Far Right May Rise as Kingmaker in Spanish
Election
A messier political landscape has lent leverage to the
extremes, leaving a hard-right party with a chance to share power for the first
time since Franco.
Jason
Horowitz
By Jason
Horowitz
Reporting
from Barcelona
July 22,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/22/world/europe/spains-election-extremes.html
If Spain’s
national elections on Sunday turn out as most polls and analysts suggest,
mainstream conservatives may come out on top but need allies on the political
fringe to govern, ushering the first hard-right party into power since the
Franco dictatorship.
The potential
ascent of that hard-right party, Vox, which has a deeply nationalist spirit
imbued with Franco’s ghost, would bring Spain into the growing ranks of
European nations where mainstream conservative parties have partnered with
previously taboo forces out of electoral necessity. It is an important marker
for a politically shifting continent, and a pregnant moment for a country that
has long grappled with the legacy of its dictatorship.
Even before
Spaniards cast a single ballot, it has raised questions of where the country’s
political heart actually lies — whether its painful past and transition to
democracy only four decades ago have rendered Spain a mostly moderate,
inclusive and centrist country, or whether it could veer toward extremes once
again.
Spain’s
establishment, centrist parties — both the conservative Popular Party and the
Socialists led by Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez — have long dominated the
country’s politics, and the bulk of the electorate seems to be turning away
from the extremes toward the center, experts note.
But neither
of Spain’s mainstream parties has enough support to govern alone. The Popular
Party, though predicted to come out on top on Sunday, is not expected to win a
majority in the 350-seat Parliament, making an alliance imperative. The
hard-right Vox is its most likely partner.
The paradox
is that even as Vox appears poised to reach the height of its power since it
was founded a decade ago, its support may be shrinking, as its stances against
abortion rights, climate change policies and L.G.B.T.Q. rights have frightened
many voters away.
The notion
that the country is becoming more extremist is “a mirage,” said Sergio del
Molino, a Spanish author and commentator who has written extensively about
Spain and its transformations.
The
election, he said, reflected more the political fragmentation of the
establishment parties, prompted by the radicalizing events of the 2008
financial crisis and the near secession of Catalonia in 2017. That has now made
alliances, even sometimes with parties on the political fringe, a necessity.
He pointed
to “a gap” between the country’s political leadership, which needed to seek
electoral support in the extremes to govern, and a “Spanish society that wants
to return to the center again.”
In
Barcelona this past week. Spain’s establishment, centrist parties, have long
dominated the country’s politics.Credit...Maria Contreras Coll for The New York
Times
José
Ignacio Torreblanca, a Spain expert at the European Council on Foreign
Relations, said the messy process of coalition building in the relatively new
Spanish era of the post two-party system lent leverage and visibility to fringe
parties greater than their actual support.
“This is
not a blue and red country, at all,” he said.
Other were
less convinced. Paula Suárez, 29, a doctor and left-wing candidate for local
office in Barcelona with the Sumar coalition, said the polarization in the
country was entrenched. “It’s got to do with the civil war — it’s heritage.
Half of Spain is left wing and half is right wing,” she said, calling Vox
Franco’s descendants.
But those
who see a mostly centrist Spain use the same historical reference point for
their argument. The Spanish electorate’s traditional rejection of extremes,
some experts said, was rooted precisely in its memory of the deadly
polarization of the Franco era.
Later,
through the shared traumas of decades of murders by Basque terrorists seeking
to break from Spain, the two major establishment parties, the Popular Party and
the Socialists, forged a political center and provided a roomy home for most
voters.
But recent
events have tested the strength of Spain’s immunity to appeals from the
political extremes. Even if abidingly centrist, Spanish politics today, if not
polarized, is no doubt tugged at the fringes.
A salon in
Barcelona. The Spanish electorate’s traditional rejection of extremes, some
experts said, was rooted precisely in its memory of the deadly polarization of
the Franco era.Credit...Maria Contreras Coll for The New York Times
A
corruption scandal in the Popular Party prompted Vox to splinter off in 2013.
