Protestors occupy city squares in Spain after mass demonstrations Sunday

WSWS.ORG
20 May 2011

Giant venue: Puerta del Sol, Madrid

Tens of thousands of protestors are continuing to occupy Madrid’s Puerta del Sol and other major public squares in cities across Spain after last Sunday’s mass demonstrations against social cuts. In Madrid, these protests were held in defiance of a ban by local authorities.   Citizens’ committees reportedly have been set up to look after food supplies, coordinate protest actions and handle communications and legal matters during the occupations. Comments on Twitter and Facebook are drawing parallels between ongoing protests in Spain and the mass protests in Egypt, and particularly Tahrir Square in Cairo, that ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

Protestors are still occupying the Puerta del Sol in Madrid, as well as squares in other cities including Barcelona, Sevilla, and Bilbao.

On Sunday, more than 100,000 mostly young people joined demonstrations in various areas of the country last weekend under the slogan “Real Democracy Now! (Democracia Real Ya) – We are not commodities in the hands of politicians and bankers”. An estimated 50,000 protested in Madrid, 15,000 in Barcelona and 10,000 in Seville. Smaller demonstrations took place in another 57 cities and towns throughout Spain.

Protestors shouted slogans against politicians, official parties and bankers—also denouncing the cuts in education, health care and other public social services, and youth unemployment and precarious jobs. Banners were waved bearing slogans like “Make the guilty pay for the recession” and “The struggle is on the streets, not in parliament”.

The Madrid Electoral Board banned the demonstration in the capital ahead of Sunday’s municipal elections and elections in 13 of Spain’s 17 semi-autonomous regions, claiming there were “no special or serious reasons” for it to take place. A ban on other protests is also being considered by the Central Electoral Board. Riot police have been drafted into sidestreets in Madrid and are demanding people show their identity cards.

Spain already has high levels of poverty and is among the most socially unequal countries in Europe. The government introduced a €15 billion package of spending cuts, including 5 percent reductions in civil servants’ pay and pensions and raising the retirement age from 65 to 67 years. Reforms of the pension system and labour protection laws are also underway.

Wages have remained virtually stagnant for a decade, while unemployment has soared to 21.3 percent, the highest in the industrialised world, with the jobless rate for youth under the age of 25 reaching 43.5 percent. Recent reports show an unprecedented growth in households headed by unemployed breadwinners to almost 1 million and a similar number of families that have no income whatsoever.

The financial crisis shaking Spain drives the ruling class to further social cuts, to resolve its crisis on the backs of working people. In particular, the Socialist Workers Party government of José Luis Zapatero may apply for a bailout like those imposed on Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

The latest protests show that workers and youth struggling against austerity measures imposed by the Zapatero government have no confidence in the official party and union bureaucracies.

Demonstrations were organised via the social networks Facebook and Twitter by “Real Democracy Now”—led by a “Coordinating platform of groups in favour of mobilising the citizens”. It has a similar character to the Portuguese Geração à Rasca (The “Scraping-By Generation”), which mobilised hundreds of thousands of youth and families earlier this year.

The manifesto of Real Democracy Now declares: “We are ordinary people. We are like you: people, who get up every morning to study, work or find a job, people who have family and friends. People, who work hard every day to provide a better future for those around us.” The objectives of the movement are diffuse, talking of “inalienable truths”, criticising an economic system that “does not take care of rights” and “a political class that does not listen to us”. It calls for “an ethical revolution”.

At its centre is the claim that mass pressure will force the state and its institutions to reform. This is not, however, the lesson of recent experiences. When in March, the Portuguese Socialist government faced mass protests that it feared were escaping the control of the Socialist Party- and Communist Party-controlled unions, the bourgeoisie took pre-emptive action. It removed the minority Socialist government and applied for an international bailout.

The emergence of apparently spontaneous groups like Real Democracy Now, and the popular support they attract, testifies to the huge gulf between workers and the political establishment, including the social democratic, Stalinist and trade union organisations. At the same time, they are given great publicity in the media such as El PaísPúblico and others, as the perspective of protest politics does not pose a genuine threat to the financial oligarchy.

The struggle now unfolding in Spain must learn the lessons of other struggles, particularly in Greece, Portugal and Ireland and particularly the Arab countries—where the working class still faces the task of overthrowing dictatorial capitalist regimes backed by Western imperialism.

What is now required is for workers and young people to form independent organs of struggle. Rank-and-file strike committees, independent of the union apparatus in every workplace and neighbourhood, can mobilise the support of public and private sector workers, youth, the unemployed, pensioners and all those opposed to the attacks on social and democratic rights.

The most important issue is the question of leadership and perspective in the working class. Only on the basis of a conscious struggle based on a revolutionary programme will the working class be able to fight back.

***

The World Socialist Web Site interviewed demonstrators in Barcelona, where the regional government under the right-wing Convergència I Unió is imposing budget cuts of 10 percent, the worst being in education and health care. The last demonstrations against the cuts were held in April, when more than 20,000 workers marched through the central streets of Barcelona.

