Spain: Podemos and the dynamic reorganisation of the left

Click for more on Podemos and politics in Spain.

By Mario Candeias

September 3, 2014 – The Bullet, posted at Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal with permission-- It is no longer enough to win over civil society, occupy public spaces, take to the streets, carry out symbolic actions, prevent evictions or to win plebiscites. In Spain movements for "real democracy" are setting a course to capture institutions – albeit with the aim to recreate these institutions in a constitutive process in the interests of "real democracy".

We are witnessing a dynamic reorganisation of the political sphere – from the left. Even before the European parliamentary elections at the end of May a shift was evident that would bring the Izquierda Unida (United Left, IU) party a tripling of its votes. It now has six members in the European Parliament (MEPs) in Strasbourg.

The real surprise winner however is the platform Podemos (We Can) that came out of the protests against the crisis with its top candidate Pablo Iglesias. Only four months after its foundation it achieved a result that gave it five MEPs.

Podemos is a cadre party with charismatic leaders, but it emerged out of the movements occupying public spaces. As such the alliance is an example of a new "shared leadership" within the movements, which does not assume any previously established leadership or avant-garde status. Instead it allows for individuals or groups to temporarily take on a leadership function, in order to move things forward and to concentrate activities on a provisional focus.

Splintering or a convergence of the left?

Are we now witnessing a further splintering or a convergence of the left? A few hours after the European elections Podemos offered “all forces genuinely opposed to austerity” a process for convergence. This appeal was directed toward parties such as IU, the green party Equo, but also toward the social movements. Alberto Garzón from IU, himself one of the Indignados of 15 May, and at 28 years old the youngest member in the Spanish parliament, has no doubt that a convergence with Podemos is coming: “We agree on most positions.” He has assumed leadership of his party's sonorous secretariat “for a constitutive process and convergence” so as to advance the rapprochement.

For many the United Left is still one of the traditional parties. It possesses organisational structures, committees as well as hierarchies. Though it is by far more democratically structured than the conservative Partido Popular (PP) or the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) and many regional parties, it has nevertheless not been able to seriously challenge the two-party system during the past 40 years. Indeed in several municipalities and regions the IU is also a governing partner. As a result a clear distinction with the other parties was not always apparent. In the past, cases of corruption also occurred. In the meantime however these cases have been dealt with and the people in question have left the party. And much has happened since. The party was also transformed by the dynamics of the 15M movement. A new generation is taking over, reforming the party from within and approximating the democratic forms tested in the movements.

This is how the IU tripled its support, in particular with those who identify with the left and are active in the trade union movement and the corresponding Mareas – the waves of protests in the health-care and education sectors and elsewhere – to take one example. Many disappointed supporters of the PSOE are also present. This potentially accounts for up to 20 per cent of the population.

“Podemos occupies a field that the plural left has not understood how to reach”, according to Garzón. Among these he includes in particular those who no longer expect anything of the political system and have turned away from the traditional parties. The structure and language of Podemos have made it possible for their voices to be heard, and to translate frustration into protest. Were it otherwise, these primarily young, urban and university-educated individuals may have been lost to the left.

In contrast the IU maintains a stronger connection to the popular classes in poorer urban zones as well as in rural regions. Together the IU and Podemos could bring on the collapse of the two-party system.

This is also supported by polling. In a recent survey by El Pais, Podemos comes in at 15.3%, the IU at 8.2%, while both the PP and PSOE register declines. If we take seriously another survey by EL Pais, unpublished most likely because of its inconvenient results, the two left-wing parties combined sit at 27.4% ahead of the PP (26.5%) and the PSOE at 17.5%.

No absolute majority

And yet this is where the problems begin. Similar to Syriza in Greece, a relative majority in an electoral victory would not be sufficient to form a government since the opposition PSOE is out of the question as a coalition partner for the moment. Indeed, as the PSOE elected its new chair it decided explicitly against a course that would correspond with the demands and political forms of the movements. Instead it selected the 42-year-old Pedro Sánchez, until now a relatively unknown functionary, who explicitly distanced himself from Podemos and IU. He orients himself on Felipe Gonzales who, in view of the menacing danger from the left, calls for cohesion among the established parties.

