History Of The Partido Popular (PP)
The Popular Party (PP) traces its origins to the Popular Alliance, a union of seven conservative political parties formed in the 1970s by Manuel Fraga Iribarne, a prominent cabinet member under Spain’s longtime dictator Francisco Franco. In March 1977 five of the seven component parties of the alliance formed the United Party of the Popular Alliance (Partido Unido de Alianza Popular), and in June, in Spain’s first democratic elections, that coalition captured only 8.2 percent of the national vote and teetered on the brink of extinction. Divided over Spain’s new draft constitution, the party endorsed the transition to democracy but strongly opposed some of its elements, particularly its prohibition against capital punishment and its provisions for regional devolution. The party’s poor showing was largely attributed to its association with Franco, its conservative views on social issues, and its opposition to decentralization. Instead, Spanish conservatives initially favoured national or regional parties of the centre-right whose leaders had more democratic appeal.
In 1979 at its national congress, the rightist party was rechristened the Popular Coalition (Coalición Popular) and attempted to cultivate a more centrist image, emphasizing both traditional values such as law and order and economic liberalism as well as support for democracy. The party’s democratic credentials were underscored in 1981 when it opposed a coup attempt by disaffected conservatives in the military. The reformed party scored well in regional and local elections, but it was the sudden collapse of the country’s main centrist party, Adolfo Suárez’s Union of the Democratic Centre (Unión de Centro Democrático), after the 1982 elections that aided the party’s rise. Winning one-fourth of the votes in 1982, the Popular Coalition became the official opposition to the governing Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE). Still, the party provided only a weak opposition to the PSOE during most of that party’s tenure in office (1982–96). Attempting to undermine the socialist administration of Felipe González, the pro-North Atlantic Treaty Organization Popular Coalition boycotted the 1986 referendum on membership. The strategy backfired, and later in the year Fraga was forced to resign as party leader after the party suffered heavy losses in the Basque Country.
In early 1989 Spain’s conservatives again tried to present a more centrist image to the increasingly leftist Spanish population and to disassociate themselves from their Francoist heritage, incorporating the small centrist Liberal Party and adopting a new name, the Popular Party (PP). Over the next several years, to maximize conservative representation, the PP formed electoral pacts with nationalist parties in Aragon, Galicia, Majorca, Navarra, and Valencia. In 1989 Fraga once again assumed leadership of the party, but he soon left to become president of Galicia’s regional government. Afterward the PP selected José María Aznar, the young president of the Castile-León regional government, as its leader.
Aznar purged the party of its extremist elements and sought to build a modern, centrist Christian Democratic party. Aznar’s efforts increased the PP’s membership, drawing support particularly from younger Spaniards who had become disenchanted with the governing socialists. The PP used Aznar’s austere image as a former tax inspector as an asset to attack the more flamboyant González and to accuse the PSOE of corruption and arrogance. The PP made solid gains in 1993, and in 1996 it was able to oust the PSOE from office and form a minority administration. In 2000 Aznar led the party to a resounding victory, in which the party won its first overall majority in the Cortes (Spanish legislature). In 2003 Aznar kept his promise not to seek a third term as prime minister and designated Mariano Rajoy, his deputy prime minister, to lead the PP in the 2004 elections. In an expression of popular opposition to Aznar’s support of the Iraq War, and partly in response to what many perceived as the Aznar government’s mishandling of the response to the March 11, 2004, terrorist bombings in Madrid, the PP was swept from office by the socialists in elections in the incident’s immediate aftermath. The PP complained that it had been robbed of the election and often criticized the ruling socialist party. In the 2008 general elections, the PP waged a bitter campaign against the PSOE but again lost.
Policy and structure
Once in office, the PP dispelled fears that it would attempt to undermine regional devolution or democracy. Lacking an overall majority, the PP governed with the support of several regional parties, including the Catalonian Convergence and Union and the Basque Nationalist Party. Spain’s previous socialist government had implemented neoliberal economic policies that the PP continued with vigour. The party also accelerated the privatization of state enterprise, cut public expenditures, and lowered inflation as part of an effort to conform to the Maastricht Treaty’s requirements on monetary union, which would ensure European Union (EU) approval of Spain’s adoption of the euro, the EU’s single currency. The government also adopted bold initiatives to stem ETA-led Basque terrorism, surprising many Spaniards by entering into negotiations with ETA and then cracking down hard on terrorism when talks failed to produce a permanent settlement.
In the late 1970s the party was quite small, with about 50,000 members. Only with the PP’s growing electoral success in the 1990s did its membership begin to increase rapidly, and by 2000 the PP had more than 600,000 members—the most of any Spanish political party. Individual party members join local party committees (juntas), which elect representatives to district, provincial, and regional party institutions. The National Congress, which meets once every three years, is formally the most powerful party institution. In between party congresses, however, the National Executive Committee is the party’s main governing body, and the party president (leader) wields considerable power.
source: Encyclopædia Britannica

Spanish Village Cashes In, Bringing Back Peseta
In Salvaterra, on the border between Spain and Portugal, the peseta has been resurrected. For a limited period only, restaurants, taxi drivers, pharmacies and about 50 other businesses have been accepting payments in the old Spanish currency.

