đ„ This Week in Spain: Amnesty Drama
Also: The F1 is back in Madrid and Spanish kids love polyamory, it seems.
By @IanMount and @AdrianBono | January 25, 2024 | Madrid | Issue #41
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đ„ This Week in a Nutshell: Right when we thought we were up for a nice and relaxing time in politics, there comes the amnesty bill again to complicate our lives and resume the all-too-familiar political bickering. And what the hell does âgood terrorismâ even mean? All of this and more in this weekâs edition of your fave newsletter. Enjoy.
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Amnesty stuff
đ€·ââïž Are Catalan separatists terrorists? It depends
Bet you never expected to argue about the meaning of âterrorismâ. Oh well! Thatâs what on the menu this week.
So is this purely an epistemological exercise? No, not really. Or at all.
Did I say âneverâ? I meant âno prob.â After claiming it would do no such thing, the (increasingly flexible) PSOE agreed to âtweakâ the amnesty bill this week to further protect Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont and others accused of the most serious crimes during the secessionist push leading up to and following the unconstitutional 1-O (2017) referendum on Catalonia leaving Spain.Â
You say âterrorismâ, I say âmild disturbanceâ: The change that raised the most eyebrows was one that establishes that people accused of terrorism will be exonerated as long as they didnât have âdirect intentionâ to cause âserious violations of human rights.â
Um, doesnât that cover a lot of things? (Just asking for a friend.) Like, âI had no intention of seriously violating human rights. I just wanted to blow up that building.â More seriously, though, intention is a fuzzy concept. Did people collecting bomb-making materials have the intention to seriously violate human rights, or were they just rubes planning to make some victim-less noise? More importantly, how would we know?
Fits the playbook: This change runs in parallel to earlier PSOE-led changes in the malversaciĂłn (embezzlement) law, which drew a line between taking public money for personal gainâlike buying a Mercedes (bad)âand taking it for other reasonsâlike the cause of splitting up Spain (not so bad).Â
But is it really terrorism? While creating Terrorism Zero Zero to go with Terrorism Normal does make the eyes roll, it raises an important question: Should Puigdemont et al. have been charged with terrorism in the first place?
Central charge: The terrorism at the center of the controversy is an investigation by separatist bĂȘte noire Judge Manuel GarcĂa CastellĂłn, who considered Puigdemont and ERC leader Marta Rovira as possible committers of terrorism for their roles coordinating Tsunami DemocrĂ tic, a platform that, among other things, invaded Barcelonaâs airport and shut it down in 2019.
What does the law say: EU law says that terrorist aims are described as any of the following: * seriously intimidating a population; * unduly compelling a government or an international organisation to perform or abstain from performing any act; * seriously destabilising or destroying the fundamental political, constitutional, economic or social structures of a country or an international organisation.
Seriously, weâre not sure. They didnât kill anyone. But âseriously intimidate a populationâ? Maybe?
âŠâŠwhich gets us to those judges. The change to the law implicitly questions the skills and impartiality of Spainâs judges to correctly determine what terrorism is and who should be charged with it.Â
PSOE silent. This questioning of judges has gotten the PSOE of PM Pedro SĂĄnchez in hot water recently. Ecology Minister Teresa Ribera got a drubbing by the juristsâ association (the Consejo General del Poder Judicial, or CGPJ) for not respecting the separation of powers by saying Judge GarcĂa CastellĂłn (him again) âtiltsâ his decisions âalways in the same directionâ and that he publishes them âat opportune moments, with important political implication.â So PSOE has been keeping its head down this week.
Not so its allies. The PSOEâs allies on the far left and in nationalist and separatist parties felt no need to do so, however. They said GarcĂa CastellĂłn was âclose to the PPâ and âtrivializes terrorism in the extremeâ and only wants to âend this governmentââand it wasnât him alone. Many judges were, âauthentic inquisitors who use the criminal law of the enemy.â Needless to say, this isnât turning many judges into SĂĄnchez gov fanboys (and girls).
