Yahoo – AFP,
December 20, 2014
Madrid (AFP) - Six months into his reign, Spain's King Felipe VI is gently polishing the monarchy's scandal-hit image, getting rid of royal Ferraris and publishing palace accounts -- but critics are demanding he try harder.
Ferraris gone as Spain king polishes image |
Madrid (AFP) - Six months into his reign, Spain's King Felipe VI is gently polishing the monarchy's scandal-hit image, getting rid of royal Ferraris and publishing palace accounts -- but critics are demanding he try harder.
Friday will
mark exactly half a year since 46-year-old Felipe took over the throne, vowing
"to make Spaniards feel proud of their king". Now as he prepares for
his first Christmas king's speech on December 24, his record is under scrutiny.
The crown's
popularity ratings appear to have strengthened, but anti-monarchist feeling
rumbles on in some quarters. And not all of the scandals that marred the years
leading up to the abdication of Felipe's father Juan Carlos have gone away.
Juan Carlos
outraged Spaniards in 2012 by going elephant hunting in Botswana at the height
of Spain's recession. Separately, Felipe's sister Cristina has been accused in
a corruption probe targeting her husband.
When Felipe
took over the throne, supporters hoped he, his former newsreader wife Letizia,
41, and their two blonde daughters, nine-year-old Leonor and Sofia, seven,
could freshen the monarchy's image.
King or
'slacker'?
The new
king has since taken steps to make the royal household more transparent. He
launched a new palace code of conduct and published details of its spending.
Felipe
ordered members of the royal family not to accept any extravagant gifts. Any
official presents they receive must now be donated to national heritage.
The palace
has ceded to the state two deluxe Ferrari cars that were given to Juan Carlos
by an Arab sheikh and are now to be auctioned, palace sources told AFP.
Media have
estimated the ex-king's fortune at $2.3 billion (1.7 billion euros). The palace
denies that figure, saying it includes assets that actually belong to the
state.
When Juan
Carlos abdicated, the monarchy's popularity rating among Spaniards was down to
about a third, according to the national social research institute CIS.
Recent
opinion polls in various newspapers indicate that Felipe has reversed that
decline. One survey in conservative paper La Razon gave Felipe a 72-percent
popularity rating.
One royal
expert, Antonio del Moral, said Felipe is doing "what the Spanish monarchy
needed to do to win back a bit of the prestige it had lost over the past two or
three years".
But Jordi
Matas, a political scientist at Barcelona University, branded Felipe "the
slacker-king".
"Everything
is exactly the same or worse, and the new monarchy's influence cannot be seen
anywhere. A lot of talk, but few results," Matas wrote in El Pais
newspaper.
Royalists
and republicans
With
limited, mostly ceremonial powers as the head of Spain's parliamentary
monarchy, Felipe has kept largely out of politics.
He has
spoken cautiously on Spain's most sensitive current political issue, however:
the drive for independence in Catalonia.
Since
becoming king he has made three trips to the northeastern region, where he has
called for unity.
The
government moved swiftly to get Felipe on the throne in June, defying street
protesters who demanded a referendum on making Spain a republic.
But the
republican undertow in Spain "is still very much alive," said Moral.
Spain's two
main political forces, the governing conservative Popular Party and the
opposition Socialists, have backed the monarchy since Spain's transition from
dictatorship in the late 1970s.
But the
political landscape is changing fast. According to recent polls, the two big
parties together have less than half of the vote.
The
left-wing protest party Podemos is now a serious challenger ahead of next
year's general election.
Its leader
Pablo Iglesias has called for a referendum on whether to keep the monarchy.
"It
should be part of the our country's past, not its future," he said.
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