Spanish Stubs Out Cigarettes
Smokers stubbed out their cigarettes in tapas bars and restaurants across Spain as one of Europe's strictest anti-tobacco laws came into force on Sunday. After a one-day amnesty granted for New Year's Day, the new law banning smoking in all bars, restaurants and public places took effect at the stroke of midnight Saturday.

Man Rescued On Madrid Railway Tracks
A man who fell onto a railway line in Madrid was saved from serious injury or possible death by an off-duty policeman. [No sound]

Spain Flights Resume Following Controller Strike
Spain placed striking air traffic controllers under military authority and threatened them with jail terms in an unprecedented emergency order to get planes back in the skies and clear chaotic airports clogged with irate travelers.
Al-Qaeda Arrests In Spain
Police have arrested at least seven people in Spain after a raid on a group suspected of forging passports for an al-Qaeda-linked Islamic terrorist group.
Spain's Interior Ministry provided no other details, but the country's leading Cadena SER radio says the detainees formed part of a group based in Thailand and linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan-based terror group blamed for the 2008 Mumbai, India, attacks that killed 166 people.
The arrests took place late Tuesday and early Wednesday in the northeastern city of Barcelona and in the surrounding region of Catalonia.
SER and other Spanish media say the arrested are mostly Pakistanis who stole passports that were later doctored and sent to Thailand for distribution to groups linked to al-Qaeda.
Spain To Privatise Barcelona & Madrid Airports
The Spanish government plans to privatise the country's top two airports, as part of a series of measures seeking to jumpstart anaemic economic growth.
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero told legislators in Parliament that Madrid's Barajas and Barcelona's El Prat airports will be run by private operators under a licensing, or concession system. Both airports have been recently remodeled and expanded to absorb increased passenger traffic in coming years.
The country's airport operator AENA will also sell a 49% stake to private operators, above initial plans to sell a 30% stake.
The government is also planning to sell 30% of Spain's state-owned lottery company, Zapatero added.

Ready, Set, Snooze! Spain Holds Siesta Contest
A sleepy Spain is holding a siesta contest to promote the traditional nap that's endangered by the hectic modern lifestyle.

General Strike In Spain, But Impact May Be Limited
A first in eight years, about 10 million workers went on a general strike in Spain on Wednesday according to unions, to protest against the socialist government's tough labour reforms and spending cuts. But despite the movement causing transport chaos and clashes across the country, Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero has vowed there will be no reversal of the labour reforms, which make it easier to hire and fire workers and which received final approval from parliament on September 9.

Spain Rejects Basque Truce Offer
The Spanish government has rejected a ceasefire announcement by the Basque militant group ETA. Madrid ruled out talks on Basque independence and said police would continue their crackdown on the group.

ETA Declares Ceasefire In Struggle With Spain
Basque separatist group ETA declared a ceasefire Sunday in its bloody 42-year campaign for a homeland independent of Spain, vowing to give up guns and bombs to seek a democratic solution. [An extract from the ETA announcement]

Spanish Food Fight Festival
Thousands of people descended on the Spanish town of Bunol on Wednesday to take part in the Tomatina festival.

Spanish Aid Workers Freed By Al-Qaeda Return Home
Two Spanish aid workers freed by Al-Qaeda's North African offshoot returned home after nine months in captivity following the reported payment of a ransom of millions of euros.

Bullfighting Protesters Strip Down
More than 100 semi-naked protesters lay down in the shape of a dying bull Saturday outside one of Spain's most iconic buildings the Guggenheim museum in Bilbao to demand an end to bullfighting in the Basque Region.

Flotilla of Stinging Jellyfish Hit Spanish Beach
A vast flotilla of small, virtually undetectable jellyfish stung hundreds of people along Spanish beaches this week, the kind of swimmer's nightmare that biologists say will be increasingly common because of climate change.
Elche is just south of Alicante.

Michelle Obama Meets Spain's King
U.S. first lady Michelle Obama and daughter Sasha had lunch with Spain's King and Queen on Sunday at the royal family's holiday retreat on the resort island of Mallorca in the Mediterranean.

Spain's Catalonia Region Bans Bullfighting
Catalonia's parliament on Wednesday voted to ban bullfighting from January 1, 2012, becoming the first region in mainland Spain to outlaw the centuries-old tradition.

Spain's 'Low Cost' Prostitutes
Dozens of prostitutes for less than a hundred euros a trick, and apparently within the law: that's what many brothels here have on offer, just six kilometres over the border from France, in the Pyrenees. The place is making a name for itself among the French a popularity that local authorities could have done without.

Nine Injured in Running of the Bulls
Nine thrill-seeking runners were injured, three by goring, in a dangerous last running of the bulls at Spain's San Fermin festival, officials said Wednesday. It was the bloodiest run of this years festival.

Running Of The Bulls
At least three people ended up in the hospital with minor injuries after Tuesday's running of the bulls, the second-to-last running in this year's San Fermin festival in Pamplona.
Contact Us
For Information.e-mail info@the-rock-of-gibraltar.com
Advertising/Sales Enquiries.
e-mail sales@the-rock-of-gibraltar.com
To report a problem
Broken link etc.
e-mail problem@the-rock-of-gibraltar.com
Site Statistics
Visitors : Last 10 minutes [138]Last 24 hours [6672]