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Subject: The Rise of Podemos (1/3)
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The Rise of Podemos (1/3)
Professor Vincent Navarro maps the conditions that led to the rise of Podemos in Spain - March 22, 2015
Bio
Vincent Navarro
was an active member of the Spanish anti-fascist underground in the 50s
and early 60s. In 1962 he had to leave Spain for political reasons, and
change careers from medicine to economics and political science in
Sweden, Great Britain, and later on in the United States at Johns
Hopkins University. He is now Director of the Johns Hopkins
University-Pompeu Fabra University Public Policy Center. He and another
economist, Juan Torres, were asked by Podemos to write the economic
program for their government. His book, Bienestar insuficiente,
democracia incompleta, won a prize equivalent to the Pulitizer in Spain.
His book, Hay Alternativas, in Spanish, was the bestseller in economics
in 2012.
SHARMINI PERIES, EXEC. PRODUCER, TRNN: Welcome to The Real News Network. I’m Sharmini Peries coming to you from Baltimore.Podemos
party in Spain has become a major force. It’s gaining momentum in Spain
the way Syriza did in Greece. Podemos also secured five seats in the
last European Parliamentary elections. European pollsters are saying
that if elections were held today in Spain, Podemos would win. The next
general elections in Spain will be held in October or November of this
year, and Podemos is poised to take power. If they do, they will pose a
serious threat to the ruling elite. As a result, our next guest writes,
Spanish financial, economic, political, and media establishments are on
the defensive and in panic, having passed laws that strengthen the
[repression]. The heads of major banks in Spain are particularly uneasy,
says Vincent Navarro, who joins me in our studios in Baltimore.Vincent
Navarro is professor of public policy at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore, and of the Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, Spain. He’s
director of the John Hopkins University-Pompeu Fabra University Public
Policy Center, also located in Barcelona. He’s the author of the Spanish
bestseller Hay Alternativas. Good to have you with us.
NAVARRO: I’m very pleased to be here.
PERIES:
So, let’s begin at the beginning, which is how did Podemos come to be?
Who is Podemos, how did it rise to this level of power, that they took
five seats in the European Parliament?
NAVARRO: Well, it
goes back to the transition from dictatorship to democracy in Spain. It
happened in the situation in which the right-wing successors of the
Fascist party controlled the state and all the major media in the
country. It was very powerful. On the other side, the left, who had been
the leading force of the democratic forces during the dictatorship,
were very weak. They just came back from the exile, or they left the
jail during the clandestinity. Weak as a political form, but strong in
the sense of popular movements, they wanted to get rid of dictatorship.
But it was not an [incompr.] the right wing was much more powerful than
all the progressive forces lead by the left.As a
consequence, democracy was established that was very limited. The
democratic laws were very skewed in favor of conservative forces. For
example, Salamanca, a conservative region. You need thirty thousand
votes to get to member of the Parliament. Barcelona, you get almost two
hundred thousand to get a member of the Parliament. Barcelona is the
industrial city-center of the progressive forces in Spain. The same in,
well, the same in [many.] So in that sense, there was a very, very
insufficient democracy. As a consequence, the welfare state, for
example, was very underfunded. The conception was Spain was inherited
from the fascist regime, [Jacobin] stayed center in Madrid, and everyone
is a region of that.The new generations came up with
different values. And fear, which played a very important role, because
the dictatorship was a very, very nasty one. For every political
assassination that Mussolini did, Franco did ten thousand. And even
today, Spain is the second country after Cambodia with a larger of
number of people who have disappeared because of political reasons. The
fear was still in the [still level.] But the new generations broke with
that. And they just said, enough. We want democracy. And in that sense,
the demand for democracy was a revolutionary demand in Spain, because
democracy was very limited. So the Indignados movement was the first
symptom of that. So people went out to the street and said, enough. We
want authentic democracy. La democracia real. Real democracy. And in
that sense, they knew that the political system was not representative.
The famous phrase, they do not represent us. No la representa. They were
not anti-political parties. They were pro-democracy, but didn’t feel
those parties were representing their interests, and they were calling
for all the forms of democracy beside representative democracy. They
asked for direct form of democracy, and so on. That—
PERIES:
What is it, what is it that the Spanish people knew that others didn’t,
in the sense that most people are content with representative
democracy? But obviously here, they’re calling for a participatory
democracy.
NAVARRO: Because it was not resolving their
problems. I think that when the crisis came up in 2007, it appeared
quite clearly that the political parties were, the two-measure political
parties were instrument of large financial and economic interest. So
the instrumentalisation of the state by these big—financing always
played a very important role in this way. Banking has played major role.
So in that respect, it appears quite clearly that the parties were
implementing policies that didn’t have any popular mandate. The
austerity policies of cutting social expenditures, reducing health
services, reducing education. Labor reforms that caused big decline of
salaries. Unemployment increased. All that was done without any popular
mandate. It was not out in the electoral platform of those parties. So
the state start losing any legitimacy. So that is where—
PERIES:
So these policies of austerity measures that were talked about at the
G20 level, implemented, really began with Zapatero, not the current
government.
NAVARRO: Absolutely. Absolutely. When that happened 2007—
PERIES: Which is a socialist government.
