đ€ This Week in Spain: PSOE and Sumar Shake on It
Also: Royal outtakes, Alcaraz makes a lot of money and more EU language drama.
By @IanMount and @AdrianBono | October 26, 2023 | Madrid | Issue #34
đ Welcome to The Tapa, an English-language, weekly newsletter about all things Spain!
đ„ This Week in a Nutshell: Another week in Spain where lots of things happened and yet it feels like nothingâs happened. In short, the PSOE and Sumar reached a deal to form a coalition government (if they get the votes in Parliament, that is) and the PP is angry about the fact we still donât know when that vote will take place. Oh, and thereâs also been talks of shortening the workweek, eliminating short flights (like in France) and, of course, amnesty. Like we said, nothing new.
đ Remember that if this email gets truncated at the bottom because itâs too long, just click here to read the rest on Substack.
đ But wait, thereâs more! The Tapa has its very own LinkedIn page to grow a new community. Please check it out and, if youâre so inclined, follow us here.
đșIf you havenât subscribed yet, please do so by clicking on the button below.
𫶠And if you already have, please send this newsletter around to your friends and family and help us keep growing.
That was the easy part
PSOE and Sumar swear theyâre BFFs, but does it matter?
The PSOE and Sumar came to a coalition policy agreement this week that will have the two support caretaker Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchezâs bid for reelection to Spainâs top job, which is kind of like fixing whatever was wrong with the dishwasher just as the house is burning down around you.
But seriously folksâŠthere are some interesting policies in the agreement, which weâll outline here.Â
Still, the chance of it ever coming to light depends on the decision of one man, a man who lives in a McMansion in a Brussels suburb. Letâs hear it for⊠Carles Puigdemont (you know the guyâthe separatist leader who spearheaded the 2017 illegal independence referendum in Catalonia and who now lives in self-imposed exile while still being the spiritual leader of his pro-independence party Junts).
First, the agreement. As we noted three weeks ago, the PSOE and Sumar set the bar low, giving themselves a whole month to come to a programmatic agreement (because, letâs be honest, they all need more time to convince Sr. Puigdemont), and ended up beating the deadline by a good 10 days.Â
The pact has 230 points, but the headline news of the agreement is a plan to shorten the workweek. To 37.5 hours in two steps: a trim to 38.5 hours a week next year, and one hour less in 2025.
Spain first legislated an eight-hour workday a century ago, after the La Canadiense strike in 1919. But that was for a six-day workweek. The cut to 40 hours a week was only made law in 1983.
The 37.5 hours thing was met by approval from Spainâs unionsâsorta. While they applauded the move, both big unions (the UGT and CCOO) said they wanted to know âhowâ it would be done (seems like they werenât part of the negotiations) and they made clear it was only one step toward their goal of a 35-hour week.Â
But oh did the business lobby not like it! The three big business unions said they were âsurprisedâ it had been planned âbehind their backâ and called the move âconstitutional abuse with an obvious interventionist aimâ.
Besides the obvious complaint that it would cost them more, what really heated up the men in suits was that PSOE and Sumar plan to make the change by reforming the Workers Statute, which only requires a vote in parliament, as opposed to going through the process used to, for example, raise wages, which involves negotiations between the unions, the business lobby, and the government.Â
The second big move is a plan to eliminate or reduce domestic airline routes when there was a train alternative of less than 2.5 hours.
France led the way on this, banning short-haul flights when there were similar train alternatives back in May.
Not totally clear: There are plenty of loopholes in the proposalâlike for routes that link with hub airports that have international flights (Madrid and Barcelona come to mind)âthat render its likely effect minimal.
The airline union noted that passengers had already switched to trains for these routesâincluding 80% of those traveling Madrid-Barcelona and 90% of Madrid-Valencia.
But thereâs plenty more! The coalition document also includes plans to raise the minimum wage, expand universal public education to two-year-olds, make it harder to layoff workers, the establishment of a maximum waiting list time for medical procedures, and so on.
And when caretaker PSOE PM SĂĄnchez and Sumar boss Yolanda DĂaz presented the agreement, he in his usual blue suit and she in a fire-engine-red dress, they kissed like a couple who had been through a war (see above). Which was nice.Â
If you care: Spainâs previous big far left party, Podemos, which DĂaz ate from the inside and now wears its skin (gross, we know), says it wasnât consulted about the agreement even though itâs part of Sumar, which DĂazâs people say is a lie. Which Podemos bigwig Pablo Echenique says is a lie. So theyâre all liars. Or someone is.Â
But, but, but⊠Room, meet elephant. Getting the 176 votes needed for SĂĄnchez to repeat at PM will require some high-level calculus on the part of the PSOE and Sumar. Or, rather, just brute mathematics. They will need the âyesâ votes of the four main separatist/nationalist parties from Catalonia and Basque Country. And one of them is unpredictable and demanding. Yup, we are talking about Puigdemontâs Junts.
