Abdication is the king’s final gift to a grateful Spain
By The Financal Times
King Juan Carlos was a remarkable monarch,
indispensable to Spain’s transition to
democracy. The king – who has abdicated this
week – skilfully navigated the turbulent waters of post-Franco
politics, consolidating the country’s fledgling democratic institutions and
defending them from an attempted military coup.
Under his guidance, Spain overcame decades of
isolation and irrelevance, joining Nato in 1982 and the European Community in
1986. Even if his reputation is no longer quite what it once was, most
Spaniards remain grateful for the king’s role.
The question that hung over Juan Carlos during the
early years of his reign was whether his own remarkable achievements would win
legitimacy for his successor’s throne. His grandfather, King Alfonso XIII, had
died in exile; his father Don Juan never ruled. Until the turn of the century,
the king’s main concern was whether the monarchy would survive the transition
from father to son in a country that was less monarchist than “Juancarlista”.
What few of us anticipated then was that, within a matter of years, the
position of Juan Carlos himself would be called into question.
Spain’s current ills are usually blamed on the
financial crisis. The erosion of the king’s standing began much earlier, almost
a decade ago. Ironically this resulted, in part, from the consolidation of
Spanish democracy: by the mid-1990s, media scrutiny of the royal family had
increasingly come to resemble that practised by the British press, because
editors felt the political system was sturdy enough to sustain it. Nonetheless,
it is because of the current economic crisis that the monarchy (along with
other major institutions) has come under unprecedented public criticism and
scrutiny.
Many Spaniards blame their country’s political and
economic elites for failing to anticipate the crisis, and for responding to it
with austerity measures that have caused widespread hardship and growing
inequality.
In turn, this explains why Spanish public opinion
was so intolerant of the king’s elephant-hunting trip to Botswana in 2012 (for
which he later apologised), and why it has responded virulently to allegations
surrounding the financial activities of Iñaki Urdangarin, his son-in-law.
Still, the inquiry into the activities of Mr Urdangarin – who denies any
wrongdoing – is proof that in Spain today nobody is above the law.
There is, however, a deeper reason why some
Spaniards are questioning the monarchy. The king played a key role in the
establishment of the current political system, and today he is widely seen as
an integral part of it. It was therefore perhaps inevitable that, sooner or
later, growing disaffection with the status quo would engulf the king and the
monarchy as well. Some younger Spaniards, who have barely heard of Franco and
take democracy for granted, increasingly see the monarchy as a dispensable
institution.
Spaniards are in two minds about the long-term
political consequences of the crisis. While some argue that economic recovery
will gradually lessen the current pressure to reform, others believe that
institutional change is inevitable. By abdicating, the king appears to have
sided with the latter.
The new king will
have to strike a balance between continuity and change, as his father did
before him
His decision to step down should thus be seen as a
brave and generous contribution to Spain’s long-overdue political renewal
which, given the current crisis in Catalonia, may well have to include a badly
needed constitutional reform. This was a daring move. But then, Juan Carlos has
never been risk-averse.
Time will tell whether Prince Felipe, who is well
prepared for his new task thanks to his university education, knowledge of
foreign languages and cosmopolitan upbringing, will be able to contribute decisively
to this process of renewal. In doing so, he will have to strike a balance
between continuity and change, as his father did before him.
His immediate challenge will be to help forge a new
constitutional settlement that guarantees the unity of the Spanish state while
accommodating the demands of Catalan and other nationalists. This is a daunting
task, but the new king will be able to tackle it without his father’s baggage.
He will also need to carve out a new role for the
monarchy in a society that is far more tolerant, cosmopolitan and secular – yet
also more sceptical and demanding – than it was in 1975. If he succeeds he will
have shown, yet again, that parliamentary monarchies are surprisingly flexible
institutions, which can still render old nations a unique service in times of
need.
Current Affairs: Abdication is the king’s final gift to a grateful Spain
Publicado por Graham Low | 1:59
The writer is director of the Elcano Royal Institute in Madrid and a
biographer of Juan Carlos