Ines and Isabel are two nurses working in Bellvitge Hospital, Barcelona. Ines said, “We are here because we are against the cuts, against an exploiting social system. The banks are robbing and destroying us”.

Isabel stated, “We want that the politicians listen to us and defend our interests, not the interests of the banks, and the only thing the trade unions do is do deals behind our backs with the government”.

Asked how this economic crisis affects them, Ines explained, “I have a son who has a university career, philosophy, but he works in precarious jobs, if he is lucky! I am also having difficulties with the cuts in salaries and now they are talking about privatising the health system.”

Luis and Diana, two high school students, said that they attended the demonstration to demand work. “I have family that has been over two years unemployed. My father is a self-employed worker, meaning he is working lots more hours, earning less than before,” said Diana.

Luis was in favour of the objectives of the demonstration, stating that we are here “to struggle against the job insecurity, precarious jobs, the cuts, and to point to those responsible for the crisis: the banks.”

Asked about the role of the unions in the crisis, Diana said that “before they use to be, to some extent, responsive to workers, but now they defend the state. How are they going to defend us if they receive such huge subsidies from the state?”

Marta, aged 31, currently unemployed, said, “I am sick of so many robbers; they are making us responsible for their crisis. Cuts in health care, education and social services, this is the capitalist crisis; they rob the poor to give to the rich.”

“I am here to make it clear that I am not going to stand still while they take our rights and impose cuts,” she continued.

Mali, currently unemployed, and Badara, who is also unemployed and studying Catalan and Spanish, are “illegal” workers, originally from Senegal. Badara explained, “We are here to struggle for our rights. We are the worst off. They search us out, carry out raids and accuse of us of being responsible for the crisis.”

Asked about the objectives of the demonstration, Badara replied, “Social injustices, cuts in salaries…there is a common root of the problem and that is the politicians and the banks. The people have the right to have a guaranteed future.”

Mali said, “We are an association of illegal immigrants who are trying to defend our rights. The people accuse us of being responsible for this crisis. I have been a year without a job.”

BONUS FEATURE

Protests Gathering Momentum in Advance of Spanish Elections

May 20, 2011 By Amanda Payne

The people of Spain are coming out into the streets in their thousands to voice their dissatisfaction with the economy, corruption and unemployment.

Spain goes to the polls on Sunday 22 May 2011 to vote for local and regional government representatives but despite the election posters, cars driving round the streets with mega-phones blaring out party slogans and millions of leaflets being pressed into the hands of passersby, one movement in particular is really making its voice heard. Starting last Sunday, 15 May 2011, a group of mainly young people under the title “Democracia Real Ya” (Real Democracy Now) or ‘Movimiento 15-M” (15 May Movement) began a series of protests in cities across Spain, but mainly focused on the capital, Madrid.

Social Media Helps Organisation Of Protests

The group set up camp in the famous Puerto del Sol square in the city, where they would more normally gather for New Year’s Eve celebrations. Other camp sites have now spread across the country and even abroad with protests in front of embassies in London, Berlin and Amsterdam already in place and a demonstration planned for Saturday 21 May 2011 in New York’s Washington Square Park. As with the so-called ‘Arab Spring’ uprisings, which have helped inspire the people of Spain, especially the young to stand up and be counted, the demonstrations have been organised through social media outlets such as Facebook and Twitter.

The group are protesting over their loss of faith in the main political parties, who they feel no longer represent their interests; the ever increasing rate of unemployment which is especially high amongst young people (currently 42% for 18 – 24 year olds) and corruption which many people feel is rife throughout Spanish mainstream politics, amongst other things.

Corruption, Unemployment And Loss Of Faith In Political Parties

El Pais newspaper, in an article written by Soledad Alcaide, quotes some of the protestors and their reasons for joining the movement. “There were people represented there who had never bothered with politics until now,” explains Javier de la Cueva, a 48-year-old lawyer specializing on internet issues” and “Fabio Gándara, the spokesman for Democracia Real Ya, said that the goal of the protest was to bring together the entire civil society. “It is time to leave all ideologies and specific interests aside, and focus on the things that make us angry,” says this 26-year-old unemployed lawyer who is studying to be a civil servant. “What we’re denouncing is the lack of real democracy and the tendency toward a two-party system where corruption at all levels is simply scandalous. These issues bring a large group of people together.”

In fact, far from it being just a group of young people causing trouble, people of all ages and standing in life are coming out to join the protests, especially since an attempt was made on the night of Wednesday to ban the campsite and clear the Puerto de Sol square. However, nobody was moved. According to El Pais, the Central Election board has declared a ban on protests planned for Saturday 21 May 2011, traditionally a ‘day of reflection’ when no electioneering is allowed and on election day itself but on Friday 20 May 2011, ministers in the Spanish government called on the Security Forces not to use violence to clear the protestors if they refuse to move, which at this point, seems very likely .

It would seem that the people of Spain, living in a country whose economy is on its knees and which has been rocked by corruption scandals in recent years, have decided that the time has come for their voices to be heard and rather than put their faith in the ballot box, have decided to come out onto the streets of the cities and towns to let their government know exactly how they feel.

Copyright Amanda Payne, whom we thank for penning this helpful independent report.

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