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: Spain
Political instability and social struggles will follow Spains
general election
By Paul Mitchell
8 March 2008
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Latest polls suggest the Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) led
by current Prime Minister José Luis Zapatero is just 1.5
percentage points ahead of Mariano Rajoys opposition right-wing
Popular Party (PP) in tomorrows parliamentary election.
Neither side looks likely to win an absolute majority in the legislature
and will probably need to reach an agreement with smaller parties
in order to form a government.
Irrespective of who emerges as victor on Sunday evening, the
Spanish election augurs a profound lurch to the right within official
politics and escalating class conflict. Spanish society is already
highly polarised. Many commentators refer to the re-emergence
of the two Spains of the 1936-9 civil war as
the consensus created during the so-called peaceful
transition from fascism to parliamentary democracy following Francos
death in 1975 unravels. The economic downturn threatens to bring
these tensions to breaking point.
Over the last decade, Spain experienced one of the highest
economic growth rates of any country in Europe. But now the financial
pages are full of warnings about a rapid slowdown, slump or stagflationstagnant
growth with rising inflation. Predictions of economic growth have
fallenfrom 3.8 percent in 2007 to an estimated 3.1 percent
this year, according to the government, and only 2.7 percent,
according to the European Commission and the International Monetary
Fund. The Commission also said business confidenceexpressed
in its economic sentiment indexwas plummeting
across Europe but was particularly gloomy in Spain,
falling to the lowest level since January 1994 when the country
last suffered a full-blown recession.
The real estate boom is grinding to a halt. The Spanish Savings
Banks Federation FUNCAS has warned that the slowdown will be more
traumatic than expected. Credit Suisse and the Spanish construction
association have forecasted a drop of 40 percent in construction
activity this year. The consequences for Spain are far worse than
for other countries since construction investment constitutes
18 percent of the Spanish gross domesticnearly twice that
in countries such as France and Germany. In addition, the construction
crisis is spilling over into other areas of the economy, particularly
the banking industry.
Financial institutions such as the International Monetary Fund
are demanding that the next administration push through long demanded
industrial reforms and raise productivity, which is amongst the
lowest in Europe, introduce more modern technology and tackle
the huge current accounts deficit now at 10 percent of gross domestic
product and the second largest in the world after the US. They
warned all the parties against relying on the record budget surplus
to finance tax cuts. During the election campaign, the PSOE pledged
a 400 ($600) tax rebate for all workers and pensioners,
whilst the PP promised to exempt from income tax those who earn
less than 16,000 a year, to cut the maximum income tax rate
from 43 percent to 40 percent and to lower corporation tax from
32.5 percent to 25 percent.
University of Murcia political scientist Ismael Crespo explained:
Now that the bubble-economy is largely defunct, the main
challenge for the victors of Sundays election will beapart
from crisis managementthe search for a new growth model,
based on rising productivity. Unfortunately, that reality, too,
has yet to sink in fully.
The reality for many workers is the inability to make ends
meet. The consumer price index rose 4.3 percent in January, compared
with 2.4 percent for the same month last year. Staple foodstuffs
such as sunflower oil and flour now cost between 25 percent and
37 percent more than a year ago and meat products are predicted
to increase in price this year by 14 percent. Household debt has
risen to more than 110 percent of income and approaches US levels.
The most recent reports show the amount of outstanding mortgage
loans stands at a record 811 billion (US$1 trillion), a
rise of 26 percent since 2006.
Unemployment rose last year for the first time in four years
to 2,315,000 people8.6 percent of the working population.
Latest figures show young people are particularly affected. Less
than half of those employed have a fixed work contract and they
spend nearly half of their income on accommodation.
Belén Barjadí, a public-sector worker who voted
for the PSOE in the 2004 elections, expressed the impossible situation
in which many workers find themselves. She told the International
Herald Tribune, I am very worried about my economic
situation, and I dont see either of the big parties offering
me a solution.
Barjadí receives a salary of 1,350 a month and
is forced to share a 700 a month apartment with her sister.
She explained that she rarely bought fresh fish or meat, did not
drive a car and could only take vacations by staying in Spain
with friends. I put on the heating and worry about how much
it is costing me, she said. I worry about the electricity
bill, the rent. Ive never been extravagant, but now I have
to be really careful.
When Zapatero says the economy is doing well, it makes
me laugh, Bardají said. But what can I do?
I am invisible.
Barjadís sentiments are typical of those expressed
by throughout an increasingly restive working class, which dismissed
the PP government in 2004, angry at its neo-liberal economic policies
and support for the war in Iraq. The PSOE was the initial beneficiary
of the electorates turn to the left, but has disappointed
the hopes placed in it.
For its part, the right has signalled that it is quite prepared
to abandon its tenuous commitment to the transition and the 1978
constitution. The PP, the Catholic Church and sections of the
army have spent the last four years waging an aggressive political
campaign to destabilise the government, portraying the PSOE victory
in the 2004 elections as a virtual coup. The PP has launched repeated
provocations on the issues of regional autonomy, negotiations
with the Basque separatist ETA, secularism, abortion and defence
of Francoism. In response, the PSOE has bent over backwards in
an attempt to heal the rift and stabilise bourgeois rule, but
this has proven impossible.
