đ»đȘ This Week in Spain: The Venezuela Dilemma
The ex-King keeps it in the family, farewell to rental scooters, and a fight over a cement block.
By @IanMount and @AdrianBono | September 12, 2024 | Madrid | Issue #69
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đ„ This Week in a Nutshell: And just like that, weâre involved in one more international conflictâthis time with Venezuela. Why? Spain decided to grant asylum to opposition leader Edmundo GonzĂĄlez Urrutia, something that once again has divided the local political class (because remember: agreeing on anything = bad).
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Little Caracas
Spain Receives Another Exiled Venezuelan PoliticianâŠand the PSOE and PP Fight About It
Itâs not every day that Spain welcomes a Venezuelan political exile after the supposedly socialist but definitely authoritarian regime of Hugo Chavez mini-me wannabe President NicolĂĄs Maduro accuses them of crimes against la patria and threatens to arrest him (or actually does).Â
Wait! It does sorta happen every day. It also happened with former Caracas mayor Antonio Ledezma (November 2017), opposition pol Leopoldo LĂłpez (October 2020), ex-president of the national assembly Julio Borges (2021) and former attorney general Luisa Ortega (2021). So itâs sorta everyday-ish.
Still, what happened this week was special. Venezuelan opposition politician Edmundo GonzĂĄlez Urrutia arrived in Madrid on a Spanish Air Force jet, yet another exiled anti-Maduro pol.Â
Donât recognize GonzĂĄlez Urrutiaâs name? Thatâs because he wasnât a big deal until actual big-time (but disqualified from running) opposition leader MarĂa Corina Machado chose him to run for president against Maduro. GonzĂĄlez Urrutia then beat Maduro like a red-headed stepchild (seriously, in a landslide) according to every living human who can count except the only one who matters in VenezuelaâNicolĂĄs Maduro.
But this is tense for Spain becauseâŠpolitics. We wonât try to explain Venezuelan politics (thatâs for our sister pub in Caracas, The Arepa, đ€Ł), but suffice it to say that the PP and PSOE have very different takes GonzĂĄlez Urrutiaâs flight to Madrid.
PSOE view. Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchez has characterized the granting of asylum and military flight as a âgesture of humanityâ and itâs hard to disagree with that, at least superficially.
Why? GonzĂĄlez Urrutia is an elder gent (75) who had been dodging an authoritarian regime that was unhappy heâd beaten it (and issued an arrest warrant to prove it), apparently spending more than a month in the Dutch embassy in Caracas before moving to Spainâs and requesting asylum.
The PP begs to disagree. Spainâs centre-right party has long been a big fan of Venezuelaâs opposition (which leans right-ishâsorta, long story) and very anti-Maduro.
Actually, a gift to Maduro. For the PP, GonzĂĄlez Urrutiaâs exit from Venezuela weakens the opposition push to get Maduro to accept his loss and, in that, is a sort of gift to the Venezuelan strongmanâs regime. In the words of PP bigwig Esteban GonzĂĄlez Pons, taking GonzĂĄlez Urrutia out of Venezuela without recognizing him as a legitimate president âis not doing democracy a favor, but rather removing a problem for the dictatorship.â
Well, actually⊠This wasnât helped when, after Spanish foreign minister JosĂ© Manuel Albares denied that there had been negotiations between Spain and Venezuela over the asylum move, Venezuelaâs VP Delcy RodrĂguez countered that there had been âample conversationsâ to set up the departure.
Plus, ZP involvement = bad. Even worse for the PP, former PSOE PM JosĂ© Luis Zapateroâwho is viewed as an undercover Maduro fan and Chavista by the rightâwas reportedly deeply involved in the process. In the words of PP MP Cayetana Ălvarez de Toledo (our favorite Spanish Bond villain), âZapatero has been working for years in favor of the regime, and he is working for the most beneficial outcome for the Maduro regime.â
Which gets us to this weekâs stick in the eye for PSOE and SĂĄnchez. On Wednesday, Parliament approved a PP-led resolution calling for the recognition of GonzĂĄlez as the elected president of Venezuela with 177 votes in favor from the PP, Vox, CC, UPN, and the PNV.
Say it: âMaduro lost.â The resolution says that this ârecognition is based on the repeated refusal of Venezuelan electoral authorities to publish the results in a timely and proper manner, the publication by the opposition of 83.5% of verifiable ballots demonstrating a decisive electoral resultâ.
But thereâs more. It demands âthe recognition of Edmundo GonzĂĄlez as the âlegitimateâ presidentâ, and also urges the SĂĄnchez administration to lead this recognition in European institutions and international bodies, to ensure that he takes office as Venezuelan president on Jan. 10, 2025.
