Spanish election offers opportunity to far right
as PP seeks power
Conservative People’s party struggles in final days of
campaigning and is forecast to fall short of overall majority
Sam Jones
in Madrid
@swajones
Sat 22 Jul
2023 08.00 BST
Spain is
facing a stark choice between the left and right blocs as it prepares for a
snap general election on Sunday that could see the far right winning a place in
government for the first time since the country returned to democracy after
General Franco’s death almost 50 years ago.
The
election, in which the opposition conservative People’s party is expected to
finish first but fall short of an absolute majority, has been closely and
bitterly fought. Although the PP is topping the polls and its leader, Alberto
Núñez Feijóo, emerged as the surprise winner of a head-to-head debate last week
with Spain’s socialist prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, the PP’s campaign has had
a poor final few days.
Feijóo, who
had already been left looking awkward after his claims about the PP’s track
record on pensions turned out to be untrue, then made an apparent reference to
the makeup of Spain’s deputy prime minister and labour minister, Yolanda Díaz,
which was criticised for its sexist tone.
The PP
leader is also facing renewed questions over his old friendship with a man who
was later convicted of drug trafficking. Speaking on Friday, Feijóo accused his
opponents of trying to smear him, adding that when he knew him, the man in
question “had been a smuggler [but] never a drug trafficker”.
Sunday’s
vote was called by Sánchez after his ruling Spanish Socialist Workers’ party
(PSOE) and its smaller coalition partners in the Unidas Podemos alliance did
far worse than expected in May’s regional and municipal elections.
According
to the polls, the PP, which last governed between 2011 and 2018, is all but
assured to win the most votes but forecast to fall short of the 176-seat
majority required in Spain’s 350-seat congress. That means any future PP-led
government is likely to require the support of the far-right Vox party, which
is currently the third biggest grouping in congress, and with which the PP has
already formed a handful or regional coalition governments.
Sánchez has
sought to portray Sunday’s vote as a showdown between the forces of progress
and the forces of reactionary conservatism, claiming that only the PSOE and its
allies in Díaz’s new, leftwing Sumar alliance, which include Podemos, can
deliver and defend a progressive agenda.
The prime
minister has also accused the PP of legitimising Vox’s denial of human-driven
climate change and gender-based violence by cutting deals with the far-right
party.
“There’s
something that’s far more dangerous than Vox, and that’s having a PP that
assumes the policies and postures of Vox,” Sánchez said in a recent interview
with El País. “And that’s what we’re seeing: a denialism when it comes to
social, political and scientific consensus.”
The PP has
accused the prime minister and his partners of failing Spaniards through a
badly botched reform of sexual offences legislation that has seen more than 100
convicted sex offenders granted early release, and of seeking to defend the
political brand it calls “sanchismo” by clinging to power at any cost.
“First and
foremost, the PP represents indispensable, vital political change in Spain,”
Feijóo told the ABC newspaper on Friday. “The PP is about doing away with
sanchismo in Spain … We’re a constitutional party, a party that believes in
liberal democracy and the market economy, a party that believes in properly
functioning public services, which knows that fiscal pressure can’t keep rising
indefinitely, and a party that wants to attract foreign investment and keep
Spanish investment in Spain.”
Feijóo has criticised
Sánchez’s minority coalition government for being beholden to the Catalan and
Basque separatist parties on whom its depends for support in parliament. He has
also said he intends to repeal a number of the laws passed by the Sánchez
administration, including one on transgender rights and another intended to
deal with the legacy of the Franco dictatorship.
An Ipsos
poll for La Vanguardia this month found that the economy was the single biggest
issue for voters, with 31% of those surveyed putting it at the top of their
list. Then came unemployment (10%) and healthcare (9%). Immigration, one of
Vox’s favourite talking points, was the most important issue for just 2% of
those polled.
Sumar is
hoping to win over voters with a green agenda, the promise of a €20,000
(£17,100) “universal inheritance” for young Spaniards when they turn 18 – and
blunt warnings about a PP-Vox government.
“On 23
July, Spain will decide between two kinds of government – two coalitions,” Díaz
said earlier this month. “The coalition of rights, freedom and progress – a
coalition of us and the Socialist party – and the coalition of hatred, which
rejects the rights of women and LGBT people, and which pits businesses against
workers.”
Vox,
meanwhile, is hoping its focus on culture wars, anti-immigrant rhetoric, and
push to defend the interests of rural Spain will finally help propel it into
government following its breakthrough into national politics four years ago.
“Pedro
Sánchez will be remembered as the prime minister who was hard and implacable
when it came to honest Spaniards and soft when it came to criminals, the
enemies of Spain and foreign elites,” Vox says in its manifesto.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário