đȘThis Week in Spain: Franco's 50th Deathiversary
Also: Spain takes a pass on the reopening of Notre Dame Cathedral and a mass funeral in Valencia.
By @IanMount and @AdrianBono | December 12, 2024 | Madrid | Issue #82
đ Welcome to The Tapa, an English-language, weekly newsletter about all things Spain!
đ„ This Week in a Nutshell: PM SĂĄnchez announced weâll spend next year celebrating Francisco Francoâs death commemorating half a century of a âfree Spainâ. And Carles Puigdemont is back to his usual antics as he asks SĂĄnchez to seek a confidence vote in Parliament (dream on) and threatens to torpedo his budget (he might).
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50 years of freedom (or less, depending who you ask)
PM SĂĄnchez to commemorate the end of Francisco Francoâs reign in 1975 with 100 ceremonies
Believe it or not, 50 years ago today Spain was a dictatorship led by the generalĂsimo Francisco Franco, a brutal, pint-sized caudillo who took over the country after waging a bloody three-year civil war and ruled for almost four decades with an iron fist.
Youâre supposed to know all of this, of course (and if you donât, there are a few good documentaries on Netflix and Max), so weâll skip intro and move on to the important part: Francoâs death in 1975 started a process usually referred to as the TransiciĂłn that culminated a few years later with a new Constitution and free elections.
And so, to commemorate half a century of Spainâs freedom from tyranny/pump out some propaganda to distract people from his political woes, Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchez announced this week that the government would be organizing over 100 events in 2025 under the slogan âEspaña en Libertadâ, which literally translates as âSpain in Freedomâ but that sounds terrible, so weâll just call it âFree Spainâ.
Franco pushback. The PM has, since coming to power in 2019, tried to extricate Franco from his still oddly privileged place in parts of Spanish life. He pushed legislation to deal with Francoâs legacy (in part by pardoning his victims) and moved the mean little fellaâs remains from their public mausoleum.
The Great Transformation. Now, SĂĄnchez says that his goal of 100 Events is meant to celebrate âthe great transformationâ that Spain has seen since Francoâs death and to honor all of the people and groups that made it possible. (Donât worry: SĂĄnchezâs Great Transformation is not meant to ape Maoâs Great Leap Forward, which led to the death of 20 million Chinese via starvation.)
Memory Day. SĂĄnchez made the announcement during the celebration of the Day of Remembrance and tribute to the victims of the military coup, the Civil War and the Dictatorship (long name, we know), saying that âalmost half a century has passed, but the consequences of the wound are still visible and require reparation.â
Begins in January. SĂĄnchez added that the government would create a âscientific committeeâ of experts whoâd put together an âextensive program of activitiesâ and that details of said program will be presented soon. Plans are still vague (clearly), but the kickoff is meant to be Jan. 8.
Raising eyebrows. Not everyone is impressed with thisâand weâre not just referring to the usual far-right trolls who call the Franco dictatorship âa period of progress and reconciliationâ.
Death â Democracy. The director of news site El Español, the longtime journo Pedro J. RamĂrez, has been very critical of SĂĄnchezâs plan, arguing that the dictatorâs death didnât usher in a new age of democracy at all.
Nothing to celebrateâyet.âFranco died in his bed, the regime had just executed five people, and there was no real freedom. Therefore, celebrating âhalf a century of democracyâ means ignoring the TransiciĂłn,â he said.
Wait 2-3 years, please. By Pedro J.âs count, this means that next year, rather than 50 years, we should be celebrating 47 [the new Constitution was approved in 1978] or 48 [elections were held in 1977] years of freedom at best.
Pedro J. is not alone, as his dubious take on SĂĄnchezâs 50-year necrophilia celebration has gotten hit by everyone from the center-right to the far-left.
PP. Madrid regional Presi Isabel DĂaz Ayuso said SĂĄnchez wants to use the events to âburn the streets and cause violenceâ (đł bit much, no?) and linked SĂĄnchezâs event plans to what he does when âthings are going badlyâ, while Madrid Mayor JosĂ© Luis MartĂnez-Almeida said he wouldnât participate in SĂĄnchezâs âtriflesâ, adding, âI will join all the acts that celebrate freedom in Spain, and freedom in Spain came with the Transition and the Constitution."