Whatâs the PSOE have to say? Justice minister FĂ©lix Bolaños addressed this controversy on Wednesday morning outside the Supreme Court, before attending the swearing-in ceremony of Attorney General Ălvaro GarcĂa Ortiz.
"Let's get serious⊠does anyone really believe that the independence process is comparable to the terrorism that Spain endured for decades?â he asked, referring to killings by Basque separatist terrorist group ETA. âWhat we all understand as terrorism⊠is outside the scope of the amnesty.â
Really, this isnât about getting into power, but about calming the waters: Bolaños repeated the PSOE talking point that the overall goal is to ânormalize the political, social, and institutional situation in Catalonia." (Not entirely convincing to, really, anybody.)
The drama has caused a rift in the PSOE, as Castilla-La Mancha regional president Emiliano GarcĂa-Page expressed his dislike for the recent changes and the whole âgood terrorism and bad terrorismâ debate.
Friendly fire: GarcĂa-Page said that the amnesty dealâs latest amendment is âon the outskirts of the Constitutionâ.
Quick response: The PSOE structure replied, with Minister of Transport/SĂĄnchez attack dog Ăscar Puente saying that he believed âthat the one who has been on the outskirts of the PSOE for quite some time now is Mr. GarcĂa-Pageâ.Â
Hot mic moment: On Wednesday, Page was caught on a hot mic criticizing his PSOE buddiesâto three PP regional presidents no less (Juan Manuel Moreno from AndalucĂa, Carlos MazĂłn from Valencia and Fernando LĂłpez-Miras from Murcia), saying he felt his party was about to âextraditeâ him. Moreno responded that if they messed with Page, the PP would jump in to defend him. Strange days!
And then thereâs Vox (thereâs always Vox). As you can imagine, the far-righties are not happy about this whole thing. Not happy at all.
Vox European Parliament rep Hermann Tertschânot a man known for subtletyâcaused a stir on Wednesday when he tweeted that he hoped âno one shot Bolaños in the face like they did to Vidal-Quadras and then ask him whether it was good or bad terrorism.â (Vox founder Vidal-Quadras was in fact shot in the face in a terroristic assassination attempt last year, so that happened, but the tweet itself, with its disingenuous âhopeâ for Bolañosâs safety? Fully face-palm đ€Š.)
Never waste an opportunity: The PSOE was quick to turn Tertschâs dumb tweet into a talking point against⊠PP boss Alberto Nuñez FeijĂło, whose party is in coalition governments with Vox in several regions. Party reps told Cadena SER that the PPâs continued partnership with Vox âreflects the path that NĂșñez FeijĂło has takenâ.
So weâre basically back to pre-23J election campaign slogans. Which is nice. For somebody. Though perhaps not for us.
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đŹ Five things to discuss at dinner parties this week
1. Â đ Big week for Las Montero !
Does your last name include âMonteroâ? Were you a minister in PM SĂĄnchezâs last government? If the answer to both those questions is âyesâ, you had a big week!
Montero y Montero is admittedly a cheap literary device to catch your interest (or a mediocre law firm), but itâs what we got! Itâs also true: the Montero (non)-sistersâMarĂa JesĂșs and Ireneâhave been front and center in Spainâs political news.
MarĂa JesĂșs Montero in âBaldgateâ: MarĂa JesĂșsâSpainâs finance minister and (since December) first deputy prime ministerâlaunched herself into a massive political controversy largely meaningless tempest in a teapot at the PSOE party congress in A Coruña.
But which guy with glasses?  Montero dismissively referred to Galicia-born Miguel Tellado, the PPâs new congressional spokesman as, âthe guy yâall [from Galicia] sent to Madrid, the one with the glasses,â and then paused to nod to the fact that Galicia-born PP president Alberto Nuñez FeijĂło also wears glasses: âWell, they both have glassesâŠ"Â
Ha, ha youâre bald! Thatâs when Montero added, to helpfully distinguish between the two glass-wearing Galicians, "The one with less hair, Miguel Tellado.â Not childish at all!
