International Airport.
“It was an
absurd suggestion — the highest infection rates were in the region’s poorest
neighborhoods, full of front-line workers, not frequent flyers — but it
worked,” said Pablo Simón, political scientist at Madrid’s Carlos III
university.
“She
managed to get the narrative focused on the airport instead of the lack of
social services,” Simón added. “She treated the pandemic as if it were just another
issue to be handled with political communication.”
‘I’m a
fighter’
Amember of
the conservative Popular Party, Ayuso is now arguably Sánchez’s most dangerous
rival — a position she’s reached through a combination of charisma, bravado and
willingness to work with Spain’s surging far right.
According
to recent polls, Ayuso’s future is practically guaranteed in Madrid, where she
would net the most votes if snap regional elections were to be held. But she’s
also become a national star on the right, with the capacity to sway masses well
beyond the borders of the Spanish capital.
By never
backing down from fights, the 43-year-old Ayuso has projected the image of
herself as a champion of all Spaniards against impositions from an allegedly
“radical” left. In the normally subdued regional parliament, Ayuso shakes
things up by referring to the opposition as “communists” and has accused them
of wanting to set fire to Catholic churches (as anticlerical rioters did prior
to the country’s bloody civil war).
Outside the
hemicycle, she has taken potshots at the region’s nurses and accused them of
being lazy. Time and time again, she has accused Sánchez’s government of being
dictatorial. And at one point she even started a feud with Pope Francis over
his decision to apologize for the Catholic Church’s crimes in Mexico.
“It’s
Politics 101,” said Santi Rivero, a regional MP and LGBTQ+ coordinator for the
Socialist party. “She always punches above her weight, taking on enemies that
make her seem bigger, more relevant than she actually is.”
“I’m a
fighter,” Ayuso said in an interview with POLITICO. “I fight and fight and
fight, and by insisting and never giving up things work themselves out.”
Far from
alienating the public, her pugnacious style has made her a darling of the
masses, a political rock star who can’t wander through the streets of what is
now her city without being stopped by fans of all ages demanding selfies or
calling her guapa (“gorgeous”).
“We love her
because she tells it like it is,” said Tomás, a barman in the capital’s
working-class Legazpi district. “She doesn’t try to sell you on B.S. like other
politicians, and that’s why we like her.”
Ayuso
argues her way of speaking is popular among Spaniards because it’s the opposite
of that espoused by “totalitarian governments — which aren’t always left-wing —
that evoke revolutions, feelings, utopia … things that may be inspiring, but
aren’t concrete.”
Pensioners
demanding the resignation of Ayuso in June 2020 | Marcos del Mazo/LightRocket
via Getty Images
“I can’t
stand people who waste my time by being vague,” Ayuso said. “I don’t think
voters who pay their taxes and get up early each morning and struggle through
life should deal with that from me, either.”
Ayuso
herself is no stranger to vagueness. Her political philosophy revolves around
the concept of “liberty,” which she describes as a loose “ownership for the
decisions you take — and letting others do exactly the same thing.”
Ribero, the
Socialist MP, said that Ayuso had won over the public by speaking in slogans
and by abandoning “the protocol of formal politics that people associate with
stuffy politicians who wear suits and follow the rules.”
“Ayuso is
the sort of person that will show up to inaugurate a sports center and not
think twice about throwing on the local team’s jersey,” he said. “People like
that she says random things, makes them laugh, and isn’t afraid to be
politically incorrect … That informality has made her a pop-icon.”
Joke
candidate
Ayuso’s
introduction to the world of politics came in the early 2000s, when she was
tapped to serve as the community manager for Madrid’s then-regional president,
Esperanza Aguirre.
“She came
from a modest family with a father with problems, and so she had gone out to
make a living when she was 19 or 20 years old,” Aguirre told POLITICO. “I
recognized in her a keen sense for politics and she did not let me down.”
Ayuso had
studied journalism and served within the youth wing of the conservative Popular
Party, but it was as part of Aguirre’s team that she received her political
education. Although the two women couldn’t be more different — Aguirre is a
countess who lives in a palace in central Madrid, while Ayuso comes from a
solidly middle-class family — both became political powerhouses by cannily
using the media to their advantage.
During her
presidency, Aguirre was routinely featured on a comedy show called “Caiga quien
Caiga” in which gonzo journalists would challenge public figures with
irreverent questions. While other politicians fled from their microphones,
Aguirre happily sparred with the comedians, lapping up the free airtime that
was turning her into a household name nationwide.
Ayuso
quickly grasped Aguirre’s no-publicity-is-bad-publicity strategy and just as
rapidly ascended within the then-president’s inner circle. “She was very good,”
recalled Aguirre, a free market evangelist who lists former British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher as one of her role models. “She read all the papers,
and she knew what my liberal principles were perfectly, and unlike other
community managers I’ve had she never put her foot in it by making statements
on my behalf.”
