{"id":127106,"date":"2021-04-19T09:37:14","date_gmt":"2021-04-19T09:37:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.radiofree.org\/?p=187849"},"modified":"2021-04-19T09:37:14","modified_gmt":"2021-04-19T09:37:14","slug":"pablo-iglesias-quits-spanish-government-to-stop-the-far-right-in-madrid","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/04\/19\/pablo-iglesias-quits-spanish-government-to-stop-the-far-right-in-madrid\/","title":{"rendered":"Pablo Iglesias quits Spanish government \u2018to stop\u2019 the far Right in Madrid"},"content":{"rendered":"
It is not often that a liberal party governs with the help of a neo-fascist party, but this is the case in Spain, where the conservative-liberal political party Ciudadanos (\u2018Citizens\u2019, Cs) governs with the support of Vox in several autonomous Spanish regions.<\/p>\n
But the polls show<\/a> support for Cs is in free fall. This led to the party\u2019s desperate attempt to stop relying on an increasingly radicalised Right and to look instead for a pact with the centre-left Partido Socialista Obrero Espa\u00f1ol (\u2018Spanish Socialist Workers\u2019 Party\u2019, PSOE).<\/p>\n PSOE and Cs planned to file a motion of censure against the right-wing Partido Popular (\u2018Popular Party\u2019, PP) in the south-eastern region of Murcia, following a new corruption scandal. PP, however, anticipated this move and, in order not to lose its hold on government, \u2018convinced\u2019 three deputies from Cs<\/a> to vote against the motion. The result: another scandal of political malpractice and corruption was unleashed in Madrid. <\/p>\n The president of the Community of Madrid, Isabel D\u00edaz Ayuso \u2013 a member of PP \u2013promptly used this as an excuse to convene early regional elections, scheduled for 4 May. This was a smart move for two reasons.<\/p>\n First, because the polls predict a majority<\/a> for the extreme-Right parties (PP and Vox) and the fall of the left-wing Unidas Podemos (\u2018United We Can\u2019, UP), which is not expected to reach the 5% of the vote necessary to enter Parliament. <\/p>\n Second, because Spain\u2019s left-wing parties have been experiencing a serious crisis for years, aggravated by internal power struggles. A symptom of this crisis is that the Left is split in two, with two warring political parties: M\u00e1s Madrid (\u2018More Madrid\u2019) and UP. <\/p>\n Recently, D\u00edaz Ayuso has moved the PP even further to the Right, adopting a Trumpian rhetoric of confrontation with the Spanish government, and promoting populist slogans about the \u201cfreedom of Madrid people\u201d. This has pushed the Spanish government, which relies on support from Spain\u2019s regional governments, towards less restrictive measures in dealing with the coronavirus pandemic. This, in turn, has led to more COVID-19 cases and more deaths. The country now faces the unpromising prospect in the weeks to come of seeing a new regional government in Madrid that falls somewhere between Trumpian Right (PP) and neo-fascist (Vox). <\/p>\n