Never let a bad joke go unpunished: Tellado and the PP were of course unwilling to let this terrible soul-searing slur stupid quip go without making a little political hay out of it.
Tellado took to Twitter (or X, whatevs): âTo refer to me, Pedro SĂĄnchez's number two emphasizes that I am bald and wear glasses. What would happen if it occurred to me to describe a PSOE deputy by her physical appearance? By her hairstyle, her clothing..." (Eds. note: This is probably not a bad point. Imagine if Tellado referred to Nadia Calviño as La bajita or something).
But Tellado couldnât stop there⊠He suggested that Monteroâs lack of seriousness showed she âwasnât up to the jobâ (debatable, but, okay, youâre having a moment, go for it). And he also wrote, "Sanchismo is this. They have no limits" (Eds note: Oh, come off it man, she didnât kill your dog.)
Non-apology apology: Montero came back a few days later to apologize. Sorta. Like, it was not meant to cause harm or even annoyance. So sorry if it did, and some people âhave very thin skinâ (Translation: Sorry that youâre such a baby.)Â
Tellado then accepted her apology. So now we can move on. Thank God.
But thatâs not the only Montero! Happily (for us), deposed Equality Minister Irene Montero was back in the news. Or, rather, people in her party (it was called Podemos, and it was a thing!) put her back in the news. Because we had all forgotten about her.
Ambassador Montero? Apparently that was an idea, at least according to Podemos boss Ione Belarra.
âSomething prettyâŠâ At a Podemos party meeting in the Madrid barrio of LavapiĂ©s (so many party congresses!), Belarra said she was going to reveal one of Monteroâs secretsâsomething she had not consulted Montero about because Irene would have said ânoâ.Â
Beware of Greeks bearing gifts⊠Belarra said, âIt would have been very easy for Irene to have what they call a political solution. They offered me a political solution for Irene, something nice, an embassy. A way out that would get her out of Spain and stop her from causing problems. When they proposed it to me, I started crying, because she made me very angry.âÂ
Spicy! đ¶ïž Belarra didnât say who it was, but media points to Labor Minister and Sumar boss Yolanda Diazâthe mortal frenemy of Podemos who helped Pedro SĂĄnchez force Montero out of government with a smile. Seems she offered Montero the embassyâin Chile!âto get her out of Spain and out of her hair. Like, 10,695 km. out of her well-feathered hair. (Notice how we mentioned her appearance like the other Montero?) đ€Ą.
2. Â Â đ° For Paul Married, there is life after Spanish politics
The last time we heard from Pablo Casado (yes, the Paul Married of the headline), heâd been run out of his job leading the PP, tail between legs, after being apparently caught in a smear campaign against Madrid regional governor Isabel DĂaz Ayuso. Since then, well, Ayusoâs become a PP political superstar and Paul Married hasâŠbecome a Jeopardy answer (category: Forgotten Pauls). Until now, that is.
Far from electoral fray. Casado is launching aâŠventure capital fund, alongside (among others) Ricardo GĂłmez-Acebo BotĂnâwhoâs the nephew of Banco Santander boss Ana BotĂn, as if you needed reminding that the political and financial worlds were intertwined in Spain.Â
The God Above: Named Hyperion Funds (after the Titan child, meaning âhe that walks on high" or simply "the god above" becauseâŠhumility) aims to raise âŹ150m to invest in aerospace, cybersecurity, AI and defense (to this end, two other partners in the fund come from the defense world). The fund will be managed by Singular Bank, a private bank with âŹ13bn under management.Â
Defense and AIâthatâs a Pablo thing? Not exactly. Though not knowing a subject isnât the kind of thing to stop him, as will know anyone who watched him during his political years trying to gladhand farmers.Â
ButâŠknowing important people. Casado is meant to provide expertise in âgeostrategy and international relationsâ, which is a way of saying he knows people and knows his way around European institutions. Fair enough.