According
to Aguirre, Ayuso was so good at channeling her boss’ thoughts that she was
eventually allowed to launch a combative Twitter account for the regional
president’s Jack Russell terrier, Pecas. In caustic tweets, the account took
aim at Aguirre’s center-left opposition, whom the dog accused of “not wanting
freedom. Bark!”
Ayuso, who
maintains she didn’t manage the account’s day-to-day tweets, left Aguirre’s
staff in 2015 to become a member of Madrid’s regional parliament, but her time
in the chamber was so unremarkable that when she was named her party’s
candidate for the region’s presidency in 2019, few voters knew who she was.
During the
campaign, Ayuso did little to dispel her image in the press of a joke candidate
with zero experience who had been put up for a post few expected the
corruption-stained Popular Party to win. In one interview, she made headlines
by celebrating Madrid’s 3 a.m. traffic jams as a “sign of our city’s identity.”
In another chat with journalists, she said that it wasn’t a lack of jobs that was
driving young Spaniards to emigrate, but rather a desire to “share their
culture” with the rest of the world.
On election
day, Ayuso’s party came in second, with 22 percent of the vote. But after the
left was unable to secure a majority in the regional parliament, the Popular
Party forged a coalition agreement with the liberal Ciudadanos party and
negotiated parliamentary backing from the far-right Vox party.
Ayuso, the
joke candidate ridiculed by the press, ended up being sworn in as Madrid’s
president anyway.
Modern-day
chulapa
Since
taking office Ayuso has cultivated both the image of a Spanish everywoman and,
more specifically, that of a modern-day chulapa, the Madrid region’s
turn-of-the-century archetype of a working-class female, traditionally depicted
as speaking with a mix of charm and insolence.
By
regularly claiming that the national government is attacking Madrid, Ayuso has
stolen the playbook traditionally used by Spain’s leftist independence parties
in regions like Catalonia and the Basque Country. And by mixing that
neo-regionalist rhetoric with her natural combativeness and her status as
Spain’s anti-lockdown champion, Ayuso has hit on a winning formula that has
allowed her to defeat some of her country’s most prominent politicians.
The first
was Pablo Iglesias, the leader of the far-left Unidas Podemos group, who
unexpectedly left Sánchez’s cabinet to stand against Ayuso after she called a
snap election in 2021. “It was an inexplicable move on Iglesias’ part,” said
Simón. “He was a polarizing figure, and putting him in the mix simultaneously
raised Ayuso’s profile while giving her the perfect foil.”
When news
of Iglesias’ candidacy broke, Ayuso reacted with obvious delight and adopted a
campaign slogan that — purposely or not — evoked a six-year-old tweet from
Aguirre’s dog Pecas: “Communism or liberty.”
While her
campaign was once again punctuated by surreal statements — including a bizarre
celebration of Madrid as the city where “you can break up with your partner and
never run into them again” — this time
Ayuso came across as a much more experienced candidate who felt comfortable
with owning her outlandish phrases.
She also
revealed herself to be comfortable with flirting openly with Vox’s voters,
rejecting other parties’ calls to eschew the far-right group’s supporters.
Faced with criticism, Ayuso shrugged and said “when they call you a fascist you
know you’re doing something right.”
Throughout
the campaign Ayuso happily attacked Iglesias at campaign events, but she
cannily limited her face to face interactions with him — betting on his
unpopularity to catapult her back into office.
Her
calculation was spot-on. While Auyso fell short of an outright majority, her
party received twice as many votes as it had in 2019, and more than enough to
come to a fresh parliamentary pact with Vox, which agreed to support Ayuso’s
minority government as an external backer.
“The
impressive electoral success of the Trumpist right that Ayuso represents is a
tragedy for health, education and public services,” said Iglesias, who
subsequently announced his exit from active politics. “I predict that these
results will exacerbate the territorial problems in Spain.”
Ayuso’s
next challenger was the leader of her own party, Pablo Casado. While he had
personally selected Ayuso to be the party’s candidate in Madrid in 2019, two
years later her star quality was outshining his own.
The two
attempted to keep things civil publicly, but the tension between them was
evident. Ayuso wanted to be named the party’s regional head, but Casado’s team
kept finding ways to keep her from that position.
The
situation took an unexpectedly dramatic turn in February, when Ayuso shocked
the nation by publicly accusing Casado of hiring detectives to dig up incriminating
evidence to discredit her.
Rather than
deny the accusation, Casado confirmed the party was investigating Ayuso because
it had evidence that her brother had received thousands of euros in commissions
linked to a €1.5 million regional government contract to procure face masks
during the COVID pandemic. He added that a disciplinary procedure would be
launched against Ayuso as a result of the evidence, which was deemed “relevant
enough to conclude that there has been influence peddling.”