Such opinion polls additionally foster a dynamic that is difficult to calculate. The media hype around Podemos now concentrates many forces on the new formation. This fosters rivalries and dissociations toward a "party of the old type" such as IU on the one hand, and toward a "fuzzy post-political entity" such as Podemos on the other. Many see convergence as an imperative precisely in order to bundle the different forces into a left-wing mosaic. Yet being able to endure the tensions between movements, parties and trade unions, or between diverse (party) formations appears to be too strenuous for many. This is all supposed to be new and as such perhaps old mistakes are only being repeated. Given its success, some members of Podemos consider it to be the prominent actor with no need for cooperation with the traditional oppositions. The danger of self-fragmentation looms.

As such the future of Podemos is uncertain. The party is still grappling with adequate organisational structures that can maintain the platform format and openness without simply becoming a traditional party. At the same time "inner-party" democracy is not yet really developed – the process is dominated by strong leadership figures. The latter, above all the figure of Podemos’ Pablo Iglesias is circulated by the media. It is to be hoped that the media hype does not end in the same way as it did for the Pirate Party in Germany.[1]

Nevertheless the conditions for success are much better. In the end Podemos is not purely a media phenomenon, but is sustained by the new mass movements. Yet neither the success of an organisational consolidation, nor a convergence with the left is assured.

Local politics

It is still a long way until the elections at the end of the coming year. In contrast, the capture of institutions is already conceivable with the local elections in May 2015. The most spectacular is an initiative arising from the movements. After Ada Calou, the spokesperson of Plataforma de Afectados por la Hipoteca (PAH, Movement against evictions), became one of the figureheads of the crisis protests in Spain, she launched a new project. She is one of the representatives of Guanyem Barcelona (Let's Win Barcelona), a citizen initiative, which emerged at the end of June in Barcelona and proposes a radical oppositional candidacy for the mayoral elections in 2015.

The initiative is broadly conceived. It is directed initially toward the unorganised majority in society, to those active neither in movements nor in parties; though its base is located in the organised neighbourhoods and movements. Guanyem also succeeded in bringing (almost) all the political organisations of the left and the trade union confederations of CCOO and (partially) UGT on board. “We do not exclude anyone – apart from the regime parties”, says Colau.

PAH is already an example of such a mosaic. Activists from every type of organisation have been working together here for years in a social network for mutual aid. The constitutive parts are local units in which activists do not simply discuss politics, but moreover share everyday practices. That is to say, they fight evictions, launch political initiatives, occupy banks, re-appropriate housing, organise collective child care. Yet they do not limit themselves simply to offering help, they are themselves sites of political action, organisation and education.

Yet this does not suffice. Even the opinion poll results for Podemos and IU are not enough. Guanyem wants more. “We want to win, that is the biggest difference. And to win you have to combine efforts. Anyone who steps up alone represents an exercise in pretension”, according to Colau. “We do not aspire to a seat in the municipal council just to provide a bit of colour there. We want to win to change things and to prove that politics can be fundamentally different.”

The example is catching on. Not only in Catalonia. All over the country new platforms or alliances are forming to contest local and regional elections, as in Madrid and Malaga, where Podemos, IU and Equo, supported by movements such as PAH or Mareas (the protest waves) and others, develop common positions, programs and electoral lists; and not in backrooms but in open assemblies and through innumerable discussions.

With this strategy the solid institutions of power, in particular the central government, are not yet reached. Yet municipal or regional governments have sufficient authority to undertake much more in housing construction and tenants' rights, in the design of public spaces or in the health-care system. They can ensure that no one falls out of the health system and can shorten waiting lists by making more resources available. They can prevent evictions or at the least make alternate housing available. They can prevent privatisations at the municipal level or even reverse them. They can promote the collective and democratic organisation of social infrastructure and create institutional support for movements. And they can act where no competencies exist by breaking rules and challenging power.

Finally, such local alliances can work against the (self-)fragmentation of the left and create the basis for a dynamic, which with the elections for the Spanish parliament leads to the end of the two-party system and to the initiation of a constitutive process for real democracy.

[Mario Candeias is a political economist and senior researcher at the Institute for Critical Social Analysis at the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation in Berlin. This article was originally published in Neues Deutschland on August 9, 2014. Translation by Sam Putinja.]

Note

1. The Pirate Party on a federal level practically went into decomposition in the course of public inner-party conflicts It received 1.45 per cent of the national vote in the 2014 European Parliament election, with only a single member elected.

Subscribe to our newsletter