Wednesday 25 May 2022

Business over Tapas Nº 447

Business over Tapas

A digest of this week's Spanish financial, political and social news aimed primarily at Foreign Property Owners:

Prepared by Lenox Napier.  Consultant: José Antonio Sierra

For subscriptions and other information about this site, go to businessovertapas.com

email:  lenox@businessovertapas.com

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Note: Underlined words or phrases are links to the Internet.

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Subscription and e-mail information in our archives is never released to third parties.

 

 

May 26 2022            Nº 447

 

 

 

 

Editorial:

 

It’s a subject that one would prefer to shy away from, but the Old King, Juan Carlos I of España, was briefly in his erstwhile kingdom over the past weekend. He had flown in to Vigo airport in a horribly expensive chartered jet. It was his first visit to Spain in 21 months.

He was generally given a rapturous welcome (the local daily gave him the first nine pages), and certainly so by the good folk of Sanxenxo (Pontevedra) where he went to the Club Náutico to join the regatta for the weekend. One fondly imagines that he ate mountains of caviar and drank the best champagne, but no one seems to think that such behaviour, far removed from the experience of most of his ex-subjects, was in any way inappropriate for the occasion.

And, after all, he had been in exile in Abu Dhabi for a couple of years, no doubt quietly drinking tea, weeding his garden and reading favoured bits from The Old Testament.

The journalists finally caught up with the Emeritus, and as he was setting off to Madrid on Sunday one of them thrust a microphone under the Royal nose and asked Juan Carlos what explanations he would be giving to his son. ‘About what?’ said the ex-king, as he wound up the window with a laugh.

On Monday, attention moved to the Royal Palace for what must have been a slightly frosty interview with his son – the first time they had been together in two years – followed by a luncheon (his wife Queen Sofía, just back from Miami, has tested positive for Covid and regretfully missed the meal, while Queen Letitia also decided against joining the family reunion) and then a trip to the airport with one small overnight bag (just kidding).

No press release has been issued about what went on behind the closed palace doors.

How the brief visit played with the population is down to which news-source one prefers – with everything from a clutch of flag-waving Spaniards outside the Royal Palace shouting ‘¡Viva el rey!’ on the one hand; to Alberto Garzón, the truculent leader of the Izquierda Unida, telling jounalists that ‘everyone in Spain knows he’s a crook’.

The New York Times is quoted in the Spanish media as making the point that Juan Carlos’ actions are certainly complicating the reign of Felipe VI.

Then there’s the suggestion that the Emeritus will soon be returning to Spain for another refreshing dalliance.

But, let us leave the last word with El Gran Wyoming, who has written a song to celebrate the fleeting Royal Visit.

...

Housing:

‘British buyers snap up 20,000 homes in Spain in three months. In the Balearics 35 percent of sales are to non-Spaniards’. Headline from the Majorca Daily Bulletin here. The article begins: ‘British property buyers went on to a major buying spree in Spain during the first three months of this year, snapping up almost 20,000 homes, according to figures released last week…’ Spanish Property Insight has a similar title: ‘Foreign demand starts 2022 with strong growth’. The article brings some interesting charts of the different nationalities and ends with the remark that: ‘Whichever figures you look at, the story is the same – foreign investors are piling into Spanish property like they haven’t done since the real estate bubble year of 2007’.

From iNews here (paywall removed), we read the opposite. ‘Brexit barriers leave British communities in Spain fading away as expats put off by huge visa costs’. The article – which claims 407,000 Brits as living in Spain – says that, with some post-Brexit issues to deal with, ‘British expats find themselves grappling with a new, and in most cases, unwelcome new world’.

Helicopters are just one of the aids used by the catastro people to find our spare buildings, swimming pools and sheds. From El Confidencial here: ‘Hacienda has detected in the Region of Madrid more than 11,500 undeclared pools in its latest analysis’. It also recorded 100,000 new constructions, extensions and other buildings in the region. Even glassing in one’s terrace is a change in the structure of a dwelling, and must, of course, be reported. Understandably, it rarely is. The changes in the size of one’s built area naturally leads to increases in the annual property tax, the IBI.

Idealista News has a peculiar idea: ‘If you are tired of your home and are thinking of moving, you would be forgiven for thinking that the only option is selling your house in order to buy or rent another one. However, there's another option! House swaps are on the rise in Spain, meaning you can get your hands on another property, in most cases without any money even changing hands…’ They even list some homes where the owners want to trade away from (one can’t help but guess that there must be a hidden problem…).

