Spain

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets in Madrid on January 31 in a huge 鈥淢arch for Change鈥 to support Spain's new anti-austerity party Podemos. The party has grown in support after the left-wing, anti-austerity SYRIZA party in Greece won last week's elections. This has brought hope that change could be in the air for other European countries whose debt is being used to justify austerity. On the demonstration, people chanted 鈥測es we can鈥 and 鈥渢ic tac tic tac鈥 鈥 suggesting the clock was ticking and time was running out for the political elite.
An estimated 33,000 people marched through the Basque city of Donostia on January 17 to protest ongoing Spanish state repression against civil rights activists and lawyers in the Basque Country. Marching under a large banner reading 鈥淗uman Rights, Resolution, Peace鈥, the demonstration included members of the Basque pro-independence left coalition EH Bildu, trade unions and supporters of Basque political prisoners.
On November 9, 2.305 million residents of Catalonia defied a November 4 Spanish Constitutional Court ruling and voted on what future political status they wanted for their country, now one of the 17 鈥渁utonomous communities鈥 (regions) within the Spanish state. Because of their rebellion 鈥 festive but determined 鈥 it was not just another voting day. Initiative for Catalonia-Greens (ICV) co-coordinator Joan Herrera called it 鈥渢he biggest demonstration in the history of this country鈥.
Millions of residents of Catalonia will indicate their preference for the future political status of their country, one of the 17 鈥渁utonomous communities鈥 (regional governments) within the Spanish state, in the November 9 Catalan 鈥減articipatory process鈥. The 鈥減rocess鈥 will present voters with the same ballot paper as the original non-binding consultation adopted by the Catalan parliament on September 26 鈥 which was immediately suspended by the Spanish Constitutional Court. Its asks: 鈥(1) Do you want Catalonia to become a state? (2) If yes, do you want that state to be independent?鈥
For 48 hours, it looked as if Thursday, October 16, 2014 might join similar October Thursdays in 1907, 1929 and 1979 as another dramatic moment when sharemarket panic triggered economic downturn. However, it was not to be. The US$3 trillion slump in world sharemarket values in the first two-and-half-weeks of October had, by October 24, been partially reversed by a coordinated effort of 鈥渃alm engineering鈥 by central bankers. But how long can that treatment 鈥 whose message to the gambling fund managers is that interest rates will stay low 鈥 succeed?
About 8000 people packed the Palacio Vistalegre in Madrid on October 18 and 19, with 150,000 taking part online, for the the final stages of the Citizens' Assembly 鈥淪i se puede鈥 (Yes we can). The assembly discussed draft documents for the foundation of Podemos.
The normally torpid Spanish legal system had an attack of extreme speed on September 29. Its highly abnormal Usain Bolt-like behaviour was caused by the Catalan regional government formally decreeing its long-awaited November 9 non-binding consultation of Catalan public opinion on the region's political status.
This year鈥檚 September 11 Catalan national day (Diada) demonstration, in support of the Catalan parliament鈥檚 planned November 9 popular consultation on Catalan statehood, was the biggest since the present cycle of mobilisations for Catalonia鈥檚 right to self-determination began four years ago.
Since the two-party political establishment in the Spanish state 鈥 the People鈥檚 Party (PP) of prime minister Mariano Rajoy and the Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) 鈥 got less than 50% in the May 25 European elections, its nightmares have been getting scarier. The spectre disturbing their sleep is Podemos, the political expression of the indignado movement that in May 2011 exploded against austerity and corruption and for 鈥渞eal democracy鈥.
If anyone can get the different forces of the Catalan left to unite in support of a common cause, it is Ada Colau. The spokesperson of the anti-eviction Mortgage Victims Platform (PAH) until early May, Colau is almost certainly the most popular and respected social activist in the Spanish state. On June 26, Colau launched Let鈥檚 Win Barcelona platform for next year's May municipal elections in the Catalan capital.
The five seats and 7.9% won by the new Podemos (鈥淲e Can鈥) ticket in the May 25 European election was an earthquake in Spanish politics. Podemos was inspired by the indignado movement that exploded across the Spanish state in 2011 against austerity and for 鈥渞eal democracy鈥. The movement was driven by mass popular assemblies, which provided a striking counter-point to the frequently corrupt 鈥減olitics as usual鈥.
An old truism says that in periods of crisis, politics speeds up. That is being strikingly confirmed in the Spanish state after the June 2 abdication of King Juan Carlos. So too is its corollary 鈥 that institutions that seemed solid and long-lasting suddenly look out-of-date and fragile.