Thousands join rightist rally against Spanish government

Protestors denounce release of Catalan independence campaigners and pacts with regional separatist parties

Protesters wave Spanish national flags as they gather in Madrid's Plaza de Cibeles during an anti-government demonstration called by right-wing groups. Photograph: Pierre-Philippe Marcou/AFP via Getty Images
Protesters wave Spanish national flags as they gather in Madrid's Plaza de Cibeles during an anti-government demonstration called by right-wing groups. Photograph: Pierre-Philippe Marcou/AFP via Getty Images

Thousands of people packed into central Madrid on Saturday to protest against the Socialist government and accuse it of undermining the constitution, in a rally backed by rightist parties.

Protesters massed in the Plaza de Cibeles in front of City Hall, waved Spanish flags, called on prime minister Pedro Sánchez to resign and shouted “traitor”.

More than 100 groups – including the conservative opposition Popular Party, centre-right Ciudadanos and the far-right Vox – called the rally under the slogan “For Spain, for democracy and the constitution”.

Speakers attacked the government for a string of policies and decisions, ranging from the release of Catalan independence campaigners to its pacts with regional separatist parties. Around 30,000 people took part, according to local government estimates.

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Vox leader Santiago Abascal, the only party leader to attend, told the crowd that the government had “trampled the constitution by locking up Spaniards,” in a reference to Covid lockdowns.

Around 200km away in the northwestern city of Valladolid, Sánchez told a Socialist rally that the protesters in Madrid were defending a “uniform” and therefore “discriminatory” Spain.

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In June 2021, Sánchez’s government pardoned the nine jailed leaders of Catalonia’s failed 2017 independence bid “in the spirit of dialogue”. Its recent decision to replace the crime of sedition with a lesser crime was opposed on the right. – Reuters

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