Idealista is a go-to site for buying/selling property. We typed in ‘cheap home in Andalucía’, and found several houses at six thousand euros or less…).

...

Finance:

There hasn’t been a great resignation of jobs, just a refusal to work for peanuts, says eldiario.es here, which claims that there are around 109,000 jobs out there that no one wants. El Mundo says that The Ministry of Labour recommends that businesses should pay their staff more if they don’t want to lose those who work long hours – like waiters and bar-staff. Directo al Paladar explains the issue here: from the bar and restaurant-owners: we wish we could pay more. From the staff: huh, they need slaves, not staff. An owner says on a TV show, quoted at 20Minutos – ‘In this business, a half day work means twelve hours’.

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Politics:

The polls are back again – in the event of an election today, who would you vote for? The main CIS poll gives the PSOE a small lead of 30.3%, the PP catching up with 28.7% and Vox at 16.6%. The DYM poll has the PP ahead with 28.4%, the PSOE following at 26.3% and Vox at 16%. The Simple Lógica survey gives the PP a three point lead: PP at 29.2%, the PSOE at 25.7% and Vox at 18.3%. This last survey also shows the popularity of the different political leaders – with a veritable gulf between Yolanda Díaz and Ione Belarra – the two leaders of the far-left.

Madrid’s Isabel Ayuso is still looking for the top job within the PP says elDiario.es here. The Party Congress this past weekend was ‘an enthronement of the new president of the PP in Madrid’ and, to help this along, says El Huff Post here, the celebration removed all memory and mention of Pablo Casado.

Alberto Nuñez Feijóo himself is aware of his party’s rise in the polls and is seeking the centre-ground says ECD here. The president of the PP says that his party will not return to the debate against the right to an abortion, so as not to play into the hands of Vox. (ECD readers are 84% horrified).

Yolanda Díaz already has a party-brand with which to begin to gather support in the process that will begin after the Andalusian elections says elDiario.es here. It’ll be called Sumar.  

...

Andalucía Elections June 19:

La Vanguardia (paywall) says The collapse of the left in 2018 and the forecasts of the polls predict a solid conservative majority on June 19’. elDiario.es says that ‘The PSOE must fight to regain the support of its traditional electorate in Andalucía in a campaign which the party realistically has few expectations of winning’.

The candidate for the Vox party is Magdalena Olona. Ms Olona is normally a deputy in Madrid – she comes from Alicante – but she will now stand down in the Cortes to run and work out of Seville. There was some bureaucratic fuss over her recent empadronamiento in Salobreña (Granada) as she doesn’t live there, indeed the town hall gave her warning last week, but the Electoral Board ruled on Monday that there was nothing improper and that her candidature stands. The Vox candidate promptly sued the mayoress of Salobreña for ‘the crimes of administrative and electoral prevarication’. An article at ECD here enthuses about the chances of Ms Olona becoming president of Andalucía (colour that unlikely).

...

Catalonia:

‘The Court of Justice of the European Union has provisionally restored the parliamentary immunity of Catalan pro-independence MEPs Carles Puigdemont, Antoni Comín, and Clara Ponsatí’. Found at Catalan News here.

‘The Spanish Supreme Court has reversed its decision to uphold the pardons for the formerly jailed independence leaders. On Tuesday, the tribunal voted in favour of allowing the appeals against the pardons to go ahead. The decision happened after a change in the composition of the court. The court revoked the ruling from January 2022, with the vote of three judges against two...’ From Catalan News here. (!)

…...

Europe:

‘President Sánchez affirms that Finland and Sweden will be at the NATO summit in Madrid’. El Huff Post says that ‘The President of the Government indicates at the Davos Economic Forum that Spain will accelerate the accession process of both countries’. Spain is to host the next NATO summit in late June.

The European pig population, by country.

...

Corruption:

The Spanish cesspit activities – as the secret activities of the Rajoy Government are known – included the activities of the ex-national police commissioner José Manuel Villarejo who acted as an enforcer. From El Confidencial here: ‘Speaking on TV3, Villarejo admits that he carried out "absolutely illegal" actions to stop the Catalonian independence process, and he affirms that he would do so again’. Catalan News also reports the story here, saying ‘…that Spain plotted fake news reports to discredit the independence movement just before an election in Catalonia’.

