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Spain: Aznars Popular Party faces electoral rout
By Paul Stuart
17 May 2003
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The Popular Party (PP) government of Prime Minister Jose Maria
Aznar faces a devastating defeat in Spanish local and regional
election on May 25. Whatever the result, Aznar says he does not
intend to stand in national elections scheduled for early next
year.
Aznar along with Britains Tony Blair was the most outspoken
supporter of the war in Iraq. He hoped the war would transform
him from a minor European statesman to a world class player and
make Spainas one Spanish international relations expert
declaredfeel part of the core group of nations that
lead the world.
His intention was not only to carve out a niche for Spain on
the global stage. It was also to turn the attention of the Spanish
population away from the domestic economic crisis. This was a
serious miscalculation. Aznar did not foresee that the Spanish
working class would make the connection between his domestic and
foreign policy and mount one of the most explosive political offensives
by the working class in recent European history. Opinion polls
suggested over 80 percent of the population opposed the war and
massive demonstrations swept across the country.
The fate of the PP and Aznar now hangs in the balance.
Aznar personally faces two hundred civil cases charging him
with supporting the war without the authority of the Spanish parliament.
Last month seven Spanish human shields returning from Iraq detailed
50 cases of attacks on the Iraqi civilian population. Spokesperson
Carlos Varea added, We hope these documents can help build
a case to charge Jose Maria Aznars government with collaborating
in war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Political conflict in the Spanish ruling class has erupted
as a consequence of Aznars coalition with the
US. Several leading figures have resigned from the PP, including
Aznars mentor and the ideological leader of the party Felix
Pastor. Pastor was the architect of the PPs return to office
after 14 years of Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) rule and now
fears his hard work is in ruins. He declared, The Spanish
people have the right to expect their governments to keep them
away from all wars. Bushs policies are so detestable that
we should keep well away.
He warned of the consequences of Aznars policies saying,
The idea of a moderate, humanitarian, Christian Peoples
Party has been blown away.
The conflicts in the Spanish ruling class have nothing to do
with a progressive struggle against US militarism. It is an attempt
by right-wing ideologues who emerged from the fetid swamp of Francoite
fascism to steer the election campaign away from the raging war
debate to Spanish domestic politics. But this is hardly safe ground
for Aznar. It is the widespread public hostility to the free market
policies imposed over the last 25 years by the PSOE and the PP
that helped fuel the massive antiwar protests. These policies
have transformed Spain into a cheap labour, part-time economy
with high levels of unemployment. When Aznar recently introduced
new labour laws to force the unemployed to accept jobs miles from
their homes, a general strike swept the country that made him
temporarily back down.
In response to the mass opposition the Iraq war has provoked
in Spain, Aznar has made a virtue out of his total isolation.
He has compared himself to the British wartime leader Winston
Churchill. He reported at a recent press conference with Blair,
Ever since I was small I learnt from a British prime minister
whose portrait I saw coming up the stairs, Winston Churchill,
that one has to be up to ones responsibilities and I think
that is something citizens appreciate.
The invocation of Churchill is based on an historical falsification.
In the period leading up to World War II, Churchill campaigned
for war against German aggression in opposition to those in the
British ruling class who wanted to appease Hitlerpersonified
in the figure of Conservative Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain.
Churchill used mass popular sentiment in his campaign to shift
British imperialist foreign policy. In the Iraq war it was Aznar,
Blair and Bush who were the aggressors.
True to form, Aznars policies are more reminiscent of
Franco who leaned on German military might to crush the revolutionary
movement of the Spanish working class in the 1936-1939 Civil War.
Under conditions of growing hostility and opposition to the PP,
Aznar leans on the Bush administration to impose further attacks
on living standards and step up political repression.
To curry favour with Bush, Aznar has committed 1,500 troops
to the US-led military occupation force in Iraq. Last month the
PP organised a protest in Madrid against the imprisonment of opposition
figures by the Cuban courts. It was meant for international consumption
particularly in Washington, but also served as a provocation against
domestic opponents. Aznar launched an attack on the PSOE and the
Spanish Communist Party (PCE) led United Left coalition for not
participating and accused them of supporting Saddam Hussein and
Castro against the democratic world.
Aznar has threatened to bring in legislation making it illegal
to oppose the foreign policy of the governmentafter Javier
Madrazo, Basque regional leader of the United Left, called Aznar
a terrorist like those of ETA, the Basque separatist
organisation. The Basque Supreme Court will decide if Madrazos
statement warrants a formal investigation that could result in
a stiff prison sentence.
On May 5 Aznar secured a deal with Bush placing the Basque
separatist party, Batasuna, on Washingtons list of terrorist
organisations following its ban last year amid accusations of
links with ETA. On the same day the Spanish Supreme Court banned
242 political groups from contesting this months elections
in the Basque region, claiming Batasuna was trying to sneak
back into politics.
See Also:
Spanish government plan for drastic punishment
of war opponents
[1 May 2003]
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