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Spain Protests: Nationwide Strike Against Austerity

Spain Protests Strike

DANIEL WOOLLS and CIARAN GILES   03/29/12 05:16 PM ET  AP

MADRID — Spanish workers enraged by austerity-driven labor reforms to prevent the nation from becoming Europe's next bailout victim slowed down the country's economy in a general strike Thursday, closing factories and clashing with police as the new-center right government tried to convince investors the nation isn't headed for a financial meltdown.

Tens of thousands held protest marches in Madrid and other cities, and the demonstrations turned violent in Spain's second largest city of Barcelona, where hooded protesters smashed bank and storefront windows with hammers and rocks and set fire to streetside trash containers.

Traffic was slowed in northeastern Valencia when demonstrators lit mattresses ablaze on a highway, and a Molotov cocktail was hurled at a police car in the eastern city of Murcia. Authorities arrested 176 protesters across Spain and said 104 people were injured in clashes, including 58 police officers. There were no immediate reports of serious injures.

The protests came a day before Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's administration is expected to announce about (EURO)30 billion ($40 billion) in spending cuts and tax hikes to ease increasing fears about Spain's budget deficit. European leaders insist drastic cuts must be made this year even though reductions in government spending are almost sure to boost the unemployment rate of nearly 23 percent, the highest among the 17 nations that use the euro.

The labor reforms make it less costly for Spanish businesses to fire workers, and give them incentives for hiring – but protesters said they are being forced to give up rights they earned decades ago.

"Why wouldn't I protest?" asked textile worker Jose Jimenez, 60, from the Madrid protest. "I've spent 45 years working for the same company and now they can get rid of me almost for free."

Others said the reforms put in place by Rajoy in February after his conservative Popular Party ousted the governing Socialists in November will only boost the profits of companies and banks.

"Workers are losing all their rights, and the benefits will go only to the banks and the businesses," 57-year-old bus driver Fidel Martin said.

Labor unions said millions of Spaniards in the nation of 47 million stayed away from work to protest, and the strike caused transportation delays and prompted Spain's government-run national health care system to significantly reduce services except for emergency cases. Workers at car factories that assemble vehicles for Renault SA, SEAT SA, Volkswagen AG and Ford Motor Co. largely stayed home, and services at mining and port facilities were also severely limited, union leaders said.

But many other businesses remained open, and Rajoy's government claimed the strike didn't have its intended impact because Spanish electrical consumption dropped only 16.3 percent, not as much as the 16.9 percent reduction when the country's last general strike was held in 2010 when the Socialists were in charge.

Union leaders demanded a "gesture" from the government to scale back the reforms, warning they could cause more unrest starting in May. Members of Rajoy's administration said they are willing to talk with union leaders, but won't issue concessions.

"There is no stopping on the path to reform," Labor Minister Fatima Banez said.

The cuts expected Friday are designed to lower the national deficit to within European Union limits and reassure jittery international investors who determine the country's borrowing costs in debt markets – and could well determine whether Spain will follow Greece, Ireland and Portugal in needing a bailout.

Spain's benchmark borrowing rate – the yield on its 10-year bonds – continued to creep up Thursday, to 5.4 percent, suggesting increasing investor concern about whether the country can avoid a bailout, one that European leaders and experts say could lead to the breakup of the Eurozone. Spain's economy is twice the size of Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

And the country's benchmark Ibex 35 stock index continued a weeklong slide Thursday, closing down nearly 1 percent and below the psychologically important level of 8,000 points.

Protester Angel Andrino, 31, said he was laid off a day after the labor reforms were approved in a decree last month. He lives with his parents and brother, who is the only employed person in the family, but working part-time.

"We are going through a really hard time, suffering," Andrino said. "The rights that our parents and grandparents fought for are being wiped away without the public being consulted."

Candido Mendez, who leads the General Workers Union, said 77 percent of the union's members were on strike as of midday but said that the rate reached 97 percent in the industry and construction and construction sectors.

