đ This Week in Spain: SĂĄnchez's Wants His Crusade to Go Global
Also: A diplomatic fight with Mexico, Alvise may be in trouble and the TV wars heat up.
By @IanMount and @AdrianBono | September 26, 2024 | Madrid | Issue #71
đ Welcome to The Tapa, an English-language, weekly newsletter about all things Spain!
đ„ This Week in a Nutshell: Remember our diplomatic troubles with Venezuela? Thatâs so last week! Now itâs Mexico, please keep up with the times. Also, PM SĂĄnchez really wants his war against disinformation to expand beyond borders so heâs taking it to the UN this week.
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 One more thing for new subscribers: we are offering paid subscriptions, and weâd be thrilled if you purchased one to help build this enterprise weâve had so much fun creating. (And to those of you who have already subscribed, thanks for the love đ„°.)
đșIf you havenât subscribed yet, please do so by clicking on the button below.
đ«¶ And if you already have, please send this newsletter around to your friends and family and help us keep growing.
The plan for a âdemocratic regenerationâ lands in New York
PM SĂĄnchez takes his fight against disinformation to the UN. Will anyone listen?
Here we are again, discussing Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchezâs so-called âdemocratic regeneration planâ (his crusade against disinformation that weâve been covering since April).
As itâs highly unlikely that parties such as the PP (center-right) or Vox (far-right) will support the PMâs legislation at home, SĂĄnchez has found some people abroad who are willing to at least listen, among them Brazilian President Lula Da Silva.
Forum time. So the two organized a forum at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) this Tuesday, entitled âIn defense of democracy and against extremismâ, that was attended by Canadaâs Justin Trudeau, Franceâs Emmanuel Macron and Chileâs Gabriel Boric, among others.
Democracy and news (the fake kind). The goal was to discuss the effects of disinformation and threats to democracy, as well as the âgrowing disillusionment observed in millions of citizens worldwideâ. (Da Silva has also been dealing with the intersection of democracy and fake news at home, with the 2023 assault on the nationâs Congress building and the current legal fight between Brazilâs Judiciary and Elon Musk).
SĂĄnchez used his opening remarks to warn that ânever before have so many people been exposed to lies and disinformationâ, adding that âtransparencyâ in digital media is necessary.
SĂĄnchez also urged the international community to âengage in the fight against fake news and disinformation with the aim of strengthening democracies and combating extremismâ.
Then yesterday around midnight came SĂĄnchezâs speech at the UN General Assembly, in which he repeated his push for a fight against disinformation and the rise of far-right extremism in the Western world.
The manâs words. âThe world faces a real risk of democratic backsliding. Rights that were once believed to be secure are now being questioned or rolled back. A global reactionary agenda is gaining ground, fueled by distrust in institutions, polarization, and the promotion of a fabricated past, as false as its proclamationsâ.
Tough words! âDemocracy cannot hope to win this battle with one hand tied behind its back. It faces unscrupulous people: activists of lies, fake news, and hatred, willing to split societies to impose their regressive agenda.â
That sounds greatâŠbut thereâs a catch, right? Yeah, sorta. As noble-sounding as SĂĄnchezâs crusade for democracy and against âfake newsâ sounds, itâs raised some, uh, eyebrows đ€š. And not only because Donald Trump popularized the idea of âfake newsâ to describe any news he didnât like or that contradicted him.Â
As far as I can throw him. In Spain's current hyper-polarized moment, there is little trust between SĂĄnchezâs PSOE and the main center-right opposition, Alberto Nuñez FeijĂłoâs PP. So while the PP supported some of what SĂĄnchez is proposing when it was enacted at the EU level as part of the European Media Freedom Actâsuch as rules enforcing transparency of media ownership and the fair distribution of state advertisingâthey do not trust (or at least say they donât) that the rules wonât be used to attack media that SĂĄnchez just disagrees with as opposed to all those that are spreading actual slander, libel and lies.Â
Pot calling kettle black? Plus, SĂĄnchezâs hyperventilated support of democracy against extremism at the UNGA forum didnât quite square with his recent take on the state of democracy in Venezuela.
Donât say âMaduroâ. Sponsors Lula and SĂĄnchez didnât mention the repression unleashed by Venezuelan strongman NicolĂĄs Maduro since it became clear he lost July elections by a landslide, seeming to suggest threats to democracy were not so bad if they came from the left. (SĂĄnchez later mentioned Venezuela in his speech to the assembly, but only to say that the votes should be counted âin total transparency and verificationâ.)
