Madrid Protests Return
After waiting for days to make a statement, prime minister Mariano Rajoy stepped up to the plate with a fuzzy denial on Saturday following an emergency meeting of the Popular Party’s executive committee.
"This is all false. I'm not in politics for money. I have never received undeclared money" said Rajoy.
Questions Abound
The reference to "undeclared money" went away in firmer denial from Rajoy, "Never, I repeat never, did I receive or hand out black money, not in this party nor anywhere else".
I am not positive of the order of those denials, but based on article timestamps, I believe I have them in the right order.
Adding fat to the denial fire, accounting books allegedly written and kept by Luis Bárcenas, the former PP treasurer, implicate Rajoy personally, to the tune of €322,231.
Meanwhile, anger is mounting and police barricaded the PP headquarters in response to gathering groups of protesters.
The Financial Times reports Anger rises as scandal rocks Rajoy
La Razon reports The PP will commission a survey of the supposed "roles" Barcenas
In the alleged notes of former PP treasurer Luis Barcenas striking that the font is the same for all entries, which would mean that he would have written Barcenas year after year with the same layout. It is as if the author had aimed names and figures in one sitting all data as belonging to different dates and spaced in time.
Documents Real?
Press Euro reports ‘The PP demands expert analysis of the Bárcenas documents to prove they are fake’
Well here we are again, with a sideshow on whether the money was declared or not. Moreover, and more importantly, with all the names and dates, it should be known 100% without a doubt whether the entries are accurate or not.
First Italian bank failures, then Greek strikes, and now Spanish protests: Europe is back at square one where the only thing fixed are the local football matches.
Ledger Book Shows Rajoy Received 35 Payments Totaling €322,231; Rajoy's Incredulous Denial; Anger Rises
4
February, 2013
Rajoy
Denies Receiving "Undeclared" Money
After waiting for days to make a statement, prime minister Mariano Rajoy stepped up to the plate with a fuzzy denial on Saturday following an emergency meeting of the Popular Party’s executive committee.
"This is all false. I'm not in politics for money. I have never received undeclared money" said Rajoy.
Questions Abound
- Where did the slush fund money come from?
- Who were the recipients?
- What were the totals?
- Were the payments legal?
- Did Rajoy really pay taxes on all of it?
The reference to "undeclared money" went away in firmer denial from Rajoy, "Never, I repeat never, did I receive or hand out black money, not in this party nor anywhere else".
I am not positive of the order of those denials, but based on article timestamps, I believe I have them in the right order.
Adding fat to the denial fire, accounting books allegedly written and kept by Luis Bárcenas, the former PP treasurer, implicate Rajoy personally, to the tune of €322,231.
Meanwhile, anger is mounting and police barricaded the PP headquarters in response to gathering groups of protesters.
Anger
Rises
The Financial Times reports Anger rises as scandal rocks Rajoy
Mariano Rajoy waited more than two days to comment on the slush fund scandal threatening to engulf both the Spanish prime minister and his Popular party. When the denial finally came, it was firm and unequivocal. “Never, I repeat never, did I receive or hand out black money, not in this party nor anywhere else,” Mr Rajoy declared over the weekend.
Reminding Spanish voters of his decision to drop a lucrative career as a property notary decades ago, Mr Rajoy said on Saturday: “I didn’t enter politics to make money. I entered politics losing money.”
His assurances, however, did nothing to silence the rising popular anger over alleged secret payments to senior members of Mr Rajoy’s centre-right Popular party, which has been rocked by a stream of embarrassing revelations over the past days. Hours after he spoke, riot police cordoned off the streets around the PP headquarters in central Madrid in preparation for the latest in a wave of small but widespread demonstrations against political corruption.
Asked whether they approve of Mr Rajoy, 77 per cent of Spaniards say no. The poll appeared alongside a fresh batch of revelations, after the paper decided to publish extensive excerpts of accounting books allegedly written and kept by Luis Bárcenas, the former PP treasurer. According to the latest report, the books record 35 payments to Mr Rajoy himself worth a total of €322,231 between 1997 and 2008.