While investors are nervous about widespread social unrest spreading in Spain like it has in Greece, Spanish experts predicted doubt that will happen. That's because many Spaniards reluctantly accept that the country needs a radical economic makeover to make it more competitive after it almost certainly heads into recession this year with even higher unemployment.

"The country is in no mood for taking to the streets," said business management professor Jose Ramon Pin of the IESE Business School.

But across Spain, the strike's impact was felt by Spaniards and visitors. Commuter trains ran much less frequently, and air travel was severely disrupted. The country's flagship airline, Iberia Lineas Aereas de Espana SA, canceled 65 percent of its flights. TAP Portugal canceled half of its flights to Spain, and Spanish national airport authority AENA said 402 flights had been canceled by midmorning.

Spanish National Television showed images of police on horseback in Madrid helping buses leaving garages as protesters tried to prevent them from leaving, and state-owned regional television stations in three Spanish regions went off the air because workers didn't show up.

___

Associated Press writers Alan Clendenning and Jorge Sainz in Madrid, and Barry Hatton in Lisbon, Portugal, contributed to this report.

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Thousands of people protest against recent labour reform in Madrid, Spain, Thursday, March 29, 2012 during a general strike day. Spanish unions angry over economic reforms are waging a general strike, challenging a conservative government not yet 100 days old and joining other troubled European workers in venting their frustration on the street. (AP Photo/Alberto Di Lolli)

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MADRID — Spanish workers enraged by austerity-driven labor reforms to prevent the nation from becoming Europe's next bailout victim slowed down the country's economy in a general strike Thursday...
MADRID — Spanish workers enraged by austerity-driven labor reforms to prevent the nation from becoming Europe's next bailout victim slowed down the country's economy in a general strike Thursday...
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05:03 PM on 05/27/2012
it is so so so funny how karma works...i remember how the spaniards used to make fun of Hugo Chavez economic policies and look at them now...Viva Chavez!
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Yank in France
Rien se cree tout se transforme
02:23 PM on 03/31/2012
From my perch here in Andalucía, I see the deleterious effects of the new govt's reforms. The so-called reform to slash employee compensation in case of layoff was imposed by the Germans and followers of the Austrian School of Economics. My friends, check out this philosophy, because it is central to Tea Party “thinking”: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_School

The "Austrians" believe that by drastically slashing public debt they can reignite economic activity, but they leave out household and business debt in their thinking! In Spain, private sector debt represents 223% of GDP whereas govt debt represents just 68% (comparable to Germany).

But consumer spending drives 70% of economic growth. When the govt radically slashes spending, a lot of jobs are lost, both directly and indirectly. Since no one knows who’s going to get the axe next, EVERYONE stops spending, which means a huge slowdown in economic activity, when means lower tax revenues.
When tax revenues fall faster than costs decline, we get HIGHER DEFICITS, not lower ones. That is precisely what we see in Greece, Portugal, Spain, but also in the northern countries of Ireland and the UK!!

America, look at Spain, the UK, Ireland and learn, because, if the Pubs come to power, they will impose a Spanish style solution on YOU!!

As for those ragging on Europe and the eurozone, I say Europe will overcome these problems. Both the southern and northern countries have made huge mistakes, but mistakes are part of all our learning experience, my friends.

Every time Europe has run into difficulties, the Americans and some British have been there to urge on the so-called imminent destruction. Don't hold your breaths, my friends. The destruction of the eurozone is neither in America's nor Europe's interests!!

And Spain will overcome this terrible episode, but it needs truly positive reforms, like those being implemented in Italy. Above all, more people in the Mediterranean rim countries need to PAY TAXES and PAY INTO THE SOCIAL WELFARE programs!! Italy’s economy is 35% underground and Spain's may even be bigger.

Get people to pay taxes and the govt deficits will disappear and economic activity in the private sector will return!!