Chileâs leftist President Gabriel Boric was not willing to ignore the Venezuelan elephant int he room. âHuman rights violations canât be judged according to the color of the dictator or the president who commits them â either Netanyahu in Israel, Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela, Ortega in Nicaragua or Vladimir Putin in Russia,â he said. âWe need to be able to defend principles and I believe we sometimes fail to do that.â
That Caracas visit. These doubts were not eased by the fact Spainâs allowed Maduro lieutenants Delcy and Jorge Rodriguez into its ambassadorâs residence in Caracas, where they apparently pressured opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez to sign a document recognizing the legitimacy of the bogus election before he fled to Spain.
TL;DR SĂĄnchezâs support for democracy and pushback against publishing lies is commendable, but trust has been worn too thin to get his legislation much beyond the slogan stage in the near future.
We canât leave you without a funny moment. Actress Anne Hathaway was apparently slated to present SĂĄnchez with a UN âHe for Sheâ award for his commitment to gender equality (which he indeed has shown in his cabinet). Not surprisingly, SĂĄnchezâs Transport Minister (Chief Troll Oscar Puente then mocked FeijĂło by saying the PP leader âwould never get overâ such an image. But then Hathaway didnât show up and the PP supporters mocked right back. Ah, how the children play on Twitter/X).
More news below. đđ
đ But First, 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. đČđœ Move over, Venezuela: We have a bone to pick with Mexico now
Mexicoâs president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum is channeling her inner Gretchen Wieners and telling King Felipe VI of Spain: âYou canât sit with usâ. (If you had to google âGretchen Wienersâ, please leave. We donât want your kind here.)
So hereâs the thing: back in 1492, Columbus âdiscoveredâ America and some stuff happened. The tl;dr version is that 500 years later there are people who disagree with the official version of history and with the actions of the Spanish empire, including Mexican president AndrĂ©s Manuel LĂłpez Obrador (aka AMLO).
Back in March 2019, AMLO (who had only become president a few months earlier in a ceremony that King Felipe attended) sent the monarch a letter, urging him to âacknowledge the abuses that Mexican authorities believe were committed during the (Spanish) conquestâ 500 years ago and to âapologize for themâ.
The King never responded to the letter and the Spanish government condemned the letter too, which led to the relations between the countries being a little icy ever since.
Six years later, president-elect Sheinbaum (who is Mexicoâs first female president and AMLOâs political heir) has decided not to invite the King to her inauguration ceremony on Oct. 1, which has reignited the flames of discord between the countries.
Sheinbaum confirmed on Twitter yesterday that the King wasnât invited because the 2019 letter âdid not receive a direct response, as would have been expected in the best diplomatic practiceâ.
But⊠Sheinbaum mentioned, however, that âMexico and Spain share a strong friendship.â She suggested, however, that âit would benefit from a renewed perspective.â Also, PM SĂĄnchez was invited to attend.
Spainâs government announced Tuesday that it wouldnât be sending any representation to the ceremony (because remember, in Spain, the King is the Head of State and the PM is the head of government).
SĂĄnchez then offered a press conference in New York on Wednesday and, when asked about his thoughts on the conflict with Mexico, he said that âthe Spanish government considers Mexico a kindred nation,â but said he was âsadâ over what he considers to be the âexploitationâ of King Felipeâs role in the inauguration.
You canât have anyone then. SĂĄnchez added that his government had told the Mexican side there would be no representatives present âas a sign of protest over an exclusion we consider not only unacceptable but also inexplicable.â
The good news? Representatives from three small Spanish lefty parties desperate for attentionâany attention!âwill be there: Sumar, Podemos and Bildu.
2. đ° SALF+SBF = Youâve got some âsplaining to do!
To be a real populist politician you need the whiff of a crypto scandal. Just ask Donald Trumpâwhen he needed to kick it up a notch (andâmore importantlyâraise money) he converted to Crypto Bro and launched a crypto platform called World Liberty Financial that was supposed to doâŠwell, something in crypto, but no oneâs quite sure.Â
Why do we care in Spain? Because aspiring populist juggernaut Alvise Pérez, whose Se Acabó La Fiesta (SALF) party/movement/Telegram channel won three seats in the European Parliament in June, just got in hot water with his own crypto-adjacent scandal.