Not that it matters. Yesterdayâs proposal has no practical effect, though, as only the Spanish government led by SĂĄnchez can recognize GonzĂĄlezâs legitimacy (and for now, the PM has said that his decision will be made with the rest of the EU).
Until then. In the meantime, the EU insists that Maduro releases the voting records to guarantee the full transparency and integrity of the electoral process.
Meanwhile, in Venezuela⊠Maduroâs Chavista officials are not happy with yesterdayâs vote in the Spanish Parliament. Jorge RodrĂguez, one of Maduroâs top political operators and president of Venezuelaâs National Assembly, has called for a passing a resolution that urges his country to immediately âbreak all diplomatic, trade and consular relationsâ with Spain. Oh, and to also stop all flights (!). âïž
đ€Ź Angry $&%#! The countryâs Interior Minister, Diosdado Cabello, also seemed furious, asking âwhat the f*ck does the Spanish Parliament have to do with Venezuelaâs domestic affairs? They think weâre a colony and they are an empire. We kicked them out 300 years ago and we will kick them out again.â Ah, history.
But isnât this a lot of playacting? In a sense, it is. The SĂĄnchez government has pushed back at the PP-led resolution as just an empty symbol that changes little and makes negotiations harder. And Venezuela needs all the relations it can get.
Keep on keeping on. Not to be dissuaded, PP sources have told El PaĂs that the EPP in Brussels plans to introduce a proposal similar to the one approved yesterday in Madrid, recognizing GonzĂĄlez as the election winner and legitimate president.
Might be a tough lift. EU governments refuse to recognize a victory by Maduro, but also donât want to recognize the leader of the opposition as the winner to avoid what happened five years ago with Juan GuaidĂł, who was recognized as the legitimate president of Venezuela and ended up doing, well, nothing. Which is embarrassing.
Tie it up in a bow. This morning, Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchez met with Edmundo GonzĂĄlez in the presidential palace, tweeting that Spain âwould continue to work in favor of democracy, dialogue and the fundamental rightsâ of Venezuela. So, at least thereâs handshakes?
More news below. đđ
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đŹ Five things to discuss at dinner parties this week
đŽ 1. Annoying rental electric scooters are leaving Madrid
No more public đŽ! Madrid has unexpectedly announced that electric rental scooters will no longer be permitted in the city starting in October. The reason? Seems like the three companies with operating licenses (Lime, Dott and Tier Mobility) didnât comply with safety regulations, according to Mayor JosĂ© Luis MartĂnez-Almeida.
Lots oâ scooting: Some 6,000 scooters are scattered throughout Madrid and, according to city authorities, none of the three companies have ensured that scooters are parked in designated zones or kept out of pedestrian areas, both crucial for the safety of vulnerable folks, like, you know, the elderly.
No learning. Authorities also said the companies did not follow through on promises to offer free driving lessons for users (to be fair, we canât think of anyone whoâd take scooter driving lessons, but apparently itâs illegal for two people to ride the same scooterâwho knew?).
No tracking either. Another problem involved the failure to use required GPS, to monitor the scootersâ locations and prevent their use in prohibited areas. City authorities said because the companies failed to properly implement it, scooters would often end up parked on the sidewalk, which is incredibly annoying đ€Ź.
The companies affected are (unsurprisingly) not happy. Lime said the decision to revoke their licenses was âunilateralâ and unexpected, and that they will file an appeal against it.
Nah⊠Madrid insists that the decision is final, and city officials express frustration over the companiesâ âlack of transparencyâ, accusing them of denying them access to key operational data, which affected the cityâs ability to verify the proper distribution of scooters across neighborhoods.
Fines aâplenty. Local media reports that between 2021 and 2023 there was an average of 11,000 fines per month issued by the city (which is a lot).
Weâre not the first. Youâve probably heard stories similar to this before. Barcelona, Paris, and Melbourne have all kicked the electric scooter out of their streets due to (fatal) accidents, injuries, and many ridersâ anarchic behavior.
Dear scooter owners. Oh, and in case you were wondering: this ban is for rental scooters only. That means that if you have your own personal âlectric scooter, youâre still allowed to use it (as long as you comply with traffic regs, natch).
So what now? Bikes, we guess. We know. Bikes sound so 20th century. Gross. Does this mean we have to pedal and engage in physical exercise to go places, like some sort of burro đ«. (Yup.)
2. đ Ex-King Juan Carlos I is a shining example of fatherhood for us all (ok, not really)
Let no one say that Spainâs emeritus King Juan Carlos I (aka JC1) does not want to take care of his children. And let no one say heâs ever been the least bit transparent about where his money is from (but thatâs for another story).