Former ministers. A slew of ministers from the TransiciĂłn and first years of democracy complained to El Español about SĂĄnchezâs âpropagandistic maneuversâ and noted that Franco died peacefully in his bed after harshly ruling Spain for 36 years (i.e. not an anniversary to be proud of). âWhat freedom in 1975?â one asked. âYou only have to have lived through it to realize what a tremendous mistake this is. In 1975, the dictator died in bed, in a hospital.â
Podemos. Ione Belarra, the leader of the once-important far-left party, pretty much called the whole thing a bunch of makeup: "No matter how many cosmetic measures are put on the table, the reality is that the Government is not governing and is not moving forward with determination in terms of democratic memory.â Ha!
And Vox? See above re; âprogress and reconciliation.â Beyond that, weâre not even going to bother.
More news below. đđ
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đŹ Five things to discuss at dinner parties this week
1. đȘŠ A funeral mass for Valencia DANA victimsâwith a notable absence
A little more than a month after the DANA storm that hit Valencia at the end of October left a death toll of 223 people (one of them was found this morning while four others missing), a funeral mass for the victims was held Monday at the cityâs Cathedral. And it was anything but a great societal Kumbaya. Nope, not a lot of coming together.
The disastrous government response to the storm and ensuing floodâand the blame game that followed between the PP and PSOEâinfuriated the locals. Indeed, as we noted, the locals greeted a visit by Valencia regional president Carlos MazĂłn, Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchez and the King and Queen of Spain with sticks, stones, and mud-slinging, angry protests.
To this day, many people remain angry. Especially at MazĂłn, whose approval rating cratered after the storm: In fact, his PP party has in recent polling dropped 10 points (from 35.3% in the May 2023 regional elections to 25.4% in December 2024).
This made Mondayâs ceremony, um, awkward.
The emotional and solemn service, which highlighted the efforts of emergency services and volunteers, was attended by King Felipe, Queen Letizia, MazĂłn, many other regional PP presidents, PP national boss Alberto NĂșñez FeijĂło, and
400 direct relatives of the victims.
A notable absence. One guy who didnât attend? PM SĂĄnchez, who sent First Deputy Prime Minister MarĂa JesĂșs Montero instead.
No official reason was provided for SĂĄnchezâs absence. Local media suggested it was because the event was not an official event or state funeral, so he was not required to attend. Which seems totally unlikely.
Perhaps more plausible. Opposition politicians and other humans had a different theory: bad optics (as in, he didnât want to face the protesters inside and outside of the cathedral).
Considering the treatment MazĂłn got, that idea (and SĂĄnchezâs decision) may not have been too far off the mark. Letâs just say there was a lot of booing and heckling that evening.
After the funeral mass, some people in the cathedral were heard calling MazĂłn a âcowardâ and a âmurdererâ. A young man was seen approaching him and handing him a photo of his dead relative. The word âmurdererâ was handwritten on the back of the photo.
A woman approached MazĂłn to tell him: âyou can now go have dinner in peaceâ, in reference to the supposed lunch he was having on Oct. 29 while a flash flood was already ravaging the region.
Outside the cathedral, a woman held up a sign that said: âIt wasnât a climate catastrophe, it was murderâ. While the King and Queen left the building, they were met with applause but also some heckling. Others could be heard calling for SĂĄnchez to resign.
A woman whose father died in the storm was seen leaving the building after MazĂłn arrived. âI donât want to share the space with certain representatives present here this evening,â she told reporters. Another man who declined to attend said he thought it was âdisrespectfulâ to be there when there are people who remain missing.
The bright side? There were no sticks, stones or slung mud. Little positives!
2. đ âWith friends like theseâŠâ: Carles Puigdemont edition
With friends like these. One of PM Pedro SĂĄnchezâs close personal friends/political leaders whose support he bought with promises of the moon is frustrated with the PM. So he wants SĂĄnchez to submit his leadership to a Parliamentary confidence voteâwhich could spell the end of Sanchezâs time as Spainâs Mr. Handsome.
That the deal Pedro SĂĄnchez made to continue as prime minister in 2023 was going to be wobbly was never in doubt. To attract the votes of parties from across the spectrum, SĂĄnchez promised everything to everyone. Since then, theyâve been fighting among themselves, and with him, and itâs getting unruly.
This week itâs Junts. Thatâs the rightish Catalan separatist party led by Carles Puigdemont, the former regional president/âchubby Beatleâ who fled to Brussels to avoid prison for his role in running the illegal secession referendum in 2017.
