... a view from abroad ...
Sorry does not expunge Spain’s political scandals
Voters see corruption as the nation’s second-biggest problem
Case by case, Spanish
prosecutors are painting a disturbing picture of national and regional
political structures riddled for years with what they allege are
inappropriate, even blatantly illegal practices. Their investigations
underline that public perceptions of corruption will play an important
part in Spain’s next parliamentary elections, which are due by December
2015. Opinion polls conducted by the government-funded Social Research
Centre show that only unemployment matters more than corruption.
For many voters, the elections will offer a chance to punish politicians deemed
to have displayed an insouciant rapacity as Spain tumbled in 2012 into a
€41bn European rescue of its banking system. Mariano Rajoy, prime
minister, showed a keen sense of electoral calculation as well as
courage last week when he apologised for his centre-right Popular
party’s involvement in the latest scandals. It was the most explicit
such statement of his three-year-old premiership.
Mr
Rajoy, who has always denied any personal wrongdoing, qualified his
remarks with the observation that Spain is neither “immersed in
corruption” nor “worse than other countries”. Unquestionably, Europe’s
financial crises exposed festering swamps of corruption in Greece,
Ireland, Italy and other countries. Yet to be told this will hardly
placate Spaniards impatient to see more honesty in their own elite.The Spanish scandals engulf the opposition Socialists as well as the Popular party, a damning verdict on the duopoly of power that has characterised political life since the transition from Francoist dictatorship to democracy in the late 1970s. The flowering of some of Spain’s most egregious scandals under the Socialist government that held office from 2004 and 2011 is, in no small measure, responsible for the emergence of a new leftist movement, Podemos (“We can”), that may draw enough votes from the Socialists to deny them power next year.
However, both the Popular party and the Socialists should resist the temptation to view the corruption problem through the narrow lens of electoral advantage. For corruption is closely intertwined with three other challenges: putting the economy and public finances on a sound long-term footing, recasting relations between the central government and autonomous regions, and modernising institutional pillars of democracy such as the judiciary and education system.
In short, corruption and waste flourished thanks to obscure networks of influence that connected politicians with bankers and businessmen, especially in Spain’s regions, and were left untouched for too long by a semi-politicised and inefficient judiciary.
Now Spain’s economy is back to growth thanks to the spirited efforts of private sector companies, the calmer conditions brought about by the bank rescue and the labour market and fiscal policies of Mr Rajoy’s government. Yet unemployment is far too high at an officially estimated 24 per cent of the workforce. Bank lending remains weak and, in a context of extremely low inflation, Spain’s public debt is heading for 100 per cent of gross domestic product.
Likewise, Spain’s regional tensions may seem less acute now that Catalonia’s government has backed away from
holding a referendum on independence. But this in no way reduces the
responsibility to redesign Spain’s flawed system of regional autonomies.
Equally important is an impartial judiciary. Above all, it is incumbent
on Spain’s political classes to show they have learnt from their past
misbehaviour. The health of Spanish democracy depends on it.