Now, JC1 is uniting his various hidden fortunes the world over into One Big Fortune, El Confidencial scooped this week, that will be held in a foundation inâŠAbu Dhabi! Why? To take care of his daughters, Infantas Elena and Cristina, (Yes, the Infants!).Â
The problem. Elena and Cristina currently have jobs at FundaciĂłn Mapfre (âŹ300,000) and FundaciĂłn Aga Khan (âŹ400,000) respectively which seem to be a little make-up-a-job-for-JC1âs-kids as the ex-King is worried that theyâll be cut loose when he dies, El Confi reports. Added to that, both Infants reportedly spend far more than their salaries and are already topping up with the JC1âs funds.Â
The solution. A fund in Abu Dhabi allows JC1 to combine and keep his funds in an almost tax-free manner, without revealing the owners or uses of them. Carlos Portocarrero de las Heras, a Spanish lawyer with the U.K. law firm Clifford Chance, oversaw the foundationâs creation, El Confi reports in another article.Â
The ex-King is super-rich, right? Well, yes, compared to you. But no, not when it comes to other royalty. After King Alfonso XIII (JC1âs grandad) was deposed in 1931, Spainâs royal BorbĂłn family was left dependent on the kindness of strangers/overseas royalists for decades. And when the Borbones were reseated at royalty in 1975, they got the title, but not all the royal stuff. So JC1 took to acceptingâŠgifts.
From whom? Thatâs a good question. They came as commissions, royal watchers said, for petroleum or weapons, or just as straight-up gifts. The most famous one, of $100m, reportedly came from the late Saudi King Abdullah (thatâs according to JC1âs ex-lover Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, nĂ©e Larsen, who said she received âŹ65m as a gift but which other royal watchers say was meant for her to hold away from prying eyes).
Moâ money, moâ problems. Whatever its source, JC1âs new wealthâor rather, the tax and romantic scandals that came with itâcontributed to his downfall and abdication in 2014.Â
There was the undisclosed âŹ40,000 trip to Botswana in 2012 â paid for by a Saudi businessman and shared with Larsen and her child â that came to light when he broke his hip and had to be airlifted home. Surprise! That angered Spaniards as they suffered through the global financial crisis.Â
Tax tangles. In December 2020, JC1 paid the Treasury âŹ678,393 to avoid tax charges for not declaring the money he received from a Mexican businessman. And in February 2021, he paid another âŹ4.4m to regularize the private flights his cousin Ălvaro de Orleans allegedly gave him.
âNot meâ, says his son and Spainâs current king. Felipe VI (F6) renounced his part of his fatherâs inheritance in 2020, after the Telegraph (h/t friend-of-Tapa James Badcock) uncovered documents showing that F6 was listed as a beneficiary of the Lucum Foundation, a fund that held the Saudi gift money. He also ended JC1âs âŹ194,232 annual stipend at the time. (Elena and Cristina stopped receiving royal stipends when they stopped forming part of the royal family in 2014.)
But think of The Infants! At least now the middle-aged royal kids can sleep peacefully, thanks to good olâ dad.
3.đș David Broncanoâs move to La 1 seems to pay off
David Broncano is back on television and so far he seems to be exceeding expectations. Back in March, we told you about how the host of the hit late-night style show La Resistencia on Movistar+, a streaming platform, was being courted by RTVE to take his particular interviewing style to the public broadcasting network La 1.
Beat Motos! The goal was to compete with king of late-night Pablo Motos and his top-ranked show El Hormiguero on Antena 3. As it happens, Motos has been highly critical of PM Pedro SĂĄnchez lately, and having Broncanoâs young and progressive voice on prime time could act as a counterbalance.
Six months (and âŹ28 million) later, Broncano has made the move to La 1 and it looks like the networkâs risky play is paying off. His new show, La Revuelta (which premiered on Monday and is formatted exactly the same as his previous show) has been the most watched show for the last two nights.
So yes, beating Motos. Last night alone, over 5.8m people tuned in at some point to watch La Revuelta (20.5% of share), while 5.1m (16.8%) preferred El Hormiguero. While these are provisional figures, this is excellent news for a network that had to deal with lots of criticism from people who werenât happy about hiring someone like Broncano with public funds.
Now, if you donât speak Spanish (or donât watch Spanish TV) you probably donât even know who Broncano is or why this matters, but trust us, you should at least be aware of his existence as, like it or not, pop culture is the politics of the 21st century.
Broncanoâs interviewing style is very down to earth. He talks to his guests and interviews them in a way that makes him sound like any other Spanish guy at a dinner party who can discuss politics, RosalĂa and Call of Duty. Heâs like the guy you just met at a party who is holding a drink and whose tongue-in-cheek comments make you laugh and feel at ease.
One of the highlights of the show is its unique guest selection, which includes individuals who may not be widely known but have inspiring stories to tell. On the first episode, Aitor Francesena, a visually impaired world champion surfer, appeared on the show to discuss his life and career.