Campaigns cost money. Back in the Spring, Alvise apparently asked new big buddy Ălvaro Romilloâthe founder of the Madeira Invest Club (MIC) who is better known (and we shit you not) as Luis CryptoSpainâfor an online crypto wallet to accept donations that could be used in his campaign. In fact, Alvise said he âurgentlyâ needed some âŹ300,000-âŹ360,000 in undeclared funds (outside the regulated electoral system) .
But no đČcoming in. After a few days he started complaining to Luis CryptoSpain that he wasnât getting it. So the crypto kingpin offered to give Alvise âŹ100,000âin cash. (We love cash too, so if youâd like to donate, please do tell.)
Small catch. All Alvise had to do was record a little video for the business âor something like that.â No prob! Alvise told Luis CryptoSpain that if SALF got seats, heâd set up talks for Luis in Brussels to lobby for crypto, and even push for pro-crypto laws in Spain once he became indispensable to a PP/Vox coalition government. Thatâs what friends are for, right?
This was not a problem. But then⊠MIC went belly-up last week and left behind some 3,000 angry investors whom his investment club had promised returns of up to 53% on NFTs (aka scammy digital art).
Told ya so! Problem was, Spainâs security regulator, the CNMV, had already put out a warningâin May 2023!â that MIC was not authorized to run the investment schemes it was offering.
đŒ Scheme. Now, the peeved investorsâmany of whom had heard about MIC at an event sponsored by Alviseâwere going to the courts and saying Romillo/CryptoSpain was running a pyramid scheme.
Spilled beans. So Romillo did what any cornered investment scammer would doâhe went to the authorities and spilled the beans. LOTS OF BEANS! đ«đ«đ«
Romillo delivered lots of documentation to prosecutorsâlike tons of Signal and Telegram chats he had with Alvise about the money and what Alvise would do for him
Thatâs illegal! Thing is, itâs against Spanish election laws to get more than âŹ50,000 a year from one donor, and all donations over âŹ25,000 have to be reported. So that unreported âŹ100,000? Bad!
Care to cut a deal? Put yourself in CryptoSpainâs oily little shoes: If you offer the authorities the head of Alvise, and the change to claw back âŹ100,000 for investors, thatâs got to count for something, right?
Next step. As a member of the European Parliament, Alvise has immunity from prosecutionâto a point. The case has been passed to the prosecutorâs office of Spainâs Tribunal Supremo, which can prosecute if it sees a crime.
3. đ©ââ€ïžâđš PM Pedro SĂĄnchez admits Begoña GĂłmez is his wife
Remember when Judge Juan Carlos Peinado summoned Pedro SĂĄnchez to testify in the (likely dubious) case of influence peddling that the far-right group Manos Limpias (yeah, homey, Clean Hands) filed against the PMâs wife Begoña GĂłmez? And lefty parties called the summons âlawfareâ while Spainâs right-wing Freddie Mercury (aka Santiago Abascal) patted himself on the back for making the interview happen? And we said, after the interview happened, âa leak of the short video is now a very real possibility. Woohoo! đâ?
Well guess what? Just minutes after Peinado released the video to the parties in the case, the audio of it was leaked to the press! Like, who woulda thunk it? đ€·
Big stuff in the audio, right? Ummmmmm. Youâre gonna want to sit down for this one.Â
The judge said hello and asked Sånchez his name. The answer? Pedro Sånchez Pérez-Castejón.
Peinado says 3 people are being investigated. The first is Doña Begoña GĂłmez FernĂĄndez. Does SĂĄnchez have a relationship of family, friendship, or enmity?Â
Wait for it! âShe is my wife.â
SĂĄnchez then denies he knows the other two. âNo,â and, âHim neither.â
After the judge informs the PM he doesnât have to testify â because sheâs one of those under investigation â SĂĄnchez declines to answer various questions. đ And thatâsâŠit!
Two ways of dealing with this Nothing Burger of a declaration. The pro-PSOE/pro-SĂĄnchez El PaĂs spent over 1,000 words tearing into the judge for forcing SĂĄnchez to answer questions (a ânon-declarationâ) in this non-case. And on the rightâŠthe pro-PP El Mundo called it âThe 111 toughest seconds in SĂĄnchezâs lifeâ. Really? Like, exaggerate much?Â
At least thereâs love. đ„° No sign that SĂĄnchez is less âdeeply in loveâ with Begoña than when he threatened to quit after the case was first filed.Â
Fun fact: The video was probably not leaked because each party to the case received video with a unique watermarkâand who wants to get caught?