Then the near secession of Catalonia in 2017 provided jet fuel to nationalists
at a time when populist anger against globalization, the European Union and
gender-based identity politics were taking off across Europe.
On the
other side of the spectrum, the financial crisis prompted the creation of a
hard left in 2015, forcing Mr. Sánchez later to form a government with that
group and cross a red line for himself and the country.
Perhaps of
greater consequence for this election, he has also relied on the votes of
Basque groups filled with former terrorists, giving conservative voters a green
light to become more permissive of Vox, Mr. Torreblanca said. “This is what
turned politics in Spain quite toxic,” he said.
After local
elections in May, which dealt a blow to Mr. Sánchez and prompted him to call
the early elections that Spaniards will vote in on Sunday, the conservatives
and Vox have already formed alliances throughout the country.
In some
cases, the worst fears of liberals are being borne out. Outside Madrid, Vox
culture officials banned performances with gay or feminist themes. In other
towns, they have eliminated bike paths and taken down Pride flags.
Ester
Calderón, a representative of a national feminist organization in Valencia,
where feminists marched on Thursday, said she feared that the country’s
Equality Ministry, which is loathed by Vox, would be scrapped if the party
shared power in a new government.
She
attributed the rise in Vox to the progress feminists had made in recent years,
saying it had provoked a reactionary backlash. “It’s as if they have come out
of the closet,” she said.
At a rally
for Yolanda Díaz, the candidate for Sumar, the left-wing umbrella group, an
all-woman lineup talked about maternity leave, defending abortion rights and
protecting women from abuse. The crowd, many cooling themselves with fans
featuring Ms. Díaz in dark sunglasses, erupted at the various calls to action
to stop Vox.
“Only if
we’re strong,” Ms. Díaz said, “will we send Vox to the opposition.”
But members
of the conservative Popular Party, which is hoping to win an absolute majority
and govern without Vox, have tried to assure moderate voters spooked by the
prospect of an alliance with the hard right that they will not allow Vox to
pull them backward.
Xavier
Albiol, the Popular Party mayor of Badalona, outside Barcelona, said that “100
percent” there would be no backtracking on gay rights, women’s rights, climate
policies or Spain’s close relationship with Europe if his party had to bring in
Vox, which he called 30 years behind the times.
Vox, he
said, was only interested in “spectacle” to feed their base, and would merely
“change the name” of things, like gender-based violence to domestic violence,
without altering substance.
Some
experts agreed that if Vox entered the government, it would do so in a weakened
position as its support appears to be falling.
“The
paradox now,” said Mr. Torreblanca, the political analyst, is that just as Mr.
Sánchez entered government with the far left when it was losing steam, the
Popular Party seemed poised to govern with Vox as its support was sinking. “The
story would be that Spain is turning right. When in fact this is the moment
when Vox is at the weakest point.”
Recent
polls have shown voters turning away from Vox, and even some of its supporters
did not think the party should touch the civil rights protections that Spain’s
liberals introduced, and that its conservatives supported.
Gay
marriage “should remain legal of course,” said Alex Ruf, 23, a Vox supporter
who sat with his girlfriend on a bench in Barcelona’s wealthy Sarriá district.
Mr. Albiol,
the mayor of Badalona, insisted that Spain was inoculated, and said that unlike
other European countries, it would continue to be.
“Due to the
historical tradition of a dictatorship for 40 years,” he said, Spain “has
become a society where the majority of the population is not situated at the
extremes.”
That was of
little consolation to Juana Guerrero, 65, who attended the left-wing Sumar
event.
If Vox gets
into power, they will “trample us under their shoes,” she said, grinding an
imaginary cigarette butt under her foot.
In Barcelona this past week. Some experts agreed that
if Vox entered the government, it would do so in a weakened position as its
support appears to be falling.
Rachel
Chaundler contributed reporting.
Jason
Horowitz is the Rome bureau chief, covering Italy, the Vatican, Greece and
other parts of Southern Europe. He previously covered the 2016 presidential
campaign, the Obama administration and Congress, with an emphasis on political
profiles and features. More about Jason Horowitz



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