The amnesty issue. Weâve written before about how Puigdemontâs big requirement is amnesty for those involved in the illegal 2017 referendum on separating from Spain. Itâs also hugely unpopular among those on the right, and sorta unpopular with a good number in the center and on the left. But thatâs the road to 176.
Weâre serious. âItâs all well and good that PSOE and Sumar go hand in hand, but it will be of little use if there are no agreements with the Catalan independence parties,â said the spokesperson for the Catalan government, PatrĂcia Plaja. âIt is dead on arrival if the investiture agreements and commitments with Catalonia are not finished.â
And right now Puigdemont is not in his happy place. The pro-independence group he set up to give his leadership of the cause a democratic edge, the Consell de la RepĂșblica, held a vote on whether he should negotiate with SĂĄnchez or say ânoâ and head to new elections.Â
Do you want the bad news or the bad news first? 75% of those who voted said Puigdemont should tell SĂĄnchez to take a long walk off a short pier, which not only means Puigdemont wouldnât be the hero who brought home amnesty, it also means he couldnât move home to Spain (unless he wanted to go to jail). But only 4% of the 90,000 members voted soâŠhe can ignore them, right? So confusing!
So for now, expect⊠Oh, letâs be honest, there will be at least one more week of posturing. The PSOE doesnât want to register an amnesty bill until they know they have Juntsâs votes, and Junts doesnât want to give the PSOE the thumbs-up until it knows it has the amnesty. SoâŠstandoff!
Next big date? The PSOE apparently wants to wrap up the agreement before its party congress starts Nov. 10. And if nothing happens by Nov. 27? New elections in January!
đ A Message From Our Sponsor
Bucólico Café is a project of connection that was born as a specialty coffee shop.
We value time and understand that it represents both a cycle and an instantâchronology and nostalgia. BucĂłlico is a space that connects oneâs soul with the purity, lightness and beauty of the countrysideâwhile being in the city. Via a cup of coffee, a piece of cake or a songâŠ
Located on Calle de Barbieri 4 â a few blocks from Plaza Chueca â BucĂłlico reassures the soul with a feeling of home.
Follow Bucólico Café on Instagram.
đŹ Five things to discuss at dinner parties this week
1. đŁ EU still not sold on Catalan as an official language
Yes, this again. On Tuesday, the European Ministers of the EU debated for the second time whether to recognize Catalan as an official language and, once again, decided⊠not to make a decision. (Video above is from a month ago, so just use it for context.)
The request presented by caretaker PM SĂĄnchez is one of the demands made by Catalonian leader Carles Puigdemont in order for his party (Junts) to support SĂĄnchezâs bid to form a coalition government for the next four years.
Not now: The EU is still deliberating over Spain's proposal but itâs pretty clear that they just donât want to be dealing with this right now. The majority of EU member states continue to express reservations and seek more information and work regarding the proposal.
âNot a priority.â Latvia's Foreign Minister, Krisjanis Karins, said in a recent meeting that increasing the number of official languages in the EU is ânot a priorityâ and that there are other critical issues like, say, geopolitics (you know, Ukraine, HamasâŠ) that should take precedence.
Lithuaniaâs a no too. The government of Lithuania, represented by Deputy Foreign Minister Jovita Neliupsiene, and its Ambassador to the EU, supported Latviaâs stance during the meeting, according to media reports.
And the Finns. Finnish Foreign Minister Anders Adlercreutz said that most countries âexpressed hesitation in the previous meeting. It's a topic that was brought up very quickly, without any preparation or presentation of what it could lead to, from a legislative and economic perspective." But, true, he acknowledged that the possibility of "using your own language in all communications" is part of "having the best possible representation." He concluded: "I truly hope that we find solutions to this issue.â So do we.
After a brief debate (apparently it lasted around 30 minutes) there was still no consensus for a decision on Spain's proposal to revise the EU's linguistic framework and include Catalan, Galician, and Basque as co-official languages.
But Spain is really trying to make this a thing. It has commissioned an economic impact study from the European Commission to outline the costs of including Catalan, Basque, and Galician as official EU languagesâand has also committed to financing these costs, unlike the other official languages, whose use is funded from the EU budget.
Deadlineâs a-coming. The next meeting of the EU General Affairs Council is scheduled in Brussels on Nov. 15, very close to the deadline for SĂĄnchez to close his agreement with Puigdemont and avoid an election repeat. However, itâs unclear whether the recognition of Catalan will be on the agenda. Or if other countries really want to schedule their lives around Spainâs political calendar.
