Spain Reacts to Romney’s Spanish Cautionary Tale
Spain Reacts to Romney’s Spanish Cautionary Tale
Update: Spaniards woke up today to the news that Mitt Romney had decided to single out their country for fiscal irresponsibility, and many are not happy. María Dolores de Cospedal, the secretary-general of the ruling People’s Party, told the radio service RNE that “Spain is not on fire through and through as some on the outside would have us believe,” noting that Romney’s remarks “upset me deeply” and that Spain “has also been a model for economic recovery.” She conceded that “our image has been damaged and regaining confidence is very difficult” but added that Spain “is in the eye of the hurricane” for a reason — “there are many people who have a lot of interest in the euro not being stable and there are some who believe that the easiest thing to do is to attack Spain.” (Cospedal was also responding to a recent New York Times article on widespread poverty in the country.)
Other Spanish leaders have lashed out at Romney as well. José Manuel García-Margallo, the minister of foreign affairs and cooperation, said it was “very unfortunate” that Romney had made “tenuous analogies” without “understanding the reality of countries” like Spain. Alberto Ruiz Gallardón, the justice minister, didn’t catch the debate but pledged to “correct misperceptions” about Spain.
Beyond the official responses, the Spanish press is chewing over Romney’s comments as well. Headlines include “The Prescription for Spain’s Bad Image Is Self-Esteem” and “Romney Didn’t Speak the Truth About Spain.” Spain is “in bad shape,” blogger Martí Saballs admitted at La Expansión, but “to make it an example of a country that the United States shouldn’t imitate strikes me as an extraordinary frivolity.”
Original post: It may be early morning in Spain right now, but news outlets in the country quickly seized on Mitt Romney’s warning during the presidential debate on Wednesday night that if the United States didn’t get its fiscal house in order, it could end up like Spain, which is currently grappling with sky high unemployment and steep borrowing costs, and may soon receive a European bailout.
“Spain spends 42 percent of their total economy on government,” Romney noted, veering away from the European cautionary tale he most often trots out on the campaign trail: Greece. “We’re now spending 42 percent of our economy on government. I don’t want to go down the path to Spain.” Here’s the clip, via Slate: