Spanish Guy
Member
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2012
- Messages
- 27
Sorry if it isn't the appropiate place for this thread, because is of European politics, although I've put it here as I've seen a thread about the UKIP in the same forum.
As you may know, on Sunday there will be elections in the European Union, where we choose our 751 deputees in the European Parliament. However they're far from being a election where the elector thinks on a Pan-European level, few people know that Juncker is the EPP candidate, and Schultz the socialist one, and the votings and debates are usually focused on national topics, as the abortion law or the Catalan Referendum. As, furthermore, due to the different electoral system is easier for a minor party getting a MEP than a MP (congressman) in the Spanish Legislature, I won't do it differently than most Europeans, my vote will be determined mostly by national issues.
The Spanish political scene have changed a lot since 2011 when the PP (equivalent to American GOP) won the national elections. I recognise I didn't vote for them. The ruling leadership of the PP is clearly what you Americans would call RINO's, taxese are higher than ever, and the overwhelming bureaucracy have not been reduced. The tensions inside the PP, between people linked to former Prime Minister José María Aznar, or former Governor of Madrid Esperanza Aguirre (more pro free-market and Atlantist than the current party) are important, and which is more strange in a country of Spain where parties try to show themselves as homogenous blocs, notorious for the general public. Finally in December the PP suffered a split, when a new party, VOX, was created and who have been supported by members of the most conservative wing of the PP. The reasons given was what was considered a soft antiterrorist policy of the Spanish government, high taxes and bureaucracy.
I share some views with the new party. Bureaucracy in Spain is huge, with several Administrations with the same functions, and the economic policies of the current government are horrible and counterproductive, as they're not fighting for finishing with the power of the trusts or diminishing the regulations in certain sectors as the labour market, transport, education or communications. However I don't share their views in another issues. Socially is a conservative party, which I doubt it'd never support causes as legalization of weed, keeping homosexual marriage, secularism and separation between the Catholic Church and the Spanish State, and which probably would pursue and tougher antiterrorist policy. A friend of mine, which will vote for them on Sunday says me they're the real holders of the Aznar and Aguirre administrations (both of them are still in the PP but without any responsabilities), but really, as I'd have in his day problems for voting for Aznar or Aguirre, I'd have problems for voting for a party with so a socially conservative agenda. Although the possibility of pressing the government to follow a more pro-market economic policy by supporting a conservative split of them is always attractive.
So now I have a real dillemma which I think some of you'd have suffered in the past. As far as I will not vote for the current government, should I vote for that party, or for other one with a more "centrist" economic agenda but with a more "liberal" social agenda, defending, for example, the legalization of weed, prostitution, and secularism? Talking in American terms... Tea Party or New Democrats?
As you may know, on Sunday there will be elections in the European Union, where we choose our 751 deputees in the European Parliament. However they're far from being a election where the elector thinks on a Pan-European level, few people know that Juncker is the EPP candidate, and Schultz the socialist one, and the votings and debates are usually focused on national topics, as the abortion law or the Catalan Referendum. As, furthermore, due to the different electoral system is easier for a minor party getting a MEP than a MP (congressman) in the Spanish Legislature, I won't do it differently than most Europeans, my vote will be determined mostly by national issues.
The Spanish political scene have changed a lot since 2011 when the PP (equivalent to American GOP) won the national elections. I recognise I didn't vote for them. The ruling leadership of the PP is clearly what you Americans would call RINO's, taxese are higher than ever, and the overwhelming bureaucracy have not been reduced. The tensions inside the PP, between people linked to former Prime Minister José María Aznar, or former Governor of Madrid Esperanza Aguirre (more pro free-market and Atlantist than the current party) are important, and which is more strange in a country of Spain where parties try to show themselves as homogenous blocs, notorious for the general public. Finally in December the PP suffered a split, when a new party, VOX, was created and who have been supported by members of the most conservative wing of the PP. The reasons given was what was considered a soft antiterrorist policy of the Spanish government, high taxes and bureaucracy.
I share some views with the new party. Bureaucracy in Spain is huge, with several Administrations with the same functions, and the economic policies of the current government are horrible and counterproductive, as they're not fighting for finishing with the power of the trusts or diminishing the regulations in certain sectors as the labour market, transport, education or communications. However I don't share their views in another issues. Socially is a conservative party, which I doubt it'd never support causes as legalization of weed, keeping homosexual marriage, secularism and separation between the Catholic Church and the Spanish State, and which probably would pursue and tougher antiterrorist policy. A friend of mine, which will vote for them on Sunday says me they're the real holders of the Aznar and Aguirre administrations (both of them are still in the PP but without any responsabilities), but really, as I'd have in his day problems for voting for Aznar or Aguirre, I'd have problems for voting for a party with so a socially conservative agenda. Although the possibility of pressing the government to follow a more pro-market economic policy by supporting a conservative split of them is always attractive.
So now I have a real dillemma which I think some of you'd have suffered in the past. As far as I will not vote for the current government, should I vote for that party, or for other one with a more "centrist" economic agenda but with a more "liberal" social agenda, defending, for example, the legalization of weed, prostitution, and secularism? Talking in American terms... Tea Party or New Democrats?