The Phnom Penh Post

Spain ends 10-month political impasse

- Marianne Barriaux

SPAIN turned the page on a rollercoas­ter 10month political crisis on Saturday as lawmakers voted the conservati­ves back into power despite divisions.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy won a parliament­ary confidence vote, pledging to plough on with his economic policies, despite the opposition blaming austerity in his first term for deepening inequaliti­es.

“Do not expect me to . . . damage economic recovery and job creation,” the 61-year-old told lawmakers in a pre-vote parliament­ary session, referring to Spain’s return to growth under his watch.

Rajoy only won the vote thanks to the abstention of most lawmakers from the Socialist party, which opted to let their arch-rival govern rather than go to third elections in poll-weary Spain.

One hundred and seventy lawmakers voted for Rajoy, 111 against and 68 Socialists abstained.

‘They don’t represent us’

The Socialists’ decision to abstain drew stinging criticism from its rivals including far-left Podemos, and divided the party so seriously that Socialist chief Pedro Sanchez was ousted earlier this month. Hours before the vote, Sanchez himself gave a tearful statement to the media, announcing he was quitting as a lawmaker so he would not have to abstain and allow Rajoy to govern.

Near parliament, several thousand protesters took to the streets amid a heavy police presence, unhappy about corruption and sweeping spending cuts during Rajoy’s first term, shouting: “They don’t represent us.”

“It’s going to be the same government, or similar, [as in] the past four years, which was disastrous for Spain,” said Carmen Lopez, a 65-year-old retired computer technician.

In parliament itself, party leaders strongly criticised Rajoy and one another – just as they have done for the past 10 months as the country went through two inconclusi­ve elections.

This unstable period saw Spain go from jubilation after polls last December ended the two-party hold on power as millions voted for two upstart parties – to disillusio­n following polls in June that returned inconclusi­ve results once again.

Rajoy’s Popular Party (PP) won both elections but without enough parliament­ary seats to govern alone. As no political grouping was able to agree on a viable coalition, Spain looked set for more elections.

That changed last weekend when the Socialists opted to abstain in Saturday’s confidence vote after weeks of in-fighting that saw Sanchez ousted.

Rajoy’s nomination will be formalised by royal decree of King Felipe VI.

Unlike when he came to power in 2011 with an absolute majority, Rajoy’s party will only have 137 out of 350 seats in parliament and will face huge opposition, forcing him to negotiate every bill.

“You are in the clear minority and under tight surveillan­ce of this lower house. The Socialist party will devote itself to monitoring your every step,” Antonio Hernando, the Socialists’ parliament­ary spokesman, told Rajoy.

Among his priorities will be the 2017 budget, which may need at least 5 billion ($5.5 billion) in spending cuts to reduce the deficit in the face of EU pressure. But further cuts are likely to face stiff opposition both in parliament and on the street.

He will also face rising separatist sentiment in the northeaste­rn Catalonia region.

After the vote, Rajoy sought to strike a conciliato­ry tone.

“If we all make an effort, we can reach agreements and we have to try and turn this difficult and complex situation into an opportunit­y,” he said.

He added that he would announce the compositio­n of his new government on Thursday.

Political analyst Pablo Simon said his term in office would be the most “turbulent” ever in Spain and could prompt Rajoy to call early elections if he faces gridlock in parliament.

But he predicted it would not be as difficult for Rajoy as some have anticipate­d.

The Socialists will need time to regroup and will not want early elections, knowing they would fare badly after their very public breakdown, he said.

The PP also has a majority in the senate, and may be able to form pacts with smaller parties in the lower house to see laws through, Simon added.

 ?? DANIEL OCHOA DE OLZA/AFP ?? Mariano Rajoy (centre) is applauded after being re-elected during the parliament­ary investitur­e vote for a prime minister, at the Spanish Congress on Saturday in Madrid.
DANIEL OCHOA DE OLZA/AFP Mariano Rajoy (centre) is applauded after being re-elected during the parliament­ary investitur­e vote for a prime minister, at the Spanish Congress on Saturday in Madrid.

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