...

Courts:

‘The ‘trade-union’ Manos Limpias (wiki) denounces Alberto Garzón before the Supreme Court for calling Juan Carlos I an "accredited criminal" and a "thief"’. EuropaPress has the story here.

...

Media:

Much is being written about Pedro Sánchez referring in the Cortes to the national police in Catalonia as ‘piolines’. The joke (?) comes from the previous national government barracking the police during the independence troubles of 2017 in a gigantic Snoopy and Donald Duck cruise-ship moored in Barcelona harbour. Un piolín is a Tweety-bird from Looney Tunes. Maldita looks at the issue here.

While the old folk watch up to six hours a day of television, those between the ages of 13 and 24 manage on just over an hour average says VozPópuli here.

The monthly collection of fake news items (‘bulos’ in Spanish) from the far-right media, as always collected by Al Descubierto here. They are usually about Muslim attacks against the Spanish police, or the neighbours, or foreign rapists and other evildoers, often found in OKDiario, EsDiario or Libertad Digital and often invented for our reading pleasure. Other subjects touched on in April include banning beer and wine from the menu del día (a bulo originated in El Español) and many others of an overtly political nature.

...

Ecology:

The thermometers have fallen at last, as The Guardian writes of ‘Temperatures in parts of Spain reached the highest on record for May’. There’s still the summer ahead of us! elDiario.es says: ‘Record heat: two out of three provinces registered maximums up to 17 degrees above normal in the May heat-wave. The spike from last week, an extreme phenomenon that will be increasingly common due to climate change, has left unprecedented temperatures in seven provinces’ (our province, Almería, last Thursday recorded a peak of 34.7ºC, that’s 10.6ºC higher than the May average since 1960).

‘The mayor of Barcelona Ada Colau has sent letters to the Government, the Ministry of Transport and to the Port of Barcelona to address the limitation of cruise-ships. She describes the situation as "totally unsustainable" due to the daily arrival of large ships and summons the three competent administrations to create a working group to agree on a limit’ says elDiario.es here.

...

Various:

Two stories from the remarkable San Diego Union-Tribune: ‘Spanish govt chides ex-king for failure to explain conduct’ and ‘Spain’s former king mulls second visit amid swirling debate’. Here and here.

‘The president of the Community of Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, criticized this Tuesday the "humiliating treatment" that the King Emeritus, Juan Carlos I, received during his visit to Spain after two years away, with the "complicit and cowardly silence " of the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez’. Item from 20Minutos here.

The Headline of the Week must be ‘Spain appeals to British tourists to make up for a lack of Russian visitors’ says Andalucia Today here. Enjoy.

There are so many structures on the pavement now – including the extra space allowed for bars and restaurants – that local residents are getting steamed up about it. El País in an opinion piece looks at ‘The City against its Inhabitants’ here.  

Oddly, football clubs are allowed to build up a massive debt without much fuss. elDiario.es says that first and second division clubs owe the banks and other lenders a total of 2,328 million euros.

Funds from the EU for the Mediterranean Corridor seem to be ending up in routes that pass through Madrid. From Valencia Plaza here: ‘With an invertebrate country, in which the train from Valencia to Alicante takes longer than the one to Madrid, the State continues to prioritize central connections over those on the coast, even using the European funds allocated for the Mediterranean Corridor…’

This is an interesting video (in English) on YouTube about the ‘empty part of Spain’. The pronunciation of Spanish names is a bit dodgy, but no doubt somebody else wrote the script. It’s worth a watch!

Around 100 of William Turner's evocative and romantic landscapes are on show at the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya through September 11. More (in English) here. Over at El Español, there’s a fuller article on the subject, with several photographs of the artist’s work (tastefully decorated with McDonald’s and other adverts).

...

See Spain:

Satisfaction as The Times chooses Agulo, in La Gomera, as Spain’s most beautiful pueblo.

From The Guardian here: ‘Bandits, beaches and Roman baths – Andalucía’s wild side’. You’ll need a car (or a sturdy bicycle) for these…

A blog called BBQBoy brings the reader to Jaén here.

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Letters:

Cowboys in Almería

Sounds like fun. Never met Lenox. Lots of Brits around Mojácar.