Viva España!!
Viva Europa!!
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MilesToGo
06:20 AM on 04/01/2012
Excellent comments, thanks! The false imaginings of the Austrian school need to be understood by more & more people, such as the fanatics that imagine Ron Paul has helpful solutions, to say nothing about Republican philosophies in general, which only bring disruption, even ruin, while serving a tiny but powerful elite.
02:47 PM on 03/30/2012
I feel this is the beginning of the end of the Eurozone.
Several countries are just not the mark, should never
have been allowed in.
The theory that one shoe fits all, was never a safe bet
from the start.
I see no future in the EU different cultures, different priorities,
and so on.
The picture of one big happy family, will never become a reality,
human nature itself, will dispel any such dreams.
Life is just not that simple.
I may sound pessimistic here, that is just my opinion.
wes.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
01:51 PM on 03/30/2012
What is sad is that this wouldn't be happening if Spain had retained its own currency and issued its own (interest-free) financing to govern itself instead of being shackled to a foreign currency, the Euro, that is controlled and governed by "the markets" (private banksters)! How many more Greeces, Irelands must suffer until Europeans see the light?
ElCojonuo
I believe in WISDOM
10:11 AM on 03/30/2012
Salganse del Euro.
Regresen a la Peseta.
No les conviene.
08:46 AM on 03/30/2012
You people who are saying this is just like Greece do not know what you are talking about. All Spanish workers enjoy working with contracts which are protected by regulations and also enjoy pensions when it is time to retire.. The new PP (Populist Party) an extreme right wing party wants the right to cancel these contracts and have corporations be able to fire people at will and reduce salaries (sounds like they have learned from the American Republican Party) and cut retirement pensions in half or more. That is what this populist protest and this nation-wide general strike is about. In Spain you can not retire until you reach retirement age before you can collect your pension.
They also want to increase the retirement age from 65 to 67 years old.
02:55 PM on 03/30/2012
Sounds a bit like the tory party here.
work till you drop.
wes
07:09 AM on 03/30/2012
More images of Spain's General Strike in Madrid http://bit.ly/pzWZ5G
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
07:38 AM on 03/30/2012
Yeah, you know for sure we are going to test that link out.
06:44 AM on 03/30/2012
"The country is in no mood for taking to the streets," said business management professor Jose Ramon Pin of the IESE Business School.
-----------------------------------------
Yeh, sure.
05:20 AM on 03/30/2012
Spain is why Obama and the Progressives need to be voted out. Workers are protesting that they can be fired and the company not be financially penalized. The actual law allowed firing for cause without penalty. But of course the media and the workers drop that little fact. What an amazing concept, a worker doesn't do their job and you fire them. Here in the US we have already reached the point where in many businesses you cannot fire a worker, even with cause. In many cases a worker will be considered as laid off despite violating company policy, such as not stealing from the company. Many employees will sue for wrongful termination, knowing that the cost to defend forces many companies to settle rather than fight. Rioting in the streets, the difference between a disaster in the US and in Japan, in Japan no theft from damaged businesses. In the US, usually those who are receiving benefits already are the first to rob a damaged business.
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BartRoberts
Vita canis, tum mors.
12:11 PM on 03/30/2012
"But of course the media and the workers drop that little fact. What an amazing concept, a worker doesn't do their job and you fire them."

I'd be a little more sympathetic with your demand that workers be "held to account," if the bigger fish, e.g. our nation's leaders and Wall Street bankers who colluded to destroy the world's economy, were held to account. Weighing all the other shenanigans that's gone on in business, I remain, as they say, unmoved.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
01:53 PM on 03/30/2012
Addction -- pro-corporation much?
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OC Surfer
A second is 30 nanoyears.
04:29 AM on 03/30/2012
If countries start bailing on the Euro, Europe goes backward fast. All those Mediterranean countries are used to civil wars. And if the world starts bailing on the dollar, watch out.
05:25 AM on 03/30/2012
Watch out, armchair expert talking..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Whistlejackett
Hey stop doing that
03:46 AM on 03/30/2012
To you from the land of the derivatives.
02:17 AM on 03/30/2012
You may as well protest against fate.
06:43 AM on 03/30/2012
That's called learned helplessess. These countries have many options should they choose to use them. There are not these all-powerful rich gatekeeping gods who insist on grinding down the people with vetoes over everything...
12:46 AM on 03/31/2012
Baloney. Provide one concrete example of your hypothesis.
06:46 AM on 03/30/2012
Greek demos got their debt cut by 50%. Before demos plan was to cut it by 25% which everyone said meant 30%, then demos and it got higher and higher.