His deal with SĂĄnchez was to vote the PSOE pol back into the PMâs chair in exchange for a broad amnesty that would allow him to return to his beloved
SpainCatalonia without facing any legal issues.The problem. While SĂĄnchez managed to get his unruly gaggle to vote for an amnesty law, not all of the judicial branch was on board. His PSOE party controls the Constitutional Court (in the way the GOP controls the U.S. Supreme Courtâthey named the judges), but not the one below itâthe Supreme Courtâwhich declined to apply parts of the amnesty to Puigdemont.
You wouldnât like me when Iâm angry. Puigdemont made his deal with SĂĄnchez a year ago, and heâs tired of waiting. So this week he dropped a bomb: His party registered a parliamentary initiative to demand SĂĄnchez call a confidence vote. "Today Sanchez continues to show that he is not trustworthy," he said. âThe time has come for a turning point or to let it go so as not to waste anyone's time.â
What does that mean? If Puigdemont manages to get a majority in Parliament to vote for the initiativeâand if thereâs a vote itâs likely he will, because the PP and Vox will vote for anything that rains on SĂĄnchezâs parade (and Podemos might too)âit will call on SĂĄnchez to submit himself to a confidence vote. Which is kind of a PMâs way of asking Parliament, âYou like me, right?â
Thatâs it? Sorta. SĂĄnchez doesnât have to call for a confidence vote, and there are lots of reasons he wouldnât want to. Like, if he did and lost, heâd have to resign and the King would name a new PM candidate. đ
But thatâs not it. Puigdemont made it clear that if the initiative passes and SĂĄnchez ignores it, Junts will no longer support the government. And that will turn Parliament into a clusterđ© where absolutely nothing will get done.
Nothing to see here. The PSOE-led government basically covered its ears and started whistling âMary Had a Little Lambâ in the hope the problem would go away. And they said they would continue working with those who supported them, blah blah blah. On the other hand, PP boss Alberto NĂșñez FeijĂło said he agreed that SĂĄnchez wasnât trustworthy âbut we never trusted himâ in the first place.
Then they fought in Parliament. During Wednesdayâs Parliamentary oversight session, Junts MP Miriam Nogueras told SĂĄnchez and his party to, âGet off your ass, do your job and pay what you owe Catalonia." Which seems rather forward.
So itâs over for Mr. Handsome? Well, no. It will be a big deal if the proposition comes up to voteâparliamentâs board will consider admitting it on Dec. 17, though itâs expected, as of now, to discard itâand an even bigger one if SĂĄnchez loses.
But the PSOE are betting Junts is bluffing, and on Wednesday, Junts seemed to back off on its demands. Even the PP thinks Junts is just trying to squeeze SĂĄnchez for a few more privileges (and euros) for Catalonia. But Puigdemont may just be angry enough to burn the whole thing down.
3. đȘđžđ«đ· That big Notre Dame reopening? Spain was too busy
You might wonder why Spain had no representatives at the Notre Dame reopening in Paris. We were too. Like, itâs an amazing feat of engineering to redo an amazing, â700-year-old church in five years after a catastrophic fire, right? Plus, youâd get to hobnob with and influence other Very Important People like Trump, Macron, Meloni, Musk and Zelenskyy. And, after hearing that an early design of the tower looked like a "phallus with its base surrounded with golden balls,â who wouldnât want to go, right?
But no, no Spain. So why? Apparently, itâs all about the invites. And, um, previous commitments. Either that or it was a diplomatic
fuckupmisstep. Who are we to judge?
Only people like us. Apparently, the basic issue was that French President Macron and the country's culture minister invited their equalsâi.e, heads of state and culture ministersâalong with incredibly rich people (which is why Salma Hayek was there with billionaire hubby François-Henri Pinault). And the invites were non-transferable.
Things to do! Spainâs Culture Minister Ernest Urtasun (Catalunya en ComĂș) declined the invite because of a, um, family obligation (Kidsâ football game? We want to know!) while the King and Queen apparently responded to Macron explaining that they regretfully declined because of schedule problems (they were preparing for a state visit to Italy and they also attended the funeral for the Valencia DANA victims on Monday).
