Madrid Voters to Reward Sanchez Rival Who Kept the Economy Open
By
Rodrigo Orihuela, Alonso Soto, and Laura Millan Lombrana
4 Mayıs 2021 06:00 GMT+3
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Right-wing leader is on track to strengthen her hold
on power
·
Ayuso
has supported bars and restaurants throughout pandemic
Isabel
Diaz Ayuso
Photographer:
Oscar Gonzalez/NurPhoto/Getty Images
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In less than two years, Isabel Diaz Ayuso
has emerged from relative obscurity to lead Spain’s most important region and
become Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s most combative opponent.
On
Tuesday, the candidate from the conservative People’s Party will be seeking to
cement her control of Madrid’s regional government in a snap election that
highlights the dividing lines in Spanish politics. Ayuso, 42, is running under
the slogan “Communism
or Freedom” -- portraying herself as the defender of the rights of Madrilenos
against the overreaching national government, led by Sanchez’s Socialists.
The pitch is a reference to her determination to keep
the Spanish capital’s economy open as much as possible through successive waves
of the pandemic. The approach defied the consensus in the rest of Europe as
well as the mounting death toll. Madrid suffered a bigger jump in the number of
people dying last year than any other city in Europe and has seen the infection
rate climb in recent weeks, though it’s still way short of the problems in
Paris.
The final polls show that Ayuso is set to roughly
double the number of seats she controls in the regional assembly, though she’s
likely to fall short of an absolute majority.
With no major ballots on the horizon, Sanchez was
preparing for a period of relative calm in Spanish politics before Ayuso’s
March decision to trigger a vote. Instead of focusing on rebuilding the
country’s economy, he found himself dragged into the campaign in Madrid, with
Ayuso framing the fight as a personal battle between herself and the prime
minister.
Sanchez’s
minority coalition depends on a web of parliamentary alliances to pass
legislation and his political fortunes have been buoyed by the prospect of 70
billion euros ($84 billion) of European Union economic aid. While Madrid’s
regional election is unlikely to change the balance of power, it will serve as
an important test of strength in Spain’s most important political battleground.
Read More: The Rage Against Pedro Sanchez Is Tearing Spain Apart
Ayuso has set out her stall on defending the economy,
and the Spanish capital has largely remained open since the summer. During the
first two months of the year, Madrid’s bar and restaurant industry overtook the
tourist centers of Andalusia and Catalonia for the first time in both sales and
jobs, according to Juan Jose Blardony, head of the regional industry group.
Even so, a fifth of all establishments have closed during the pandemic.
Isabel Diaz
Ayuso attends a rally in Madrid, Spain on May 2.
Photographer: Pablo Blazquez
Dominguez/Getty Images
“The biggest help we received so far is being allowed
to stay open,” Blardony said. “When you are making a third of your normal
revenue and are heavily in debt, it’s only natural that you welcome less
restrictive lockdowns.”
Ayuso has managed to win over voters in Madrid despite
criticism of her handling of the pandemic from health-care professionals. Her
regional administration came under fire in particular for cutting the number of
people being tested for Covid-19. Critics said that decision lowered the
infection rate artificially because cases were going undetected -- a charge the
regional government denies.
“From a medical point of view we thought it was
wrong,” said Angela Hernandez, a surgeon who is also an official at medical
union AMYTS. “It prevents any chance of following epidemiological chains and
tracing contagion.”
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