BFF-07 After fall of Rajoy, Spain conservatives pick new leader

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BFF-07

SPAIN-POLITICS

After fall of Rajoy, Spain conservatives pick new leader

MADRID, July 21, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Spain’s conservatives pick a new leader
Saturday after ex-prime minister Mariano Rajoy was ousted, with his former
right-hand woman Soraya Saenz de Santamaria vying against 37-year-old Pablo
Casado, who would take the Popular Party (PP) further right.

After an acrimonious campaign that saw mystery videos released attacking
both candidates in turn, 3,082 delegates will be casting their ballot in
Madrid for the successor of Rajoy, who spoke for the last time as PP leader
on Friday.

In a long, emotional speech, the 63-year-old asked PP members to “be
responsible in carrying out your duties”. The delegates have a choice between
Saenz de Santamaria, 47, who for six-and-a-half years was deputy prime
minister, and Casado, a lawmaker who has promised “hope” with a generational
revamp of the party and a step further to the political right.

Both were voted through a first round of unprecedented primaries at the PP.

Saturday’s victor could become Spain’s next prime minister if the PP wins
general elections planned for 2020 at the latest.

Saenz de Santamaria is emphasising her considerable experience.

She doesn’t think the party needs to be revamped and believes she is most
capable of defeating Pedro Sanchez, the current Socialist prime minister who
ousted Rajoy with a parliamentary no-confidence vote.

“I have energy, I want it and I have experience,” she told a campaign
meeting.

“Pedro Sanchez is flying a Boeing 747, and he doesn’t even have the
experience to pilot a light aircraft,” she said of the centre-left opponent.

– Re-energise PP –

On the other side is Casado, who has criticised his rival’s management of
the separatist crisis in Catalonia when she was in charge of relations
between Madrid and regions.

He has taken a hardline stance on Catalonia, calling for the addition of
offences such as illegally calling a referendum to the criminal code to boost
Spain’s legal response to the secession threat.

“Dialogue doesn’t work with those who want to break the law,” he said this
week.

Casado is also against depenalising euthanasia as promoted by the Socialist
government and wants to lower income and corporation taxes.

The winner will have to breathe new life into a party which between 2011
general elections, when Rajoy won an absolute majority, and the last polls in
2016 has lost three million voters.

Many have migrated to Ciudadanos, a centre-right party, angry over the
series of corruption scandals that hit the PP in the past years.

Jose Pablo Ferrandiz, lead researcher at polling company Metroscopia,
believes both Saenz de Santamaria and Casado will find it “very difficult to
attract those who went to Ciudadanos”.

The PP, which still holds most seats in parliament even if it has lost its
absolute majority, will have to rapidly prepare for municipal, regional and
European elections in May 2019.

And then further ahead, the party will be striving to re-take power from
the Socialists.

BSS/AFP/SSS/0857 hrs