4. đș Johnny Depp and Norman Reedus heat up Spainâs late night TV war
The fight to be crowned the đ King of Late Night television continues, and this week the gloves came off in a big way.
Not a day in the last three weeks has gone by without the local media running a story on who is winning the Late Night wars. As we explained recently, Pablo Motosâ El Hormiguero (Antena 3) and David Broncanoâs La Revuelta (La 1) have been ruthlessly competing to see who manages to draw a larger audience. And yes, itâs safe to say that the two are head-to-head.
Big guns! đȘ On Monday, both shows brought out high-caliber guests. Johnny Depp was a guest on El Hormiguero, while Norman Reedus (of The Walking Dead fame) appeared on La Revuelta. The winner? Pablo Motos, whose show featuring Depp drew a 18.1% share (or 2,373,000 viewers), while Reedusâ interview with Broncano drew 16.3% (some 200,000 fewer viewers).
Now, letâs talk about why this happened:
First, Johnny Depp is, well, Johnny Depp. No disrespect to Reedus (who is a great actor and seemingly a cool guy) but Depp has been around for a lot longer and is a much more popular celebrity in Spain.
Next, El Hormiguero provides non-Spanish speaking guests with simultaneous translation so there are no awkward silences and pauses. On La Revuelta, on the other hand, Broncano served as a translator, which slowed down the pacing of the interview and at times made Reedus giggle like a child because he had no idea what was going on.
Lastly, while El Hormiguero announced Johnny Deppâs appearance a week in advance, Broncano did not reveal his surprise guest until he was seated on the show (as he always does). This may not have been the best move.
Look, we expect for the battle for the prime time slot to continue, but in the end both can be congratulated for having some damn good numbers.
Olive branch đ«. In fact, Broncano last week extended an olive branch to Motos by saying on his show that he hoped people âwould be able to watch both programs, as they are both pretty goodâ.
(Oh, and side note: In case you donât remember, Deppâs ex-wife Amber Heard lives in Madrid and when she was asked about him being in town she was like âthank you, nextâ).
5. đŁïž That polio survivor who was removed from parliament
(Originally we were going to use the fifth spot here to tell you this story about a fake Brad Pitt scamming two Spanish womenâbut like literally every publication in the world, including Mashable India, already has it. So without further adoâŠ)
Because seemingly Parliament canât get enough yelling and drama these days, this week featured an episode between Speaker Francina Armengol and a woman who started screaming from the gallery during yesterdayâs plenary session.
From the peanut gallery, literally. Yesterday around 10 a.m., the parliamentary debate was in full session and Transport Minister Oscar Puente was answering questions when a woman started screaming from the gallery. (The gallery, known as Tribuna del PĂșblico, is an area of Parliament where
peasants like usmembers of the public, visitors, and sometimes invited guests can observe parliamentary sessions.)âWe are dying!â the woman, who was using crutches, could be heard screaming. For a few uncomfortable moments, an usher struggled to remove her as she kept screaming and Armengol reminded her that public interruptions were not allowed. MPs looked up, trying to figure out what the hell was going on.
The woman was later identified as Victoria Ibåñez, a member of âPolio Childrenâ, a collective of polio survivors, who had decided to complain about the lack of attention (mainly from the Ministry of Health) towards polio victims in Spain.
Wait. Is polio still a thing in Spain? No, but it affected thousands of people in the mid-20th century. During her brief protest, Ibåñez screamed that they had been fighting for their rights for 60 years.
After she was removed, Ibåñez continued to make demands from the street alongside other protestors from the organization.
Ibåñez told TVE that polio survivors in Spain have âvery limited access to rehabilitation, have trouble finding work and receive âpitifulâ pensionsâ.
In her words: âWe are victims of both the dictatorship and democracy ⊠Iâm very sorry for the commotion I caused in Congress, but there was no other wayâ.
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.
It's unbelievable to me that a country with such a strong feminist movement would tune in to watch an abusive, misogynist man in such numbers. It also seems *extremely* creepy that he chose to appear in the country where his victim lives. Horrific!