My first jobs in Spain was galloping around the Tabernas area in Almeria westerns. I rarely knew the titles but they were for the most part Italian or Spanish productions. Back to back productions, my agent told me which bus to get on at the break of dawn and on the set you would be given a horse, a saddle and a bocadillo. Except for the bocadillo you had to return the horse and saddle at the end of the day and in return you were given a thousand or so pesetas according to whether you had a line of dialogue or not. All the same, sound and dialogue was usually done in post-production.

Since I was usually the only rider who looked vaguely like a cowboy, the rest were gypsies, on most occasions I got to say the dialogue. Normally something like "Let´s go boys” before galloping off in a cloud of dust. Always very scary for me because up until then, I had only ridden lazy Alabama plough-horses. The movie horses were most often very nervous and damaged horses from the bullfight world.

The gypsies had to ride as Indians in the afternoon. Mostly naked and bareback. Thanks to the colour of my skin, I was spared that.

The westerns were so bad, the cowboy thing didn´t last long, the Clint Eastwood films were the notable exception. But there was always some major production going on down there. World class actors sitting around the terraces in the afternoon. From Yul Brynner, Sean Connery to Bridget Bardot and Raquel Welsh. I think about just about everybody who worked in films showed up in Almería at one time or the other in the 60s. Now they go to Morocco or Tunisia.

B-

 

Funeral plans

Hi Lenox,

As a retired financial adviser (working in Spain) I was acutely aware of some of the “dubious claims” made by a number of funeral plan companies! In particular they would offer a level of service (for sake of argument let’s call them Gold, Silver, Bronze) and you would pay a fixed sum / monthly premium commensurate with the service level you selected. So far, so good!!

Now this is where things start to get interesting, as you have agreed (& paid) a price for a service, that you hope won’t be needed for some while in the future. How do you know that what you invested say 10, 15, 20 years before, will be sufficient to provide the level of service you bought and paid for?

The answer is of course they can’t! Sadly, there are some funeral plan businesses who effectively lie to their clients, by telling them that their money is invested with guaranteed returns! There is no such thing! Indeed a BBC Radio 4 “Moneybox” investigation a few years back highlighted some of the very questionable sales tactics used by some funeral plan companies!

Sadly, I lost my wife in 2019. I used the local tanatario, who provided an excellent service. It was significantly less expensive than the plan I was offered (some years before) by a local funeral plan company, and the procedure nowhere near as complex as their “scare” tactics would have you believe!

All I would say to anyone taking out a funeral plan:

Caveat emptor”!!!

Brian

...

Finally:

Los Celtas Cortos is a terrific group. They stepped out of character for this one from 1990. Odín on YouTube here. Loud, please!

 

Wednesday 18 May 2022

Business over Tapas Nº 446

 

Business over Tapas

A digest of this week's Spanish financial, political and social news aimed primarily at Foreign Property Owners:

Prepared by Lenox Napier.  Consultant: José Antonio Sierra

For subscriptions and other information about this site, go to businessovertapas.com

email:  lenox@businessovertapas.com

***Now with Facebook Page (Like!)***

Note: Underlined words or phrases are links to the Internet.

Business over Tapas and its writers are not responsible for unauthorised copying or other improper use of this material.

Subscription and e-mail information in our archives is never released to third parties.

 

 

May 19 2022            Nº 446

 


Essay:

When I think of my province – Almería – I don’t bring to mind flamenco dancers eating enormous plates of paella after an enjoyable afternoon at the bullfight explaining the minutiae of the spectacle to aghast tourists.

Hideous plastic farms aside (and I live completely surrounded by them), I’m gonna go along with the cowboys.

I learned my Spanish from going twice-weekly to the old pipa-theatre, the summer cinema open to the stars (late-showings only) and began with ‘hands up’ and rapidly progressed to ‘die, you dirty dog’ – useful on so many occasions, and especially now, with the Russian army due to arrive later this week on the twelve noon from Numa.

The old pipa-theatres were so called, because you ate a twist of sun-flower seeds noisily from your wobbly wooden chair, which could be picked up and turned around to make it easier to chat more comfortably with one’s neighbours during the slow boring bits. In the winter, one went to the enclosed cinema next door. The chairs were fastened to the floor, but you could still smoke.

Or chat with your pals if things got dull.

Of course, with a good cowboy film, shot locally and with an Italian, German or Spanish director, there weren’t many boring bits to be sure.