Protests can save you billions.
12:45 AM on 03/31/2012
First of all, there has been absolutely no savings. Secondly, where do you think this money is coming from? Thirdly, you seem to be implying that it is best to live beyond your means and count on others to bail you out. Greece isn't out of the woods yet.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Coyote50
"Taxes are the price we pay for civilization."
02:09 AM on 03/30/2012
The austerity that is being forced on the poorer countries of Europe because of the financial meltdown - which was not their fault - is reaping what it has sowed. Austerity does NOT lead to growth. Austerity results in joblessness and more poverty. Do they expect people to just sit and cry? Of course there are going to be riots. And austerity is what the Republicans in the US want. No growth, joblessness, poverty, riots. Great idea.
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SiameseTrainer
...we are Sia..mese if you don't please..
02:50 AM on 03/30/2012
Fanned by the SiameseTrainer for putting it all in a nutshell that even the dopey ought to be able to crack!
05:27 AM on 03/30/2012
You don't really believe that baloney do you? The austerity is a result of socialist policies and being paid for 14 months of work, while working only 10. In many European countries they are better off not working than taking a job at their minimum wage. There are many jobs to be had in those areas, more so when, like Germany, they change the tax structure from socialist (high taxes) to capitalist. And you can still be green minded, and socially liberal. While many businesses are run by greedy bosses, the more successful businesses know that good work environment, worker friendly policies, will most often be rewarded with better output. Too many of you are buying the propaganda of the media and the left that the employers are big bad wolves. There are more cases of employee theft than employer mismanagement. In fact, the estimate in one study was over 50% incidence of employee theft.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
01:56 PM on 03/30/2012
Addction -- I bet you read The Economist religiously. That's the kind of claptrap they spout week in and week out.
01:38 AM on 03/30/2012
July 2010 the Spanish people had the chance to fight for their country.

In that time all those Hot Shots who are responsible for this chaos met in Sitges and discussed how to make the rich richer and how to bring the dirty rest to the ground...

They are not even there YET! but it is already to late to complain..
Spain missed the chance.. and only because they acted blind in that time doesn't mean that they are not guilty

They are guilty for doing nothing when they had the chance!

So they have to take the result, and stop complaining...

Imagine if all of those protesters would went to the Bilderberg Meeting in Sitges in 2010... Imagine that thousands of people would ran over that place with one message... "Piss off"

But they didn't...

Do I feel sorry? yes... but much more for those people who already fight since many years against this bullshit... and now that it becomes to late... failed!

99% percent of the Spanish people are still part of this system... work..buy...and die...

If they really want a change... They first have to take a look into the mirror instead of blaming someone else... That's way to easy!!!
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BartRoberts
Vita canis, tum mors.
12:14 PM on 03/30/2012
How does one say "P-iss off" in Castilian? "Meate"?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
khanti
Cultivator
01:38 AM on 03/30/2012
They sure spend a lot of money on football.
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BartRoberts
Vita canis, tum mors.
12:31 PM on 03/30/2012
"Panem et circenses" (Bread and circuses)

In the long history of humanity, nothing really changes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
khanti
Cultivator
05:20 PM on 03/30/2012
That's because people clings to their likes and make all kind of excuses to keep them while they make double the excuses not to keep their dislikes. Either way but lose.