Each Western power (at least,
the ones in Europe) has a far-right political party which will fight tooth and
nail, by fair means and foul, to gain ascendency in the national politics.
Here in Spain, it’s Vox
(there are a few others, but currently of no interest). The party today has 33 deputies
in the Spanish parliament making it the third largest group. These include
their po-faced spokesperson Pepa Millán and the nephew of the disgraced conservative
politician Rodrigo Rato, the oddly inept José María Figaredo (known as Frigodedo
by his detractors).
Vox began in 2013, when its
leader Santiago
Abascal dropped his membership in the Partido Popular to start a fresh
far-right party. Santi (as he is called by his supporters) is a
handsome-looking fellow, and instead of sporting a wild hair-style, like Donald
Trump, Boris Johnson or Geert Wilders, he is well-groomed, has a short beard,
and – when the cameras are willing – he might jump on a horse in a manly sort
of way. In short, he’s more of a Putin than a clown.
All of the original founders
of Vox have since
squabbled with Abascal and have left politics – as Iván
Espinosa de los Monteros, Macarena Olona, Rocio Monasterio,
Víctor Sánchez del Real, Juan Luis Steegman… and now (hanging by his fingertips),
Javier Ortega Smith
– the Vox spokesperson in the Madrid City Hall, best remembered for swimming
into Gibraltar in 2016 and raising – briefly – a Spanish flag on the rock there.
Ignacio Garriga is the
party Secretary General, a highly religious man born in Catalonia with a
Spanish/Belgian father and an Equatoguinean mother. For obvious reasons, he
will have reached his zenith with his current position and is no threat to his
boss.
The party is present in the
European Parliament – led by a man who came from the moribund Falange Española
de las JONS and a lookalike for the baddie in the first Indiana Jones film called
Jorge Buxadé. Vox
is aligned with the Patriots for Europe
(Fidesz, Rassemblement National, Vlaams Belang and others: parties in thrall to
Donald Trump).
Vox is also found in most of
the regional governments and many town halls – usually either in an uneasy
alliance with the Partido Popular or sniffily standing aside. Says Abascal
regarding any
deal to be made post-elections in the two regions of Extremadura or Aragón:
‘The PP wants to treat us like savages’, he says. If they fail to come to an
arrangement – and Vox increased its number of councillors in both elections –
then the regions will need to call for fresh elections. The next regional
ballot, with a similar PP/Vox
forecast, is Castilla-León later this month.
The party program is simple
enough: old school nationalism, tradition, Catholic, anti-immigrant, unimpressed
by women’s issues and global warming, and in favour of lower taxes. The
party does well with young men (who are apparently concerned that women
have too many rights and protections). It’s also popular in the countryside,
particularly in the provinces of Murcia, Almería and Cádiz (where there are
lots of foreign immigrants working the fields: people – needless to say – who
don’t have the Vote). Those underprivileged folk who back the ‘ultras’ are
sometimes known as ‘los fachapobres’ – that’s to say, the poor
fascists.
‘Make España Great Again’
could be their slogan, although Santi rarely wears a vulgar baseball-cap.
Vox is in some ways merely an
extension of the Partido Popular (which has recently been moving to
the right in an attempt to claw back support), and notable extremists
within the PP include Isabel Díaz Ayuso (president of the Madrid region) and
the PP deputy Cayetana Álvarez de Toledo.
There’s been another thorn in
Abascal’s side down in Murcia, where José Ángel Antelo the alarmingly tall Vox
leader there had fallen into disapproval with head office, and (like Ortega
Smith above) wouldn’t
leave his post. Earlier this week, the rest of the regional party
councillors voted together for his
summary ejection as leader and spokesperson.
As one
headline says with satisfaction: ‘The far right is slowly devouring itself
while selling order and discipline to its supporters’. Another
is of more concern: ‘Centralized command and a personality cult: Abascal
sidelines critics and completes his vision for the new Vox’.
Nevertheless, it doesn’t look
like this party will go the way of Ciudadanos or Podemos in the near future…