Barbara my Californian wife would say, oh look, those aren’t American horses, those are PREs (which is horsey-folk slang for Spanish nags) as the rest of us wondered how a German director could get an Italian actor to say ‘Hands Up!’ in Spanish.

The gigantic speakers, plus the simple story line (Die, you dog!) made it easy to both follow the plot and also to pick up some vocab.  Even today, I like my movies loud.

The movies were shot in Almería back in the golden years of society’s regular visits to the cinema. Before colour TV and videos came along.

The desert scenes of Tabernas were considered just the job for a good shoot-out and the extras came cheap enough. Sergio Leone and others like him managed to take an American original (we were all brought up on cowboys and indians, stamped with the heavy American morals of the times) and improve upon it. Cut the chat, they figured correctly, and shoot somebody. Leone brought the camera close to the actor’s face and we could see the twitch in the eyes just before the guns blazed. The astonishing Ennio Morricone provided the music.

At 15 pesetas for a cracking good evening, with a beer or a soft drink for another ten, hold the pipas, it was blissful.

Tabernas today, a half century on, has several cowboy towns – or film-sets – open to the public. The largest is the Mini Hollywood now called Oasys with a museum with film posters of Anthony Steffen, Giuliano Gemma, Bud Spencer, Terence Hill (all Italians), Clint Eastwood, Lee van Cleef, Dan van Husen (who came to my 21st birthday party in Mojácar), Klaus Kinski and so many more. There’s a collection of old film-projectors, a zoo (for some reason), a bar with lots of character actors wandering around shooting each other as we complacently drink a beer and many other attractions besides.

They even lend you a cowboy hat and a revolver and take a picture of you looking either mean or else bemused (or in my case, mildly sun-stroked and drunk).

By the mid-seventies, the film-makers had moved on, as the local agents got increasingly greedy, and they began to make cowboy flicks in Yugoslavia or Morocco (‘that’s an Arab horse’ says Barbara derisively).

Nowadays, Tabernas gets a few adverts shot there and maybe a Spanish director will make a rare cowboy film (Pedro Almodóvar is filming one at present), and my old mate Eduardo, who has made his career by getting shot and dramatically falling off a galloping horse, will likely make a brief appearance in the second reel.

 

The history of the Spanish cowboy films at Valencia Plaza here explains how the local industry fell to pieces.

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Housing:

‘The market for prefabricated houses in Spain is on the up, and every day more and more companies are joining in on the sale of this type of housing. Thanks to their numerous advantages, prefab and modular houses are an increasingly popular solution in the real estate market in Spain. Some come fully assembled, others arrive in modules and it is up to the client to finish assembling them in their location of choice…’ Story at Idealista here.

Karethe brings us ‘The arduous and joyful task of restoring a village ruin’ at Eye on Spain here.

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Tourism:

From elDiario.es here: ‘The immense return of tourists to Barcelona puts residents on alert: "We have learned nothing from the pandemic". The return of the massive press of visitors reopens once again the debate on the city model after two years in which public spaces were recovered by the people of Barcelona’.

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Finance:

Some good news from The San Diego Union-Tribune here, ‘Spain and Portugal sign off on plans to temper energy prices’. It says that ‘…Spain and Portugal joined forces earlier this year to ask the European Union’s executive arm to allow them to skirt the bloc’s common-market rules. Citing the large amounts of renewable energy used in both countries and their scant connections with the European power grid, the European Commission has now agreed to allow a price cap on gas used for power generation, averaging around 50 euros per megawatt-hour for the next 12 months…’ From El Confidencial here. ‘The regulated electricity bill, to which more than 10 million households are covered, will experience relief thanks to the cap on the price of gas used in generating electricity. But this will not come into force until at least June 2 and it is not known how many euros of savings it will mean for the pockets of consumers. The news agency EFE says: ‘The Government approves the mechanism that will lower the electricity bill by 40% from June’. "Homes and companies will see their electricity bill reduced from the next receipt", promised the President of the Executive Pedro Sánchez in a tweet says the article.

‘The Emir of Qatar announces an investment of 5,000 million dollars in Spain in the coming years’. Sheik Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani spoke of his "profound friendship" with Spain at a dinner held in his honour at the Palace of the Zarzuela in Madrid says El Huff Post here.  

...

