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Spain’s government faces no confidence vote over graft

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Spain's government on Tuesday faced a vote of no confidence tabled by the far-left Podemos to denounce a series of corruption scandals that have hit Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's conservative party.

The motion to unseat Rajoy is unlikely to succeed as a majority of lawmakers plan to vote against it or abstain, but it is once again shining the spotlight on the ruling Popular Party (PP), whose reputation has been damaged by graft case after graft case.

"You have more (party) members under investigation than lawmakers in the lower and upper houses," Irene Montero, a 29-year-old psychologist and one of Podemos's top leaders, told parliament before enumerating a long list of cases hitting the PP.

"You want to normalise the plundering of public coffers, normalise spending cuts... you want to normalise the deterioration of our health system," she said.

- 'Zzz' -

Rajoy listened as she spoke for just over two hours, while PP government spokesman and culture minister Inigo Mendez de Vigo sat reading a book.

"Zzz," tweeted the PP on its official account.

"If this bores you, imagine 21 years and one day in Soto del Real," retorted Inigo Errejon, another high-level Podemos member, on Twitter, referring to a prison where the former PP president of the Madrid regional government is being held, accused of embezzlement.

Rajoy then took the stand, thanking Montero for her "loving" words and accusing Podemos of putting on a highly-mediatised "performance."

Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias addresses lawmakers in Madrid on June 13  2017  before a vote of no co...
Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias addresses lawmakers in Madrid on June 13, 2017, before a vote of no confidence tabled by his far-left party
CURTO DE LA TORRE, AFP

"I won't deny that there have been corruption cases in the Popular Party like in other parties, some very serious," he said, adding however that graft was "the exception and not the rule" in Spain.

"This scourge won't stop because you submit votes of no confidence," he told Podemos.

"It will stop because we approved measures and laws."

Rajoy -- who came to power in 2011 with an absolute majority before losing ground in two inconclusive elections in 2015 and 2016, forcing him to head up a minority government -- credited his time in office for dragging Spain out of an economic crisis.

Spain's central bank on Tuesday lifted its economic growth forecast for 2017 to 3.1 percent from 2.8 percent -- well above the eurozone average -- although unemployment remains high at 18.7 percent.

- Corruption, austerity -

This is only the third vote of no confidence to take place in Spain since the 1977 transition to democracy after the death of dictator Francisco Franco, and none has ever succeeded.

Corruption is a major issue in Spain, which last year scored its worst ranking in Transparency International's annual corruption perceptions index.

It has mainly hit the PP, with even Rajoy called to appear as a witness next month in a major graft trial involving members of his party.

But the Socialists and regional politicians have also had their share of scandals.

Such is public anger over the issue that many voters flocked to Podemos and centre-right party Ciudadanos, two relatively new parties, in recent general elections.

Opinion polls regularly show corruption is one of Spaniards' main concerns, though sky-high unemployment remains at the top.

Pablo Iglesias, the leader of anti-austerity Podemos, later took the stand and gave concrete examples of people in difficulty in Spain, which was hit by sweeping spending cuts during the crisis.

He mentioned "a telemarketing phone operator who earns 700 euros ($790) a month", or "a police officer without bulletproof vests due to your spending cuts."

"You would love us to shut up but we're in parliament to tell you the truth," he said.

"Your party needs an intense disinfection job."

The vote, which will take place later on Tuesday or Wednesday depending on the length of the debates, is unlikely to succeed.

Rajoy's PP has 137 lawmakers out of a total of 350.

They will all vote against the motion, as will the 32 MPs of Ciudadanos.

The main opposition Socialists, who have 85 parliamentary seats, plan to abstain.

Spain’s government on Tuesday faced a vote of no confidence tabled by the far-left Podemos to denounce a series of corruption scandals that have hit Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservative party.

The motion to unseat Rajoy is unlikely to succeed as a majority of lawmakers plan to vote against it or abstain, but it is once again shining the spotlight on the ruling Popular Party (PP), whose reputation has been damaged by graft case after graft case.

“You have more (party) members under investigation than lawmakers in the lower and upper houses,” Irene Montero, a 29-year-old psychologist and one of Podemos’s top leaders, told parliament before enumerating a long list of cases hitting the PP.

“You want to normalise the plundering of public coffers, normalise spending cuts… you want to normalise the deterioration of our health system,” she said.

– ‘Zzz’ –

Rajoy listened as she spoke for just over two hours, while PP government spokesman and culture minister Inigo Mendez de Vigo sat reading a book.

“Zzz,” tweeted the PP on its official account.

“If this bores you, imagine 21 years and one day in Soto del Real,” retorted Inigo Errejon, another high-level Podemos member, on Twitter, referring to a prison where the former PP president of the Madrid regional government is being held, accused of embezzlement.

Rajoy then took the stand, thanking Montero for her “loving” words and accusing Podemos of putting on a highly-mediatised “performance.”

Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias addresses lawmakers in Madrid on June 13  2017  before a vote of no co...

Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias addresses lawmakers in Madrid on June 13, 2017, before a vote of no confidence tabled by his far-left party
CURTO DE LA TORRE, AFP

“I won’t deny that there have been corruption cases in the Popular Party like in other parties, some very serious,” he said, adding however that graft was “the exception and not the rule” in Spain.

“This scourge won’t stop because you submit votes of no confidence,” he told Podemos.

“It will stop because we approved measures and laws.”

Rajoy — who came to power in 2011 with an absolute majority before losing ground in two inconclusive elections in 2015 and 2016, forcing him to head up a minority government — credited his time in office for dragging Spain out of an economic crisis.

Spain’s central bank on Tuesday lifted its economic growth forecast for 2017 to 3.1 percent from 2.8 percent — well above the eurozone average — although unemployment remains high at 18.7 percent.

– Corruption, austerity –

This is only the third vote of no confidence to take place in Spain since the 1977 transition to democracy after the death of dictator Francisco Franco, and none has ever succeeded.

Corruption is a major issue in Spain, which last year scored its worst ranking in Transparency International’s annual corruption perceptions index.

It has mainly hit the PP, with even Rajoy called to appear as a witness next month in a major graft trial involving members of his party.

But the Socialists and regional politicians have also had their share of scandals.

Such is public anger over the issue that many voters flocked to Podemos and centre-right party Ciudadanos, two relatively new parties, in recent general elections.

Opinion polls regularly show corruption is one of Spaniards’ main concerns, though sky-high unemployment remains at the top.

Pablo Iglesias, the leader of anti-austerity Podemos, later took the stand and gave concrete examples of people in difficulty in Spain, which was hit by sweeping spending cuts during the crisis.

He mentioned “a telemarketing phone operator who earns 700 euros ($790) a month”, or “a police officer without bulletproof vests due to your spending cuts.”

“You would love us to shut up but we’re in parliament to tell you the truth,” he said.

“Your party needs an intense disinfection job.”

The vote, which will take place later on Tuesday or Wednesday depending on the length of the debates, is unlikely to succeed.

Rajoy’s PP has 137 lawmakers out of a total of 350.

They will all vote against the motion, as will the 32 MPs of Ciudadanos.

The main opposition Socialists, who have 85 parliamentary seats, plan to abstain.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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