Wednesday, 24th April 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Spain’s foreign minister to stand for European elections

By AFP
26 February 2019   |   1:25 pm
Spain's Foreign Minister Josep Borrell, who was once president of the European parliament, will stand for European elections in May, his Socialist party said Tuesday.

(FILES) In this file photo taken on June 8, 2018 Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Borrell smiles as he arrives to a cabinet meeting at La Moncloa palace in Madrid. – Borrell, who was once president of the European parliament, will stand for European elections in May, his Socialist party said on February 26, 2019. The 71-year-old veteran Catalan politician, who is staunchly pro-EU and fiercely criticial of his region’s independence movement, will head up the Socialists’ list for the May 26 polls, a party spokeswoman said. (Photo by JAVIER SORIANO / AFP)

Spain’s Foreign Minister Josep Borrell, who was once president of the European parliament, will stand for European elections in May, his Socialist party said Tuesday.

The 71-year-old veteran Catalan politician, who is staunchly pro-EU and fiercely critical of his region’s independence movement, will head up the Socialists’ list for the May 26 polls, a party spokeswoman said.

Borrell became foreign minister in June when Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez ousted his conservative predecessor in a no-confidence vote.

But Sanchez has been forced to call early general elections on April 28 after his minority government failed to get the necessary parliamentary support for his 2019 budget.

The socialists are far from assured of staying in power after the elections, with some opinion polls suggest right-wing and far-right parties could get a majority in parliament.

Outspoken, Borrell has been very vocal abroad in refuting Catalan separatists’ claims that Spain lacks political freedoms as 12 pro-independence leaders are on trial over their role in a 2017 secession attempt.

He was also active in trying to push the European Union to recognise Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaido as interim president of the economically strapped country.

Borrell was once at the head of the Socialist party, elected leader in 1998.

But he renounced the position the following year before a 2000 general election due to a financial scandal involving two of his former co-workers when he was deputy finance minister.

He bounced back by dedicating himself to European affairs, serving as president of the European parliament between 2004 and 2007.

In this article

0 Comments