Document
Snapshot
La Razon reports The PP will commission a survey of the supposed "roles" Barcenas
In the alleged notes of former PP treasurer Luis Barcenas striking that the font is the same for all entries, which would mean that he would have written Barcenas year after year with the same layout. It is as if the author had aimed names and figures in one sitting all data as belonging to different dates and spaced in time.
Documents Real?
Press Euro reports ‘The PP demands expert analysis of the Bárcenas documents to prove they are fake’
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s People's Party (PP) wants to submit the original copies of the secret financial notes alleged to have been written by his former treasurer, Luis Bárcenas, to experts in order to determine whether they are genuine.
According to the account records, published by El País, key members of the PP received additional undeclared payments between 1990 and 2008. Mariano Rajoy has said publicly that he has "never" received any undeclared money ...
Curious
Defense
Well here we are again, with a sideshow on whether the money was declared or not. Moreover, and more importantly, with all the names and dates, it should be known 100% without a doubt whether the entries are accurate or not.
If indeed Rajoy, did declare all the income,
then it should be easily seen in tax records. So what did Rajoy
declare on taxes?
Do the numbers match? If not, why not?
Instead we have a pair of sideshows regarding a font and whether or
not the money was declared.
If the documents were fake,
would the matter need to be studied or would the PP would come
straight out and declare, "the documents are fake"?
So,
if the documents were fake (and perhaps even if they weren't, it
would be in Bárcenas' best interest to challenge their
authenticity.
So, where is the statement from Bárcenas that
they are fake?
Instead, Bárcenas threatened to set off
a political "atom bomb" if convicted. If everyone is
innocent, then it is logically impossible to set off a political bomb
of any size, let alone an "atom bomb".
Simply
put, the denials do not add up.
For more on the scandal, the
denials, the "atom bomb" threat, and Rajoy's effort to
squash the news, please see Big
Brother in Action: EU Wants Power to Sack Journalists; Prime Minister
Rajoy Threatens Newspapers Following Corruption Articles.
Spain PM rejects calls for his
resignation
Madrid: Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has dismissed calls for his resignation over a case of alleged corruption in which he is implicated, saying he has the same determination to tackle Spain's economic crisis as when he took office.
."The
whole thing is absolutely false," Mr Rajoy told a joint news
conference with
- The Age,
- 5 February, 2013
-
Spanish
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy at a news conference in Berlin this
month. Photo:
AP
Leading
centre-left newspaper El
Pais on
Thursday published account ledgers allegedly kept by two former
treasurers of the ruling Popular Party that purportedly show that at
least a dozen senior party officials, including Mr Rajoy, received
payments from a secret slush fund.
The
report has sparked daily protests by hundreds of demonstrators
outside the right-leaning party's headquarters in Madrid as well as
in other locations across the country at a time when the unemployment
rate stands at a record 26 per cent and the government is imposing
tough spending cuts.
The
leader of Spain's opposition Socialist party, Alfredo Perez
Rubalcaba, on Sunday called on Mr Rajoy to resign over the corruption
scandal while an online petition to oust the prime minister had
gathered more than 850,000 signatures by Monday evening.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Monday
when asked about the
corruption allegations
"Today
I have the same enthusiasm, the same courage, the same determination
to get Spain out of the most difficult situation which it has
experienced in the last 30 years as when I came to power," he
added.
Mr
Rajoy took office in December 2011 after ousting the Socialist party
in a landslide, and his Popular Party holds one of the strongest
parliamentary majorities in Europe.
Earlier
on Monday the Popular Party announced it would take legal action
against anyone who published or leaked information implicating its
executives in the case of alleged corruption.
The
scandal drove Madrid share prices sharply lower on Monday, with the
Ibex-35 index of most-traded shares closing down 3.77 per cent.
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