Within days
the party leader was forced to shelve the procedure when it became clear that,
whatever his evidence, the charismatic Madrid president’s popularity was far
greater than his own. After thousands of PP hardliners surrounded the party’s
headquarters in Madrid, calling for Casado’s resignation and Ayuso’s election
to the party leadership, he agreed to step down.
Tilting
right
Since
eliminating Casado and his stalwarts, Ayuso has moved to consolidate power in
Madrid. Last month she got her wish of becoming head of the Popular Party in
the Madrid region. Ayuso told POLITICO her predecessors had treated the local
government as “a placement agency” for loyalists and lackies. She said the
leadership position was important to her because it would give her the ability
to fill those positions with her own people.
Ayuso
hasn’t survived her fight with Casado completely unscathed. Weeks after the
scandal broke, she admitted that the region paid her brother at least €55,850
as part of a contract to procure masks. In March it was reported that the
European Public Prosecutor’s Office had opened an investigation into the matter
as a potential fraud committed with EU funds, but the status of the case is
unclear due to a competence adjudication conflict with Spain.
Ayuso denies
there was any wrongdoing and insists the whole affair is part of a “campaign to
which the left has subjected me since the very start.” She added that her
opponents had a habit of attacking her through the men in her life: “If they
don’t go after my ex-boyfriend or husband, they go after my brother … Or my
chief of staff,” she said, referring to Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, a veteran
political operative who is often described as the éminence grise behind Ayuso.
“It’s very sexist.”
The Popular
Party’s new president, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, has avoided clashes with Ayuso
since succeeding Casado. A long-serving president of the Galicia region, Feijóo
is known as an able administrator, but it’s not yet clear if his low-key,
moderate style will play in Spain’s increasingly polarized political landscape.
As he finds
his footing, Ayuso has not hesitated to keep pushing the Popular Party to the
right. In March, she campaigned on behalf of her party in the regional
elections in Castilla y León and urged its representatives to come to an
agreement with Vox. The region’s Popular Party subsequently entered into a
coalition with the ultranationalist party, marking the first time the far right
has been allowed into a regional government in Spain since the end of the
Franco regime.
At a recent
campaign event in Andalusia — where elections are scheduled for June 19 — she
urged her party to reach a similar agreement if they don’t win an outright
majority, adding that “Vox and the Popular Party have a lot to do.”
In Madrid,
where Vox provides external support to Ayuso’s minority government,
collaboration between the two is ongoing. In December, Ayuso allowed Vox to
present an (ultimately defeated) bill to slash LGTBQ+ rights in the capital.
The far-right party has, in turn, backed legislation that effectively gives
Ayuso’s government control over the region’s public television channel. The
effectiveness of the alliance has only emboldened Ayuso’s unapologetic defense
of political partnerships with Spain’s ultranationalists.
“The opposition
doesn’t want us to make deals with Vox because then we won’t have anyone with
whom to form coalitions and so we’ll never be able to form governments,” she
told POLITICO. “But we can’t decide who is and isn’t allowed to be part of
Spain’s political institutions.”
“My party
will always participate in elections with the most ambitious project … But if
we have to form coalitions, we should do so with those with whom we have the
most in common,” she added.
Since
becoming party leader, Feijóo has been careful to avoid crossing Ayuso, and to
adopt stances similar to hers whenever possible. While he had previously
rejected deals with Vox, this spring he green-lit the coalition with Vox in
Castilla y León.
It remains
to be seen if Feijóo’s tactic of appeasing Ayuso will save him from suffering
his predecessor’s fate. Ayuso is indisputably the most charismatic figure
within their party, and few doubt she would pass up a serious opportunity to
jump to the national stage.
“She has to
win [next year’s] regional elections first, but why not?” asked Aguirre. “She
has an extraordinary way of speaking that connects with everyone, she’s smart
and, why not admit it, beautiful as well.”
Pablo
Iglesias, Ayuso’s one-time rival for the presidency of the Madrid region, said
that if she wants to become Spain’s prime minister, “she could absolutely do
it.”
“If Donald
Trump became president of the United States, anyone can become president of any
country,” he said, adding that Ayuso knew how to use “the Trumpian tactic of
embracing alternate facts and outright lies as legitimate political tools.”
Más
Madrid’s García said she wouldn’t be surprised if Ayuso threw her hat in the
ring eventually. “What Ayuso loves is power,” García said. “She’s driven by
this real will to accumulate power and she’ll do anything to perpetuate herself
in a position of power.”
Ayuso
insists that her political future lies solely in Madrid and said that her only
interest is serving that citizenry. Asked if she means the citizens of Madrid
region or those of Spain, Ayuso wryly noted that she makes no real distinction
between the two: “Madrid is Spain, and Spain is Madrid — they’re the same
thing,” she said with a smile.


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