2. đ¶ How many of Spainâs âstolen babiesâ were stolen?
The El Pais headline was guaranteed to draw attention: âI donât know of any confirmed case of stolen babies, but I wonât say none existed.â It wasnât so much for what the interview said, but for who he was: the director of Spainâs National Institute of Toxicology and Forensic Sciences, Antonio Alonso.
Thatâs because Alonso knows a bit about identifying people (he runs the countryâs forensics institute, which identifies bodies, after all) and he says that a large part of Spainâs famous wave of âstolen babiesâ during Franco and even afterâwhich some peg at 300,000âmay not have existed.
Letâs take a step back. Those whoâve lived in Spain (and many outside) have repeatedly heard from victims associations and lawyers who worked with them that 300,000 babies were robbed from their mothers between the 1940s and the 1990s.Â
The story is as follows: A womanâusually poorâgoes to a hospital to give birth and does, but then the nun on call tells her that the baby was stillborn. The baby is alive, however, and is given to a wealthy Catholic family that has paid. Sometimes, the mothers are shown the body of a dead baby as proof (the office of one Madrid doctor, Eduardo Vela, was said to be notorious for having a frozen body on hand).
But the mothers doubt the stillborn story, and in the 1980s, Spanish media began to publish stories from mothersâand later childrenâwho said they had suffered involuntary adoptions.Â
Because of these widespread storiesâand the credible reports of mothers being reunited with children they hadnât put up for adoptionâwhat Alonso says is so surprising.
âTo my knowledge, there is no confirmed case of stolen babies, meaning a modus operandi in which the death of a baby was simulated, in a private or public hospital, to steal it and sell it to whatever mafia.â
To back this up, Alonso points to the 120 childrenâs coffins that were exhumed by his office to see if they were empty. In 117 cases, they found bones and in 90% of the cases they could extract DNA they were able to link them to their families.Â
And, he suggests, some families just couldnât handle the truth. âMost of the families said: âGreat, this uncertainty we had is over.â...[but]⊠When we were able to prove that the babies had died, some parents didn't believe it. No matter how much we showed them scientific evidence that their children were there, they did not believe it. It caught our attention: the relatives believed that we were deceiving them.â
So what does Alonso think happened instead? In many cases, he says he believes the women consciously gave up their babies, very possibly under coercion, and that in many cases âfraudulent practicesâ were then used, such as not putting the baby up for official adoption but instead registering the baby as having been born to another woman, often sterile, whose family had paid for the child.
The most famous case of Eduardo Vela was apparently one of these. Courts found that Inés Madrigal had not been stolen, but rather that after her mother agreed to hand her over, had been illegally registered as the birth child of another woman.
Now, Alonso isnât saying that no babies were stolen. He largely agrees with Judge Baltasar GarzĂłn who wrote in 2008 that in the 1940s and 50s Franco-aligned religious institutions held some 30,000 children whose parents were killed, exiled, imprisoned or underground.Â
âDid that happen? Of course,â Alonso says. But, he adds of the later robbed babies, âI wonât say that it never happened, I said that we have not seen a case of newborn abduction. I haven't found it. Could it exist? Yes, but was there a newborn abduction mafia? A mafia of gynecologists from public hospitals? Medical teams from many public hospitals are being questioned, without any evidence.â
Spainâs stolen babies history is a grim one, no matter its exact contours. Considering the credible stories already mentioned, and Alonsoâs focus on only legal cases (which many times wonât look at the claims because of the statute of limitations), itâs clear that there were plenty babies takenânot to mention a big business in baby trafficking.
But how many? That is where Alonsoâwho supports the creation of a national DNA bank to help in identify babies as well as the civil war and dictatorship dead in places like the Valle de Cuelgamuros (aka the Valle de los CaĂdos)âquestions the repetition of the 300,000 figure without more proof.
âI believe that an important cognitive bias has been generated,â he says. ââIf they tell me that at the time there were 300,000 cases, why not me?ââ
3. đ”đž Israel-Hamas war continues to drive wedges in Spain

Podemosâs local MĂĄlaga offshoot hung a pretty giant Palestine flag from city hall andâsurprise!âcontroversy followed.Â
The clandestine banner-draping happened Tuesday when members of Con MĂĄlaga Toni Morillas and Nico Sguiglia dropped the 4x8 meter banner off the city hall terrace for several minutes.Â
Con MĂĄlaga claimed they had okayed the move with the police, while city hall representatives said they had not.Â
Then Con MĂĄlaga said theyâd been asking to hang the flag for a while (in vain) because the local PP-led government had illuminated the city hall facade with Israelâs colors in support of the victims of Hamas, so it seems they didnât have permission. But anywayâŠ
Con MĂĄlagaâs Sguiglia said, "we are experiencing an authentic moral and humanitarian catastrophe with the siege and bombing by the Israeli government of the population of the Gaza Strip."
