The Daily Telegraph

Women to run Spain’s treasury and military in world’s most female-dominated cabinet

Sánchez hails his selection as ‘a watershed moment for social progress’ – but political rivals unhappy

- By Hannah Strange in Barcelona

SPAIN yesterday inaugurate­d the world’s most female-dominated cabinet, as 11 women and six men took their posts as ministers of Pedro Sánchez’s new centre-left government.

Mr Sánchez, who took power last week following a vote of no-confidence in the government of Mariano Rajoy, was widely applauded for advancing equality with the appointmen­ts, which put female ministers in key portfolios such as the treasury and defence.

At almost 65 per cent female, the Spanish cabinet now leads the way in the proportion of women ministers, according to United Nations figures.

Mr Sánchez acknowledg­ed the political influence of an unpreceden­ted strike on Internatio­nal Women’s Day on March 8, when millions of Spanish women abandoned their workplaces and homes and took to the streets, describing it as a watershed moment for social progress.

After unveiling the make-up of his cabinet to King Felipe VI on Wednesday evening, he said it was a government “committed to equality” that for the first time gave the weight of economic responsibi­lity to women.

In a nod to the female majority, 13 of the new ministers referred to the cabinet during the inaugurati­on process as the Consejo de Ministras y Ministros – putting the feminine form of the noun first and eschewing the traditiona­l use of the masculine form for both genders.

Women’s rights groups in Spain and elsewhere hailed the compositio­n of the new government. “This morning we greet the most feminist government in the world,” said the Communicat­ion and Gender Agency, based in Madrid. “If you doubt their credential­s, check their CVS. And now let them work.”

Among the appointees are María Jesús Montero, the new head of the treasury, Margarita Robles at the defence ministry, Dolores Delgado as minister of justice and Carmen Calvo, who, as well as her roles as vice-president of the government and minister for equality, will also oversee parliament­ary relations.

Brussels has been particular­ly pleased with the selection of Nadia Calviño, the European Commission’s director general for budgets, to head the ministry of economy and business. She is regarded as one of several appointmen­ts designed to reassure Europe over the new administra­tion in Madrid, which won power in a lightening assault on the Popular Party government but must now rule with the smallest minority since Spain’s transition to democracy in 1978.

The choice for foreign minister of Josep Borrell, a former president of the European Parliament who in recent years has taken a hardline stance against the Catalan independen­ce movement, has also been lauded in Brussels. However, it has aggravated the separatist government in Catalonia, whose support was key to Mr Sánchez’s victory.

Junts Per Catalunya, the party of Quim Torra, the Catalan president, also took aim at the appointmen­t of Màxim Huerta, a well-known journalist and author, as culture minister.

Pointing to tweets such as a 2010 post saying: “I s--- on the f------ separatist”, it said Mr Sanchez’s selection of Mr Borrell and Mr Huerta demonstrat­ed his “little will for dialogue … to resolve the conflict with Catalonia”. Pablo Iglesias, the leader of the hard-left party Podemos, which also backed Mr Sánchez, complained that the president had selected a cabinet that would please conservati­ves.

He told TVE, Spain’s national television broadcaste­r, that Mr Sánchez “has taken 24 hours to forget who has made him president of the government”.

The conservati­ve Popular Party poured scorn on the new cabinet.

It was better suited for a TV reality show featuring an “island of celebritie­s”, said Xavier Garcia Albiol, the PP’S leader in Catalonia.

 ??  ?? Spain’s newly appointed cabinet members pose for photograph­ers with King Felipe VI, front centre, during a swearing-in ceremony at the Zarzuela Palace outside Madrid
Spain’s newly appointed cabinet members pose for photograph­ers with King Felipe VI, front centre, during a swearing-in ceremony at the Zarzuela Palace outside Madrid

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