Pedro S¨¢nchez 3.0
All the good intentions of the Socialist Party¡¯s governing program are going to clash with the difficulties of cobbling together majorities inside Congress
The Socialist Party government formed by Pedro S¨¢nchez in Spain could find itself in a variety of situations. For one, it could become the target of brutal, insistent, cross-party attacks from the left, the right and from nationalist parties, until it falls and is forced to call new elections. This situation could materialize if its adversaries glimpse electoral dividends to be earned in the short term. For now, however, given that the Popular Party (PP) is searching for a new leader, Ciudadanos has been relegated to the background, and Podemos is suffering from its own leader¡¯s bad image, this does not seem like the most reasonable scenario.
The most interesting part about this government is its classic social-democratic nature
On the other hand, the S¨¢nchez administration could also get mired in the parliamentary mud created by other parties¡¯ shared interest in avoiding early elections, and by their symmetrical hope that things will not go so well for the Socialists, the point being to make sure that the PSOE doesn¡¯t gain political capital from its time in government ahead of the local, regional and European elections next year. Because all the good intentions of the administration and the PSOE¡¯s governing program are going to clash, day in and day out, with the difficulties of crafting majorities inside a Congress where the party only holds 84 out of 350 seats.
This is, therefore, a government that could work without a governing program, because rather than a government, what it is in reality is an electoral program.
For all that, the most interesting part about this government is its classic social-democratic nature. If there is anything that has historically characterized the socialists, it is a healthy dose of bipolarity: using market mechanisms to grow the economy, and state mechanisms to redistribute this growth. But always in that order: grow and redistribute, not redistribute first or even at the cost of growth, which is what sets it apart from the other left, the one whose search for equality leads it to stifle growth.
S¨¢nchez could get mired in the parliamentary mud created by other parties¡¯ shared interest in avoiding early elections
This explains the orthodoxy of the economic portfolios, which are sending out a clear message to the financial markets, to investors and to our European partners. And next to these classic elements, we have the new topics ¨C gender equality and the energy transition ¨C which cut across ministries. In what constitutes S¨¢nchez¡¯s umpteenth ideological pirouette, this time toward the center of the political spectrum, we now have a classic government with no concessions to either Unidos Podemos or to the concept of plurinationality. After watching the liberal S¨¢nchez who signed an agreement with Ciudadanos (1.0), then observing the new S¨¢nchez who sided with Podemos and with plurinational ideals (2.0), we are now bearing witness to S¨¢nchez 3.0.
English version by Susana Urra.
Tu suscripci¨®n se est¨¢ usando en otro dispositivo
?Quieres a?adir otro usuario a tu suscripci¨®n?
Si contin¨²as leyendo en este dispositivo, no se podr¨¢ leer en el otro.
FlechaTu suscripci¨®n se est¨¢ usando en otro dispositivo y solo puedes acceder a EL PA?S desde un dispositivo a la vez.
Si quieres compartir tu cuenta, cambia tu suscripci¨®n a la modalidad Premium, as¨ª podr¨¢s a?adir otro usuario. Cada uno acceder¨¢ con su propia cuenta de email, lo que os permitir¨¢ personalizar vuestra experiencia en EL PA?S.
En el caso de no saber qui¨¦n est¨¢ usando tu cuenta, te recomendamos cambiar tu contrase?a aqu¨ª.
Si decides continuar compartiendo tu cuenta, este mensaje se mostrar¨¢ en tu dispositivo y en el de la otra persona que est¨¢ usando tu cuenta de forma indefinida, afectando a tu experiencia de lectura. Puedes consultar aqu¨ª los t¨¦rminos y condiciones de la suscripci¨®n digital.