Other experts: The BotĂn cousin is meant to know finance, and the two defense industry partners knowâŠdefense. The advisory board includes political and business bigwigs (from NATO to Saab), as well as Spain-based Argentine entrepreneur MartĂn Varsavsky.Â
Still, a little weird? Honestly, not really. AI is huge, providing security against cyberattacks is huge and defenseâŠis gonna be huge in Europe as the continent notches a ârecord increaseâ in defense spending because Russia and Ukraine and maybe no more help from a Trump-led U.S.
Funny money: The anchor investor in the fund is the family office Nortia, which belongs to the mad rich Manuel Lao, a billionaire who founded Spainâs largest casino companyâCirsa.Â
Not a peep: Casado has not spoken to the media about the the fund. Like, not at all. Suggesting that heâs learned to keep his head down and lips shut after the Ayuso drubbing, And this is important: heâs gonna get some money đ€!
3. đš Triple homicide shocks the country
The small town of Morata de Tajuña (pop. 8,000) is reeling from the murder of three siblings after a romance scam gone awfully, tragically wrong.
The bodies of siblings Amelia, Ăngeles and Pepe Gutierrez Ayuso, aged 68 to 72, were found last week partially burned, stacked on top of each other and showing signs of violence in their home in Morata de Tajuña, some 40 km from Madrid.
The investigation quickly centered on the supposed boyfriend of one of them, an American military officer named âEdwardâ stationed in Afghanistan, who had been asking them for money for quite some time (leading them to the point of bankruptcy).
Virtual love affair: Seven years ago Amelia and Ăngeles met two âhandsome members of the U.S. militaryâ on Facebook. They wereâapparentlyârich, and both sisters started long-distance relationships with them.
Then the problems started. âEdwardâ informed the sisters that his military friend had passed away and left them an inheritance of âŹ7m. Edwardâletâs call him âthe scammerâ at this pointâsaid he needed money to sort out the paperwork to unlock the money and send it to them. And Amelia, who was still âdatingâ him, kept sending him money as he asked for increasingly large amounts.
The entire town suspected they were being scammed (or so it seems) but they wouldnât hear it. El Mundo explains that âas soon as they collected their pensionsâ, they would send them to the scammer.
âThey asked for money from acquaintances, promising to return double the amount borrowedâ. They apparently event went to the village priest for help. So not only did they lose their own. moneyâthey also lost that of their friends.
Friends believe the scammer got between âŹ300,000 and âŹ400,000 in total.
This is when they went to Dilawar Hussain, a Pakistani citizen who ran a nearby internet cafe that they frequently visited to send the money to the scammer. Local people say that they convinced Hussain to lend them some âŹ30,000 euros, promising him to double that amount once they collected the âinheritanceâ. đ±
The sisters offered Hussain a room in their home for free when the money didnât come. But, after feeling the money slip away, the man left the house and became more aggressive and started asking for the âŹ60,000 he was âowed.â
Hussain even attacked Amelia with a hammer, which landed him in jail last year. While the sisters didnât want to press charges, he was still sentenced to a few months in prison and was told to stay away from them.
After he was released in September, Hussain tried contacting them again for his money (unsuccessfully). In December, he again showed up at their homeâbut this time he killed all three siblings.
A few days later, he turned himself in and admitted to killing Amelia, Ăngeles and Pepe (who had mental disabilities). According to local authorities, he said the victims had âruined himâ and he âcouldnât afford to buy foodâ.
Hussain is now in jail without bail, as the judge of the case believes heâs a flight risk.
One last thing: The photos that the scammer used for years were those of retired United States Army officer Wesley Clark. A simple reverse search of the image on Google Photos could have helped them realize they were being scammed.
4. đ Madrid is hosting F1 races again (starting in 2026)
Racing fans, rejoice! After 45 years, Formula One is returning to Madrid, starting in 2026, after the city signed a 10-year deal to host the Spanish Grand Prix on a hybrid track near IFEMA.