PP mayor Francisco de la Torre replied that hanging the flag just âcanât be done and it shows their partiality in the analysis of the conflict," suggesting that Con MĂĄlaga had picked a side in the Israel-Hamas war, and it wasnât Israel.
The spat comes at a tense moment, just days after Israelâs ambassador to Spain suggested that Podemos was aligned with âISIS-type terrorismâ for coming out against Israelâs response and calling for Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu to be brought up on war crime charges.
Left/Right battle: It also shows that either/or support for Israel or Palestine is becoming a political litmus test in Spain (as seen in last weekâs Madrid regional assembly fight), when one might think politicians could hold two ideas at onceâthat Hamasâs massacre of Israeli citizens should be condemned and punished, and that Palestinian civiliansâ safety and aspirations should be respected.Â
4. đŸ Carlos Alcaraz gets how much just for showing up?
Spanish tennis wunderkind Carlos Alcaraz hit the headlines this week for a largely undiscussed side of the sport: appearance fees.
There are times when someone pulls back the curtain on the backstage machinations of professional athletes, and Herwig Straka, the director of the Vienna ATP 500 tournament, did just that.Â
Alcaraz is not playing the Vienna tournament, in theory to give him time to recover from a series of minor injuries that have bothered him in a disappointing stretch since he won Wimbledon (the last trophy he took home, and not a bad one at that).Â
But then tournament director Straka revealed another reason: Alcarazâs appearance fee. Tennis players donât just make money from prizes and brand sponsorships. The top players also charge small and midsize (ATP 250 and 500 level) tournaments just to show up and give the event cachetâas well as attract TV audiences and sell tickets.Â
The issue is that Alcaraz doesnât come cheap. âHeâs too expensive. He wants âŹ750,000â to play, Straka told Der Standard, saying the quiet part out loud. With a âŹ12 million overall budget, âŹ750,000 was too rich for the tournament, no matter how hot Alcaraz is these days.
Alcarazâs fee is not that weird, to be fair. Spanish football paper Mundo Deportivo notes that Roger Federerâs usual fee was around $1 million, and Alcarazâthe world #2â is the current hot ticket for tennis tournaments.Â
And you think thatâs high? Getting top players to come to an exhibition (unofficial) event can cost $2 million.
World #1 Novak Djokovic is not playing at Vienna either, as he concentrates on the biggest (and highest paid) tournaments.
Both Alcaraz and Djokovic are both expected to play starting next week in the Masters 1000 of Paris. Masters 1000 tournamentsâa level above the ATP 500 of Viennaâare essentially mandatory for top players if they arenât injured, however.
5. đŹ The King (then Prince) was an awkward teenager too
Weâre only days away from Princess Leonorâs 18th birthday, when she is expected to take the oath to uphold the Constitution just like King Felipe VI did before the Courts on Jan. 30, 1986.
Article 61 of the Constitution establishes that, once they turn 18, the heir to the throne shall swear to faithfully perform their duties, uphold and enforce the Constitution and laws, and respect the rights of citizens and the autonomous communities. So on Oct. 31 Spain is celebrating Halloween and the oath ceremony. Which both involve costumes. But we digress.
Many moons ago (37 years and 8 months, to be exact) King Felipe de BorbĂłn (then Prince) was about to turn 18 and he was rehearsing his oath speech, which was going to be broadcast by TVE.
Turns out that, yes, royals, they are just like us. (Sorta.) And some fun outtakes have now seen the light of day, showing young Felipe in gala attire screwing up his linesâand laughing at his mistakes
He is seen redoing several takes in the gardens of Zarzuela Palace because he felt they were unflattering or because he stumbled over some of the words in the message.
âI am going to take an oath before the Courts...." Felipe says before stopping suddenly. "No, I said 'an oath,' not 'my oath.'" He then resumes but immediately goes silent: "The lighting changed, and I got distracted," he says while laughing.
The unusual video has been making the rounds on social media because itâs rare to see Spanish royalty be so relaxed in front of the cameras. Sure, we have a Queen that raps, but even that is still carefully choreographed. So to see the current King be, well, human, feels like a breath of fresh air.
Maybe 37 years from now we may be treated to Leonorâs outtakes (hopefully sooner). In the meantime, you can expect both King Felipe and Queen Letizia to join their daughter this Tuesday for the swearing-in of the Constitution.
đ Before you go, please remember to share this newsletter with your friends on social media. The more we grow, the more information weâll be able to offer each week.
Weâll be back next week with more.