Gag Law: Spain’s government tries to push back the tide
The intention behind Spain’s
draconian new anti-protest law is clear: the government simply wants
citizens to keep their mouths shut and stay at home.
Spain
is one of the European countries that has suffered the most under the
effects of the Great Recession. As of October 2014, unemployment rates
stood at 24% for the general population, and a whopping 53.8% for people
under 25 years of age. Timid signs of economic growth appear now and
then, only to eventually collapse amongst the general feeling that Spain
is one of the sick countries of Europe — or as the offensive acronym
goes, part of the PIGS: a peripheral country gasping for air and
incapable of recovering from the financial crash.
The
public response to the crisis, besides a mild Keynesian initiative by
the center-left PSOE government during its early years, has followed the
neoliberal mantra: labor legislation reforms to weaken collective
bargaining and limit workers’ rights, an austerity agenda and cuts on
social services. Public spending is frowned upon and is severely limited
by a reform of the Constitution in 2011, passed by both the Socialist
and the right-wing Popular Party, which imposed a fiscal straitjacket on
the Spanish budget, forcing it to comply with what would later become
the European Fiscal Compact. These are only some ingredients in a mix
that includes a constant stream of corruption scandals involving the
Spanish elite, from top politicians to businessmen, bankers and even the
royal family.
Many Spaniards are understandably angry. Amnesty International reported
45.000 demonstrations during 2012. In 2013, 4.500 took place in Madrid
alone. Most demonstrations have been peaceful. Whether they involved
unions and workers defending their rights, PAH activists exercising
civil disobedience to stop evictions, pro-independence Catalans claiming
their right to self-determination, or regular citizens demanding
accountability and an end to corruption, Spaniards have fought back
against injustice mainly by voicing their discontent. The Popular Party
government, however, is not happy with this growing unrest.
Back
before social networks and the latest technological gadgets were
widespread, the media oligopoly guaranteed that protests deemed
undesirable could be controlled to a certain point: those supporting
them could be framed as radicals, violent rioters or nihilist thugs.
Isolated incidents could be presented as the norm, or as the true
intention of the protesters. But newer technologies have made this more
difficult, and it is now common to see people recording the police to
monitor their actions. Videos of unlawful actions often go viral a few
days after the protest.
Both factors,
the growing unrest and introduction of new technologies, are among the
reasons underlying the Spanish government’s latest initiative to
restrict citizen’s rights and scare them into submission: the Citizen
Safety Bill, or as those who oppose its introduction call it, the “Gag
Law”.
What is the Gag Law?
The main objectives of the Gag Law are two:
- To establish several “administrative infractions” that warrant fines for those who would commit them. Several of these new administrative infractions used to be faltas, or misdemeanors, under the old Spanish criminal law.
- To create an “administrative infraction registry” for those citizens who commit said infractions.
The
first fundamental flaw of the Gag Law is related to what jurists call
“undefined legal concepts.” These are legal concepts that depend on
subjective assessment or otherwise non-objective measurements: when a
law calls for a “reasonable” use of force, bans “affronts to national
dignity” and so on, it is making use of an undefined legal concept. It
is sometimes necessary to use them in laws, as not everything can be
quantified and specified to the level of detail that is necessary in
day-to-day life. However, these concepts are intended to be used with
considerable caution in laws that limit rights and liberties of
citizens, since they entrust authorities with considerable discretion.
The Gag Law is full of these concepts when describing acts that are
considered “administrative infractions.”
This
is a bigger concern when one considers that some of these concepts are
supposed to be evaluated by authorities under stressful situations in
which calm, rational judgments are difficult to make. For instance, a
police officer in the midst of a demonstration might not be in the best
setting to assess whether the words uttered by a protester constitute an
“affront to national dignity” or if they are merely an expression of
his freedom of speech before deciding to arrest him. The introduction of
undefined legal concepts in the law creates the basis for legal
loopholes and abuses of power against citizens.
The
second flaw is related to the creation of the new “administrative
infractions” themselves, which often entail disproportionate fines of up
to 30.000 euros for people exercising such fundamental rights as that
of protest (in this case, when this is done without an authorization
issued by the public authorities). The government claims to be doing
this based on the criteria established by criminal law experts. And it
is true that many criminal law jurists advise that their discipline be
used as the final answer to social problems, thus adhering to what is
usually called the “principle of last resort,” that is, that criminal
law should always be the last answer to a social problem. While we might
disagree with the effectiveness of criminal law in modern societies, it
is reasonable to admit that following such a principle is better than
an authoritarian government that tries to impose a certain vision of
social behavior by establishing thousands of new crimes.
The
problem is that the Spanish government has twisted this principle and
is following it in a warped way. The Gag Law incorporates several
“administrative infractions” because, unlike crimes (which are to be
ruled by a judge in a court), these infractions can be imposed by an
administrative authority, such as a police officer. This leaves citizens
with fewer legal guarantees to defend themselves against the accusation
of having committed one. If people wish to prove themselves innocent of
an “administrative infraction,” they must stand before an
administrative court. And these, under the recent reforms of the Spanish
legal system, charge citizens taxes, which criminal courts do not.
Thus, these new administrative infractions become de facto
“quick fines.” You either pay them or you go to court, paying taxes in
order to do so, and risk losing the whole process, thus paying even more
money in the end. The effect that the government hopes the law will
have on most people is clear: that they stay at home and don’t risk
having to pay ridiculous amounts of money in fines for attending an
unauthorized demonstration. Even when the protest is authorized and
stays closely within the boundaries of the law, as I mentioned above,
those boundaries are so subjective and depend so much on undefined legal
concepts that you might still be fined because a Spanish equivalent of
Judge Dredd (“I am the law”) will assess your “infraction,” decide you
are guilty and sentence you all in the same act. The moral of the story
is: stay at home and keep your mouth shut, citizen.
The
third flaw of the Gag Law is the creation of an Administrative
Infraction Registry that will compile all infractions committed by a
citizen in a personal file. Its purpose, according to the bill, is to
“note recidivism and assess it in order to issue administrative
authorizations that will affect citizen safety.” This bizarre registry,
something akin to a “light” criminal record, has been criticized by
several Spanish jurists, who consider it to be a list of “bad citizens”
and a step back towards darker times.
Beyond the Gag Law
The
Gag Law is one step in the process of transforming a liberal democracy
into an authoritarian one with less margin for dissent and protest.
Paradoxically, one might think that it is a good sign to see the
government react in such a blunt way to unrest in the streets and its
loss of credibility. It is kind of an old-school reaction: their “velvet
glove” does not do the job, so they must resort to the “iron fist,” as a
well-known Italian thinker once said. This is, in a way, a sign of how
much momentum the alternatives to the current system are gaining.
But
this should not lead us to forget that the Gag Law can have disastrous
effects on the people caught in its trap. It can ruin lives with its
disproportionate fines, or with the social stigma and fear it can cause
in people. And it is in these cases that mutual aid will be needed and
solidarity networks will have to work hard.
Still,
although these are real risks we must bear in mind, it is quite
doubtful that the Gag Law will extinguish the climate of social unrest
in Spain. While laws are extremely important and have real effects on
the day-to-day lives of real people, the government cannot simply
overturn social and political shifts overnight through the imposition of
individual fines. Complex social dynamics can be as strong as a tide,
and too powerful to be to be stopped by a single law. The question is:
is the tide turning in Spain? As Galileo famously said, “Eppur si muove.” And yet it moves.
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