Politics:

ECD says that the days of Unidas Podemos are drawing to a close as the IU leader Alberto Garzón is breaking with Podemos (the loss of that party in the far-left coalition in Andalucía, says the news-site, was not a mistake) and instead is moving towards bringing Más País (Iñigo Errejón’s party) into the fold. The thinking behind this is to give Yolanda Díaz a fully-supportive platform for her project (to be revealed later this summer).

...

Andalucía Elections June 19:

The Andalusian pre-campaign is warming up. Juanma Moreno, the president of the Junta de Andalucía and once again PP candidate is playing down the PP badge in favour of his own product. He’s even using green instead of blue in his party posters. Juan Manuel Moreno Bonilla (‘Call me Juanma’) is an able politician and knows to keep the Partido Popular apparatus at a cosmetic distance. While Moreno is a moderate, the elephant in the room and his likely partner, the Vox, most certainly isn’t.

Pedro Sánchez has been campaigning in Andalucía (as time permits) with the message – it’s either us, or it’s the PP/Vox says El Confidencial here.  

From El Huff Post here, ‘The former mayor of Seville and now PSOE candidate for president Juan Espadas has an obsession: to mobilize the progressive electorate. This was one of the keys to the election disaster of four years ago, when around 400,000 party supporters stayed home. It was a major defeat for the then candidate Susana Díaz…’

From El Independiente here: ‘The polls foresee the victory of Vox in almost seventy towns, most of them located along the Mediterranean coast. They share three common aspects: they are tourist areas, with high unemployment rates and with frequent flows of irregular immigration’ (that’s to say: lots of foreigners). From EPE here: ‘Vox falsifies official data to stir up fear of immigration in Andalucía. The Vox leader Santiago Abascal backs the 'anti-immigration' groups within the EU to incite in his Andalusian stronghold, Almería, the idea that immigrants increase crime and will bring about the end of the Welfare State’.

...

Catalonia:

The BlintWhat’s on in English in Barcelona. Mainly comedy acts by the look of things.

Barcelona 2030, Europe’s digital capital. Digital city model must facilitate teleworking, training and e-health, bring new thinking to the mobility of people, the use of buildings and city centres, and have an attractive, digitized commercial offer’. A puff from Politico here.

…...

Europe:

From Brilliant Maps here: ‘The Percentage of People that think their Country has benefited from being in the EU’. All of them, really, except for the little grey one centre-left on the picture.

Like many other countries, Spain has generously given military equipment to The Ukraine, however some of it is raising eyebrows says The Objective here. Recent supplies sent to the beleaguered country include a generous stock of winter boots (it’s springtime in the East) and six million 7.62mm cartridges. 

From Schengen Visa here: ‘The 90/180 days rule – Calculate Your Legal Short-Stay Days in Schengen Area – Visa Calculator’.

...

Health:

From EuroNews here: ‘Spain approves plans to become the first European country to introduce paid menstrual leave'. Indeed, there is still some fuss about this rule and it won’t be signed into law for some months yet.

...

Corruption:

CadenaSer Radio has some recordings, published this week by El País, of a senior member of Mariano Rajoy’s government – the erstwhile General Secretary of the PP Dolores de Cospedal – talking to the disgraced ex-commissioner José Manuel Villarejo (wiki) about how to smother the Barcenas information (the double accounting system) on corruption and extra-payments to high-ranking members of the party. It’s not that much of this wasn’t already known – as that here are the tapes. The recordings come from January 2013, before the whole Operación Kitchen thing that ended in the fall of the Rajoy government had even begun. There’s more on the story at La República here.

...

Courts:

The PP has bought off a few judges along the way, says Público here, as they focus on one particular example.  

...

Media:

20Minutos is the news-site with the most single visitors in April, followed by El País then El Mundo, La Vanguardia and so on. Well done, them. It doesn’t have a paywall, mind…

...

Ecology:

‘Germany supports Spain to achieve a large solar module plant’ says El Economista here, adding ‘It will require an investment of 1,000 million euros if it gets the green-light from the EU’. The plan is for a gigafactory to assemble solar panels (currently, most of them are made outside Europe).

We are apparently in an age of extinction. EFE: Verde brings us twelve Spanish birds which have either totally disappeared or regionally so in the last 500 years.

Barcelona can claim the award for the European port with the most pollution suffered from the visits by cruise ships says La Vanguardia here. Palma de Mallorca is second.

From EcoAndalucía, a short video on YouTube here: ‘Environmentalists publicly denounce that several urban projects, with the support of the Tarifa City Council, once again threaten the virgin coastline of Tarifa (Cádiz), one of the most famous in Europe, located between two seas and two continents. Urban speculation seems to have no limits...’