Nobody told me! Spainâs foreign minister was upset by this because, you know, no one told him that Spain would have no representative at the big event (and the Culture Ministry sorta blamed his ministry for that). Now the government is saying âNo siree, no problem at all!â which means they must have been really angry.
The opposition speaks. PP leader Alberto Nuñez FeijĂło called Spainâs absence from the event an âembarrassmentâ (which, considering weâre talking about it, is sorta right maybe? đ€·) and added, âOnce again, the Government is not up to the task of the society it is supposed to serve,â (You be the judge on that bit). And Vox slammed the SĂĄnchez government for its (checks notes, eyes bulge), âalarming christianophobiaâ. Because they would say that. Well, at least they didnât blame Muslim immigrants.
No word on the âgolden balls.â đȘđȘ
4.đȘđž The best economy of 2024? Spain, says The Economist
Bring out the cava đ„! Because the best-performing economy in the world this year, according to The Economist, is none other thanâŠSpain. đ
You read that right! Salaries here may not be great; we may be dealing with a horrible housing crisis; youth unemployment may still be high; and political polarization may be worse than ever. But we still have reason to celebrate, people!
Spain emerged as the top-performing economy among 37 âmostly richâ countries ranked by The Economist.
So sayeth The Economist. Spain achieved exceptional GDP growth, which is expected to surpass 3% thanks to a strong labor market and significant immigration that boosted overall economic output and lowered unemployment. The magazine (or newspaper, as they insist) also took into account Spainâs good performance in terms of inflation, stock prices and government deficit.
Despite global challenges such as high interest rates and geopolitical tension, Spain was resilient. And with GDP per capita growing, Spain is a standout in Europe (and beyond), particularly compared to the sluggish performances of bigger economies like Germany and Japan.
Yay, us! This is great news for the national government (or, as journalist Javier Ruiz says in Cadena Ser, âitâs a reason to get drunk at the Moncloa Palaceâ) which has been needing a win lately due to corruption accusations and the neverending chaos in Parliament.
PM SĂĄnchez was quick to post the good news on X yesterday, saying Spain is a âformidable country with a great future aheadâ. (It was a little over two months ago that the same magazine published a story critical of him, saying he was clinging to office at a cost to Spainâs democracy, but now no one remembers that, except for negative types like us).
SoâŠis Spain on a roll?
Yes. The OECD recently raised its forecasts and predicted that Spain will end 2024 growing almost four times more than the eurozone.
No. Not everyone in the country is getting a boost. La Sexta yesterday asked, âIf Spain is the best economy, why arenât we noticing it?â The usually pro-SĂĄnchez network mentioned inequality, low salaries, inflation and rent costs as reasons why many Spaniards arenât smiling.
5. đŹ Our new hero: Manoliño the rascal Galician dolphin
Politics, the economy, golden balls⊠Itâs all pretty pesado, no? So weâre going to end with something happy: a naughty dolphin named Manoliño who just wonât let shellfish divers work! (More on the last bit in a sec.)
Who is Manoliño? Heâs a very friendly dolphin whoâs recently popped up in the RĂa (estuary) de Ferrol, in southwest Galicia. This isnât the first time heâs been spottedâheâs a long-time fan favorite whoâs been popping up in various estuaries, rivers and bays in Galicia since 2019. But this year heâs in the Ferrolâand he once again has mischief on his mind. (See above: He even plays with dogs!)
As in? While he cavorts (see video above), Manoliño likes to interact with peopleâand this causes problems. As the Ferrol fishing leader Gustavo Chacartegui, explains, shellfish divers suffer Manoliñoâs mischievousness the most, because he touches their fins, grabs the hose that connects them to the boat, and hits them with his mouth: "He doesn't let you work."
Dolphin day-care. Ever resourceful, Ferrol fishermen and shellfish divers figured a workaround. Sergio and Ernesto, two of the divers in Chacarteguiâs groupâthe CofradĂa de Pescadores y Mariscadores de Ferrolâ take turns entertaining Manoliño so that the other can collect razor clams. Who said dolphins are smarter than humans?
To end, we leave you with a photo of Manoliño being entertained. Because itâs cuteâthatâs why.
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So fun fact: the English for rĂa is ria - it's actually a word we've acquired from Galician! It means a flooded glacier valley, or something like that. Years ago I worked with a guy in the UK who banged on about how Salcombe Estuary wasn't an estuary but rather a ria. The more you know, I guess.