During the election campaign the PP has whipped up Spanish
nationalism and anti-immigrant sentiment. Acknowledging that the
party had a very hard, right-wing image at the moment,
PP official Gabriel Elorriaga said that Even our own voters
think they are more centrist than the PP. The partys
aim was to persuade PSOE sympathisers to abstain.
Our whole strategy is centred on wavering Socialist voters...We
know they will never vote for us. But if we can sow enough doubts
about the economy, about immigration and nationalist issues, then
perhaps they will stay at home.
The Catholic hierarchy has also intervened in the election,
with the Spanish Bishops Conference reminding Catholics
of their duty to defend traditional values and to elect leaders
responsibly when they vote on Sunday. This week, the
Conference chose as its new president, Cardinal Antonio Maria
Rouco Varela, to replace Bishop Ricardo Blazquez. Under his leadership
the Spanish Church embarked on Pope Benedict XVIs mission
of evangelisation, promoted the unprecedented beatification of
nearly 500 Catholic priests killed when the Church supported fascism
in the civil war, encouraged a witch-hunt against abortion rights
and organised a mass rally at which speakers denounced the PSOE
governments social policies.
Popular sentiment is opposed to the Churchs political
intervention, yet Zapatero has attempted to restore the Churchs
authority by renewing the Church State Accords last autumn, sending
representatives to the beatification ceremony in Rome and removing
passages from his partys manifesto that promised to extend
abortion rights.
The Catholic Church has also been in the forefront of defying
the provisions of the new Law of Historical Memory, which officially
condemns the mass executions and other crimes carried out under
Franco. It has celebrated masses all over the country, including
at the Valley of the Fallen, where the dictator is buried along
with the founder of the fascist Falange Española, José
Primo Rivera.
Following the passing of the law, pitched battles broke out
between police and anti-fascist demonstrators in Spains
main towns, claiming several victims, one fatal. Combined with
widespread anger over revelations regarding the massive wealth
inherited by the family of Franco and its decadent lifestyle,
the new law threatens to bring to the surface all the unresolved
political problems of the civil war, the victory of the fascists
and the ensuing decades of repression.
The military has also made its views known in the elections,
with Lieutenant-General José Mena Aguado, the ex-commander
of Spains 50,000 ground troops, urging the population to
vote against the PSOE during the launch last month of his book
Soldiers. The limits of silence.
Within its pages, Mena claims there was widespread support
within the top brass for his January 2006 public speech in which
he threatened to deploy the military to resist the PSOEs
Catalan Statute and the limited additional powers it gave to the
province. At the time the PSOE tried to brush off the incident,
saying it was an act of isolated indiscipline thats
already been corrected.
The issue of Catalan and Basque nationalism also threatens
to erupt again, particularly since Kosovo unilaterally declared
independence last month. Whilst the PSOE and the PP take the same
position on Kosovo, insisting that it is a special case,
the regional separatists are hailing it as a precedent to further
their own ambitions. The largest nationalist party in the Basque
Country, the PNV, says it will hold a referendum on the future
of the region later this year and is attempting to draw in the
supporters of the terrorist group ETA and its political wing,
Batasuna.
There is nothing progressive about the perspective of national
separatism, which accepts capitalist exploitation and inequality
and is fundamentally opposed to the independent mobilisation of
the working class. Moreover, ETAs bombs and assassinations
have provided a pretext for strengthening the repressive apparatus
and draconian attacks on democratic rights. The Zapatero government,
like the previous PP government led by José Maria Aznar,
has used the Basque region as a test-bed for anti-democratic measures
aimed at clamping down on any popular dissent. Last year it arrested
the entire Batasuna leadership and last month banned two Basque
parties and their deputies in the regional assembly from standing
in the elections, accusing them of being front organisations of
Batasuna.
Since it came to power, the PSOE has defended the interests
of Spains ruling elites at the expense of the working population.
It has bowed down to the PPs provocations and sought to
block any movement by the working class to defend its economic
and political interests. During the election campaign, Zapatero
vowed to secure an agreement with the trade union bureaucracy
and business leaders to impose the labour reforms long demanded
by the IMF and other financial institutions. Attempts to carry
out these reforms in the past have provoked several general strikes
in Spain, including one in 2002 that caused the PP government
to back down and withdraw its proposals. In 2005, workers were
involved in several nationwide strikes, including a politically
explosive strike by miners. The UGT and the Stalinist-led Trade
Union Confederation of Workers Commissions threatened a winter
of discontent, but instead accepted virtually all the demands
of big business.
See Also:
Spain: United Left splits as it lurches
further right
[6 March 2008]
Spain: Socialist Party capitulates
to right wing anti-abortionists
[5 January 2008]
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