Spain’s government faces no confidence vote over graft Mariano Rajoy
Mariano Rajoy

Mariano Rajoy

MADRID. – Spain’s government yesterday 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 was unlikely to succeed as a majority of lawmakers planned 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 Podemos lawmaker, told parliament before enumerating 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, as Rajoy sat listening.

Pablo Iglesias, the charismatic leader of anti-austerity Podemos, was to then outline his project for Spain as an alternative prime ministerial candidate, if the vote of no confidence were to succeed. But this was unlikely. Rajoy may be at the head of a minority government, but the PP still has 137 lawmakers out of a total of 350.

They will all vote against the motion, as will the 32 MPs of centre-right party Ciudadanos. The main opposition Socialists, who have 85 parliamentary seats, planned to abstain in the vote, which was to take place later yesterday or today depending on the length of the debate.

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 have ever succeeded.

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

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