NAVARRO:
Absolutely, absolutely. That is why he lost all the good will he had
building up, because prior to that period they were responsible for some
of the development of the welfare state. They didn’t go as far as they
should have, but still. It’s true that according to social [incompr.] in
Europe, they created the national health service, they increased social
expenditures. But that changed. When the crisis came up, the way, how
they respond to that crisis was the same that any other conservative or
liberal party. What in here is called the neoliberal policies. Cuts,
austerity, and lowering wages. It’s an attack to labor. That is why, in
that respect— and now there’s a mobilized calling for democracy. And the
parties were not responding to them. And the political expression of
that movement, Indignados, was Podemos. Which is broader than the
Indignados. But no question, without the Indignados, Podemos would not
exist.That is why Podemos is the political channel of
enormous anger and frustration towards the political and media
establishment that is not responding to people’s needs. So it’s a
Podemos movement, but more than a Podemos movement. It comes up that
wants to measure changes. Where as I said before, today the
revolutionary call is not for the nationalization of the means of
production. It is for having authentic democracy in Spain. The second
transition is what is called —the first transition went from dictatorship
to dramatically insufficient democracy. The second transition is from
insufficient democracy to democracy. Democracy not only in the political
sense, but also in the economic sense. You cannot have democracy when
there is so many inequalities, where that, those inequalities of
concentration of income and wealth diminish dramatically the political
process.
PERIES: Without economic democracy, it’s not possible to have democracy.
NAVARRO: Right, right. Right.
PERIES:
Can you break down for us, when we talk about austerity measures or
government policy that has been cut down, it’s somewhat abstract for
some people. Get specific in terms of, what do we really mean when you
implement austerity measures?
NAVARRO: Well, for example,
Zapatero froze the pensions. The pension system in Spain is responsible
for getting out of poverty sixty-two percent of the elderly. Without the
pension system, the [incompr.] sixty-two, sixty-four percent of the
senior citizens would be poor. So it is the most important anti-poverty
program. The same in the United States, by the way. In that sense, it’s a
very popular program. Now Zapatero, a social democracy. When he has
been told by the Troika, which is the European Central Bank, the
European Commission, the International Monetary Fund, you have to reduce
public expenditures. What he done? He freezes the pensions, in order to
get one thousand, five hundred million [incompr.] But he could have
done differently. He could have reverse the lowering of property taxes,
which he implemented in 2006, and with that he would have gotten double
the number of, two thousand five hundred million [incompr.]
PERIES:
This seems so obvious, really. I mean, who would weaken the weakest in
your society— you know, pensioners are older, elderly people trying to
survive day-to-day. They’re not a rich class. How could that be
—NAVARRO:
Because it’s a class issue. I think that the dominant groups, and the
middle class, dominates the state. To increase property taxes affects
those who have property, who is not the general population. Pensioners
are [now to read] the same intent of the current president Rajoy of the
conservative party. He cut six thousand million dollars for the national
service. That is a frontal attack to the national services. Why he does
that? He could have gotten far more money by reversing the lowering of
taxes on capital taxes. For those large enterprises that have under
forty million dollars as part of their activity, which represents less
than one percent of all the large enterprises in Spain. But this group
is very powerful. I speak about [sinox], Google, Telefonica. They are
very powerful over the state. So he’d rather catch on the national
service, which affects the majority of people. The popular classes. But
does not touch on the powerful. That is the meaning of. So
what we see now, in Greece it’s obvious. In Spain it’s obvious. The same
in Portugal, in Ireland, is that the welfare state, what is called
social Europe, is under now a frontal attack. What does it mean? Listen.
The waiting time to get interviewed for a candidate has increased five
times. The time when you go to see a general practitioner, the time of
visit rather than being ten minutes, now is four minutes. The number of
students in the classroom, rather, in the age nine-ten, then being
twenty, now might be thirty-five. Now that the rate of quality of the
services, and the quality of life—not to speak about unemployment.
Fifty-five percent unemployment of the young people in Spain
—PERIES: Fifty-five percent youth unemployment.
NAVARRO: Absolutely. Fifty-five percent.
PERIES: And for the general public?
NAVARRO:
Twenty-five percent. So as you can see, that hurts people. And of
course those who govern say, we don’t have any alternative. That is why
the book that we publish showing yes, of course you have alternative.
Why do you cut here and you don’t cut there? And you see when who are
the ones who suffer, who are the ones who get free ride, class issue
becomes very clear. Who controls the state? That is why—and the social
democrats, we’re part of the problem, because we’re absorbed into that.
And they, some of them, they didn’t think there was alternatives. But of
course, there were alternatives. That is what Podemos comes up, and
that is why it was a huge—I must say, it might sound immodest, but I
predicted that that would happen. Podemos is the expression of popular
anger saying, enough. And in that respect, in a very peaceful, in a very
mature, in a very convincing, democratic way. Nothing violent. But when
people [go to see] they have a lot of power.
PERIES: So
the rise of Podemos is an example for the world. So let’s take up the
conditions, and the economic conditions that led to the rise of Podemos
in our next segment on The Real News Network. I’m talking to Professor
Vincent Navarro from Johns Hopkins University. Please join us for
segment two.End