Podemos March for Change: Huge crowds rally in Madrid to support Spanish leftist party
A
week on from the seismic political shift delivered by the people of
Greece, tens of thousands gathered in the Spanish capital today to
tell their ruling elite that they too had had enough.
31
January, 2015
People
of all ages, from babies carried by their mothers, to the elderly,
came to express support for Podemos, a leftist, anti-austerity
political party that is just 12 months old, and later this year is
promising to end the dominance of Spain’s two main parties. Wearing
the party’s purple and chanting “Yes, we can”, Spaniards from
all walks of life turned out to show their support.
They
came from across Spain in more than 260 buses that had been laid on
for the “March of Change”, and from midday packed Madrid’s
busiest central avenues around the square of Puerta del Sol – a hub
for shoppers, tourists, and often protests too. Long before the
speeches started, Sol was full, and many that had travelled from
across the country found themselves jammed shoulder-to-shoulder in
side streets.
Waving
a Greek flag, one of the many in the crowd, Pablo Gonzalez, 32, a
television director, said that voters in Greece had shown the way
forward. “I hope we all do the same. In Ireland, Portugal and
Spain. We should all follow what the Greeks have done,” he said.
“I
am cross with Europe and with the political system here – it all
has to change. We are all suffering. My pay has not risen for seven
years, and many of my friends are losing their jobs. The situation
just can’t go on.”
2015
is a year of elections in Spain, with regional and municipal polls
across the country, culminating in a general election, probably in
November. In some polls Podemos is already ahead of both the
governing centre-right party, PP, and the traditional party of the
left, PSOE, the original workers’ party.
Speaking
to the crowds, which Spanish television later estimated could have
run to hundreds of thousands, Podemos’s 36-year-old pony-tailed
leader, Pablo Iglesias, said: “It’s exciting to see the people
smile and speak with one giant united voice.
“These
brave and humble people are the DNA of our party. Together we will
win the elections and beat the PP.”
Speaking
at a meeting in Barcelona, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said he
didn’t accept the bleak picture of Spain that Podemos propagated.
“They’re a sad bunch, who go around saying how badly things are
going,” he said, according to the Associated Press.
Podemos
has described Syriza, which romped to victory in Greece last weekend,
as its “sister party” and several people held up signs saying,
“Greece 10, Merkel 0,” a reference to the new Greek government’s
intention to ignore the crippling conditions of Europe’s €240bn
(£180bn) bailout.
And
while there is anger in Spain at the bureaucrats in Brussels and
Berlin who are accused of forcing austerity on the Spanish, the real
resentment is reserved for their own political leaders and the
broader establishment.
The
PP is embroiled in a kickbacks scandal, in which its leaders are
accused of being the beneficiaries of a slush fund. The King’s
sister, Princess Cristina, is due to stand trial later this year on
tax fraud charges – the first time a member of Spain’s royal
family has faced criminal proceedings. Mr Gonzalez, the television
director, said he had voted for the PSOE party in the past, but now
regarded them as part of the same tired old elite.
With
about one in four of the workforce unemployed, Podemos believes it
has tapped into a rich vein of public wrath. Many see the party as
being born out of the “Indignados” (outraged) movement, a ragtag
coalition of groups that staged protests in 2011 and 2012 against the
economic collapse felt in Spain and much of southern Europe. The
Puerta del Sol was their protest spot of choice and home to sit-ins
designed to highlight burgeoning job losses, home repossessions and
cuts to public spending.
“This
is not just about Podemos, it’s about society and the people,”
said Paula Forstred, 50, a teacher. “Society has changed since the
crisis and we are here to show the government that.”
Yet,
as support for Podemos grows, so does the scrutiny of its policies
and leaders. Mr Iglesias told the rally “we want change”, but
acknowledged that, “I know that governing is difficult but those
who have serious dreams can change things.”
Last
week the spotlight fell on Juan Carlos Monedero, one of Podemos’s
founders, over work he did for several Latin American governments. He
denies allegations that he avoided tens of thousands of euros in tax.
Another
problem for Podemos is that Spain’s economy is slowly coming to
life. On Friday, official figures put quarterly growth for the last
three months of 2014 at a better than expected 0.7 per cent, while
unemployment is gradually falling. Spain’s leaders had been vocal
all week, telling voters not to threaten the country’s economic
recovery – now one of the strongest in the eurozone.
“If
I had to make a prediction, I think people will see later in the year
that unemployment is falling and think that the recovery is gathering
pace,” said Tom Rogers, a senior eurozone economist at economic
forecasters Oxford Economics in London. “They will see Podemos’s
policy to repeal labour market reforms will mean fewer jobs.
“There
is still little detail, but the party has outlined a more
comprehensive economic manifesto, which would see it relax fiscal
policy and repeal a number of the labour market reforms of recent
years. In sum, it looks like what they are proposing would impinge on
Spanish growth.”
All
this means that the hurdles facing Podemos as it tries to convert the
rally into electoral success are real. But after the radical left’s
victory in Greece, and today’s massive show of support, huge
political upheaval in Spain is not as fantastic as it once seemed.
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