Lots of đ¶: Madrid regional president Isabel DĂaz Ayuso, Formula One President Stefano Domenicali, and Madrid mayor JosĂ© Luis MartĂnez Almeida estimated that the GP will generate some âŹ450m annually and create more than 10,000 direct jobs. đł
Barcelona has the current contract to host the event, which ends in two years. So at first glance Madrid seems to have snatched it from Catalonia. But Domenicali assured that the race in Catalonia could remain on the calendar, meaning that Spain could hold two races. AwwwâŠ.
Seriously⊠Because this may seem to be the latest salvo in the Madrid vs. Barcelona war, Domenicali reiterated that âfor the avoidance of doubt⊠the fact that we are in Madrid is not excluding the fact we could stay in Barcelona for the futureâ.
Not Spainâs first
rodeorace: Spainâs first GP was held in 1913 and Madrid last hosted it in 1981. Then it was held in Jerez (Andalucia) from 1986 to 1990 and since then in Barcelona (plus a brief stint in Valencia, but more on that below).
Alright, but whatâs the circuit like?
For those of you who are into this sort of thing, the F1 says that it will stretch 5.474 km and include 20 turns. It is also âdesigned to deliver a qualifying lap time of approximately 1 minute and 32 secondsâ.
The track will be located by the IFEMA convention centerâconveniently five minutes from the Barajas airportâand will include a 1.5 km stretch of public roads and âF1âČs first indoor paddockâ.
And⊠the project âwill be organized by IFEMA, the leading fair operator in Spain, and will not involve public financingâ.
Sounds great, right? Well, apparently not so fast.
Opposition leaders and media came out to criticize it immediately, and seemed especially skeptical of the whole ânot involve public financingâ part.
Skepticism not unreasonable: When Valencia hosted five Formula 1 Grand Prix races between 2008 and 2012, then-regional president Francisco Camps (PP) also claimed the GP would come at âzero costâ to public fundsâbut the Valencian government ended up paying over âŹ230m (on TV rights, event organization, etc). This is why we canât have nice things.
Petty politics? If youâre wondering if the whole thing got snarkily political, the answer is: of course it did!
Madrid boss Ayuso was asked on a radio interview whether she would invite PM Pedro SĂĄnchez to the Madrid GP, to which she responded: "I will like to invite the authorities who are in office at that time⊠I hope it's not him..â Oooh, snap!
5. Gen Zers in Spain are really into polyamory, apparently
Kids these days, right?
Youth unemployment in Spain may be the highest in all of Europe but it appears that young people in this country are also number one at something else: polyamory. Or at least so says this article on El PaĂs (whichâshockerâhas been tops of the newspaperâs âmost readâ section for some time).
Really? Before you start shaking your head and judging how 20-year-olds choose to live their life, we suggest you take this with a (yuge!) grain of salt. As in, this revelation comes from infidelity dating site Ashley Madison, which you may remember because it was hacked in 2015 and it was revealed that many of the women that men were talking to were actually bots (thereâs even a show on Disney+ about it. Check it out!).
But we digress. Turns out that according to a study conducted by the dating app in collaboration with data analytics firm YouGov, Gen Zers in Spain are the most supportive of polyamory and open relationships in all of Europe. đ„°
3 of 5: The study, titled âDecoding Generation Z: A Global Report on Non-Monogamies, Sex and Privacyâ, says that 60% of Spaniards aged 18 to 29 support being in non-monogamous relationships (18,000 people participated in the study).
A trend? Another recent studyâby Spainâs very official CIS (Center for Sociological Researchâsaid that 4 out of 10 Spaniards are in favor of open relationships. Look at us, so progressive!
So, are their rules? Expertsâor at least people El PaĂs refers to as experts, say every coupleâor three-person triad or âthroupleâ, in which each support the others in their unique waysâmakes its own rules, but the most common are:
No relationships with acquaintances (donât wanna mess up a friendship).
Avoid sexual encounters with people who live in the same house (like, sex with roommates â great idea).
Maintain full trust with your partner so you can share absolutely everything youâve done.
Free love is back! At least in Spain.
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