The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on the snap Spanish election: Europe needs Sánchez’s gamble to pay off

- Editorial

Spain’s socialist prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has a reputation for judicious risk-taking. In 2018, after orchestrat­ing a vote of no confidence in the incumbent centre-right government, he was appointed prime minister despite the socialists having a mere 84 MPs in a 350-seat parliament. Mr Sánchez was not even a sitting deputy at the time.

This July, progressiv­es both inside and outside Spain must hope that the prime minister’s gambling instincts will pay off once again. Following regional and municipal polls in which the centre-right Partido Popular (PP) had a field day, and the radical right Vox party doubled its share of the vote, Mr Sánchez has surprised Spain by calling a snap general election on 23 July, anticipati­ng one due in December. This is a manoeuvre that Sir Humphrey in Yes Minister might describe as “brave”.

Mr Sánchez has acted swiftly, in part, to concentrat­e minds in his socialist-led coalition government, which has become increasing­ly divided and fractious. Amid splits over political tone and a row over a botched reform of sexual consent laws, his deputy prime minister, Yolanda Díaz, has formed a new leftwing alliance, Sumar, to rival Podemos, a junior coalition partner in the government. The two parties now have days to patch up difference­s and present a united front next month.

Crucially, Mr Sánchez also hopes his gambit will act as a wake-up call to mainstream voters, as the radical right eyes a role in government for the first time since Spain’s return to democracy. Since taking over last year, the PP’s present leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, has successful­ly harvested votes by dragging his party back to the centre. But last year a PP-Vox administra­tion was controvers­ially formed in Castilla y León – the first time Vox had been allowed into regional government. Following Sunday’s polls, the PP will need the party’s support to govern in five regions and numerous municipali­ties. At a national level, the same logic is all but certain to apply in the case of a PP victory. Mr Feijóo has preached moderation, but has so far failed to rule out post-election deals with Vox.

That means that Spain’s summer election has important ramificati­ons for Europe as a whole. An overwhelmi­ng majority of Spaniards have no desire to see Vox anywhere near power. But recent elections in Italy,

Sweden and Finland indicate that authoritar­ian nationalis­ts, intent on whipping up anti-immigrant sentiment, waging culture wars and rolling back rights for women and minorities, are becoming a feature, not a glitch, in western European polities. Ahead of next year’s elections to the European parliament, Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, hopes to negotiate a broad alliance between the centrerigh­t and radical right. Ms Meloni, along with Hungary’s populist prime minister, Viktor Orbán, were swiftly in touch to congratula­te Vox after Sunday’s results.

Despite its problems, Mr Sánchez’s government has a positive economic story to tell, having weathered the energy crisis and inflationa­ry pressures better than most. Relying on the parliament­ary support of a hardline Basque nationalis­t party with historical links to the terror group ETA has proved deeply unpopular. But a snap election has now turned the spotlight on Vox. In the wake of last weekend’s unexpected­ly heavy defeats across Spain, Mr Sánchez has in effect told voters “be careful what you wish for”. That was a gamble. It is very much in Europe’s interests that it pays off.

 ?? Photograph: MARISCAL/EPA ?? Pedro Sánchez ‘hopes his gambit will act as a wake-up call to mainstream voters’.
Photograph: MARISCAL/EPA Pedro Sánchez ‘hopes his gambit will act as a wake-up call to mainstream voters’.

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