All of this has made him very popular with young people in Spain, who tuned in to his previous show regularly to see him interview everyone from football players to trap artists and movie stars.
This week on his show, heâs also directly addressed speculation that his move to La 1 was politically motivated. He denied getting paid a ridiculous amount of money (he says heâs already rich) or that his show has any government agenda (his co-hosts claimed to be in shock about this and jokingly unveiled a SĂĄnchez tattoo during the show and said they expected the audience to turn into âgays and unaccompanied migrant minorsâ by the end of the first episode).
La Revuelta airs Mondays to Thursdays at 9:40 p.m. on La 1. El Hormiguero airs Mondays to Thursdays at 9:45 p.m. on Antena 3.
4. đšđł PM SĂĄnchez wants China to know heâs a changed man
If rolling eyes made a sound loud enough to hear, today you would have heard the eye-rolling in Brussels all the way in China. Because PM Pedro SĂĄnchez said something, and Germanyâs Chancellor Olaf Sholz then said, âYeah, what he said.â
Excuse me? SĂĄnchez has been on a trip to China to
avoid fractious the debates happening in Spainâs parliament boost ties with the worldâs second-biggest economy as trade tensions build between Beijing and the EU. He told Chinaâs President/Sun-God Xi Jinping that Spain wanted to work constructively to âensure that relations between the two regions are closer, richer and more balanced.â In other words, closer trade ties, more money, and mĂĄs tranquilidad.Then on Wednesday, Sanchez said that the EU needed to âre-considerâ its plan to impose added tariffs on Chinese-made EVs because, the EU thinks, the companies that make those vehicles get state aid that makes them impossible to compete with. Those added tariffs would raise the duty on some Chinese EVs to nearly 50%.
But didnât you vote for that? The thing is, back in June Spain was one of 11 countries that voted in favor of increasing the tariffs in a preliminary poll. (A vote on final approval is expected in October.)Â
So whatâs going on? Spain is the EUâs second-largest car maker and wants to attract Chinese investment to build an EV industry (one explicit reason for SĂĄnchezâs China visit). Perhaps more importantly, Spain accounted for âŹ1.3b of the âŹ3bn in pork exports the EU sent to China last year (half of all that China imported)âmaking it Beijingâs biggest pork supplier đ„.
Nervous, maybe? Seems so. Spainâs pork farmers đ· freaked out back in June, when (as we reported) China opened an âanti-dumping investigationââi.e. a âwe donât like what you didâ warningâafter Spain was (then) a top proponent of the tariffs.Â
At least Spain is reconsidering. Its support of the tariffs, that is. âWe donât need another war, in this case a trade war,â Sanchez said, and itâs clear Spain canât afford one with China. Hence the change in tone.
That also explains Germany, which is hugely exposed to China auto trade. Olaf Scholz joined Sanchez in calling for the EU to drop its extra tariff plan on Wednesday, noting that Germany wanted to sell its cars everywhere, âBut this means that we are also open to get the cars from other countries.â (Which is German for, âPlease donât start a trade war, Xi.â đ)
Whether Spain and Germany will get their way is another question. Pressure from two big members could lead the EU to rethink, but Brussels folks say that a majority (including Franceâs Emmanuel Macron) are for it. Trade war, anyone?
5. ⏠Gibraltar to Vox to Gibraltar: You, sir, are a blockhead!
This is too good to be true, BUT ITâS TRUE! Back in 2013, during a period of high tension between the governments of Spain and Gibraltar, the GIbralteños placed cement blocks in the sea to create an artificial reefâand, it seemed, to block Spanish fishing boats. So what happened?
Vox bigwig Javier Ortega Smith went to Gibraltar a little later and stole one of the blocks. And then Gibraltar put out an arrest warrant for Ortega Smith, who would face up to 10 years in prison if captured. TOO GOOD!
But it gets better. The block found its way back to Madrid, where it has long been displayed as a kind of war trophy in Voxâs offices.Â
Now, Gibraltar First Minister Fabian Picardo is kicking the fight up a notch. On Gibraltarâs National Day on Tuesday, he said that he had presented the Spanish government with a demand to repatriate the stolen block. âWell, I have news for Vox and for you, my friends. We are going to get it back and bring it back home,â and, âWe will not rest until we recover one of our sovereign assets stolen from our British waters, no matter how long it takes." đȘ
You can do macho? I can do big macho? Not one to back down from a ridiculous fight over a block of concrete, Ortega Smith replied (on
TwitterX natch), "Come on, pirate Fabian Picardo. If you dare, come and find it and take it on your back. Spanish Gibraltar! Pirates off the Rock!" đŽââ ïž
Just. Too. Good.
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