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The Weather:

‘Andalucía prepares for “earliest heat wave” since records began in Spain. Unusually high temperatures are forecast throughout the region in the coming days, with four provinces already on alert for sweltering heat this Thursday’. Sur in English reporting here. From Xataca, we read that ‘May is turning into the first month of summer: this week's heat wave is just a warning of things to come’.

...

Various:

Facua, the consumers’ organisation, claims that anyone using gas at home could be paying a huge mark-up. They say that ‘…the free gas rate is almost three times more expensive than the regulated one. Facua has checked the offers from Endesa, Naturgy, Iberdrola, Repsol, CHC Energía and Total Energies and found them to be anything up to 175% more expensive than the TUR rate’ (here). Iberdrola, says the article at El Independiente here, is the most expensive.

‘Castilla y León is to resurrect the failed City of the Environment of Soria after 130 million euros spent and twenty years passed. The regional government wants to finish the Garray Business Park that was left uncompleted after the crisis and various court rulings with an injection of another 28 million euros’ says elDiario.es here.

The US Department of State has removed ETA from its list of terrorist organisations. The terror group committed its last atrocity in 2010 and is now extinct. We hope. El Mundo reports here. 

A little-known fact, says VozPópuli here, is that politicians don’t pay the same rate of tax as the rest of us. National politicians down to mayors and local councillors all get fiscal advantages which rise in the higher echelons of politics to a discount of 40%.

Juan Carlos I, The Emeritus, will return to Spain this weekend says El Confidencial. No word if he is staying any longerMeanwhile, Doña Sofia finds that she has an engagement at the same time in Miami.

A private – and valueless (?) – survey of 81,600 people who volunteered their opinion on whether they preferred a monarchy or a republic was held this past weekend in various cities  by the La Plataforma Consulta Popular Monarquía o República. We imagine a table on the pavement with a couple of pollsters, although there were in fact some 724 points across Spain. The result:  the republic pulled 93%. In reality, the chances of such a choice being put to a referendum – a bit like hanging in the UK – is highly improbable.

Apparently, there’s a nefarious plan to turn we white folk into a minority. It’s called the Great Replacement Theory. We saw this in action in Buffalo NY earlier this week. There’s even a Fox News host who promotes this stuff. Anyhoo, here in Spain, we have the Vox party which appears to share the same opinion and, we read, their leader Santiago Abascal came out with this in a recent campaign meeting in Almería: “More and more Spaniards and Europeans are feeling themselves strangers in their traditional neighbourhoods, and a sense of bewilderment and dispossession is spreading, of loss of control of their own lives”. It’s so handy for the Voxxers that the foreigners – whether wealthy European expats or the miserable North African farmworkers – can’t vote. The Vox candidate for the Andalusian elections is Macarena Olona, who has this to say "Never in Spain has a woman or a homosexual walked through our streets with as much risk as today". InfoLibre also follows the story: ‘Vox stands alone in Congress warning of a delirious plan by Brussels to end the white race as we know it’. The article says that conspiracy theories (the more sinister the better) work well for the extreme right.

Vox has an agency called the Fundación Disenso which pumps out their racist line here. Views which are contested by Stop Rumores here.

Well, I made the Big Time in the iNews (only, they spelt my name wrong). An article (paywall removed) about the issue of the Brits driving in Spain and also the exciting new development of ol’ time Brit expats now being able to vote in the UK. Their alarming title: ‘Britons in Spain face life without cars or family care after failure of post-Brexit talks’.

From the AUAN: It is with great sadness that we report the passing of Len Prior on Wednesday 11th May 2022.

Len’s determination, resilience, good humour and sheer bloody mindedness allowed him to rise above the rubble of his demolished home in Vera to take on a faceless administration in the pursuit of justice. He was a source of inspiration and support for this association and its members and a real catalyst for change. The homeowners of Andalucía owe him a debt of gratitude that can never be repaid. May he rest in peace.

Sincere condolences to his wife Helen and to his family who request privacy at this time.

The Olive Press remembers Len Prior here.

Pegasus spyware with the irreverent Miguel Charisteas on YouTube here. Heh!

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Finally:

Lole y Manuel introduced a new kind of flamenco fifty years ago. Here they are on YouTube with Todo es de color.