AlcudiaPollensa2

About Alcúdia and Pollensa and the north of Mallorca and any other stuff that seems interesting.

Posts Tagged ‘Unió Mallorquina’

Miquel Llompart – new mayor of Alcúdia

Posted by andrew on January 9, 2010

The soon-to-be-new mayor of Alcúdia, Miquel Llompart, is a big bloke. He is and has been something of a leading light in Mallorcan basketball for several years, having played for different teams including Alcúdia. Other than the odd run-out with mates, he’s not likely to get much chance to do any slam-dunking for a while. (I wonder what slam-dunking is in Catalan? Or maybe they bow to the Americanism.)

Anyway, I met him yesterday, and spent rather longer with him than I had expected. The result of the meeting is an interview piece that should appear in “Talk Of The North” next week.

It is often salutary to actually meet these chaps. Impressions can be formed which are not always accurate without such first-hand contact. And some of the issues also take on a different perspective. Take the old rail extension controversy. At no point did he hint at the fact that the town hall didn’t actually want the train, which I confess was something that had occurred to me. Of course, one has to read between lines, but in this instance, the line was pretty clear – they wanted the line, but not to go to the old town. This was the stance that was publicised, but the stress on the benefits to tourism of siting the terminal by Es Foguero or Magic was far more evident when he explained the town hall’s position. And in this, one did come away with a feeling that the town hall’s attitude – and that of the Unió Mallorquina locally – was far broader than that of the transport ministry. This also served to question any notions that the UM, as a nationalist party, is somehow antagonistic towards tourists or indeed “foreigners”. One doesn’t quite know where this impression ever arose from, as it has been the UM that has, for example, been to the forefront of golf developments.

Indeed when I brought up the idea that there was some antagonism, he was quick to point out that the UM’s “nationalism” is not quite as one might think. He admitted that even in other parts of Spain there can be a view of Mallorca as rather parochial, something that the UM might be said to reinforce. But it is a false impression.

There again, it does rather depend on individuals, and Llompart does not strike me as a little Mallorcan (physically not so, that’s for sure). He is highly focussed on Alcúdia, which is fair enough, but he seems to have a breadth of vision as well and comes across as being quite dynamic. In all, I would have to say that he falls into the category of being a decent bloke. We’ll have to wait and see, but my guess is that he’s going to be a popular and good mayor, and that higher office might well yet await him. At 40, he’s got time on his side.

SANT SEBASTIA – PALMA
I know it’s not a local event to the north of the island, but it is a great event and any number of folk from the north do make a trip for the festivities, so main events on the programme are available on the WHAT’S ON BLOG – http://www.wotzupnorth.blogspot.com. Important to note is that, though the music night of the 19th is a week day, the fire spectaculars will take place on the 23rd, Saturday.

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Nobody Does It Better

Posted by andrew on October 13, 2009

Of the local town halls, only Alcúdia might be said to function adequately, notwithstanding the Can Ramis fiasco. One can probably add Muro, now that the PP-CDM have carved up the mayoral office and put an end to the slight inconvenience of a rival party having that office. In Pollensa, the administration stumbles from debt-ridden crisis to another, assaulted from all political sides for creating, for instance, “science fiction” in respect of its latest attempt to draw up a budget; at least the local police no longer deem it necessary to work to rule, which they did last year. Sa Pobla gives us near acts of fisticuffs in the open session, but nowhere does it better – or worse – than Santa Margalida. 

 

Santa Margalida town hall is the gift that has been giving and keeps on giving, though one might also say that it is the cup that regularly overflows. From the potty notion that Son Real might have been turned into a golf course (and unlike the Son Bosc finca in Muro, there were very strong reasons for it not to have been, such as the ancient burial sites) through the spats over contracts for works in Can Picafort and fiesta expenditure to the current lunacy surrounding cups for a football tournament. Yep, this is politics, local-style, in Can Pic and at the town hall some kilometres away. This is the town hall where the opposition groups have walked out of meetings – as happened with a dispute about invoices – and have even set up an alternative open session, protesting at a change to the time of the regular one. Over the past week, it emerged that there was a plan under which establishments currently operating on a commercial basis, such as restaurants, would no longer have been classified as being for commercial use. This was before it was admitted that there had been an error, one laid at the door of the previous administration and, naturally enough, batted back across the net and laid at the current one’s door.

 

Then we come to this football tournament. This was part of a fiesta for immigrants in Can Picafort. Five seven-a-side teams made up of players from South America took part in this tournament, itself all in the name of the process of social integration. When it came to the giving out of trophies, however, the mayoral delegate in Can Picafort vetoed the handing over of two trophies donated by the Unió Mallorquina party, one of the parties in opposition to the Partido Popular, of which the mayor is a member. 

 

Now this may all sound very petty, and it almost certainly is, but there’s a bit more to it. On the previous day, the UM published the latest issue of its local news-sheet. On the front cover of this were mocked-up 500 euro notes bearing an image of the mayor; this was a protest at the alleged squandering of public money. On the back cover was the reproduction of an invoice said to support this allegation. So, come the day of the tournament, the PP would appear to have sought its retaliation – by not delivering the trophies to players completely uninvolved in the argument.

 

“The Diario” styled this as part of the “never-ending row” between the ruling body and the opposition. One can probably style it differently. Kindergartens, asylums, breweries, there must be some analogy, the problem is trying to choose between them all.

 

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Head Bangers

Posted by andrew on September 12, 2009

The piece below has been rather overtaken by events – the government is set to divert the funds set aside for the extension to Alcúdia to other rail work on the island and in particular work on the “boulevard” which is part of a solution to issues surrounding the Manacor railway. Or is this just a cunning ploy by the government? More on all this to come, no doubt.

 

 

 

No, not something about Status Quo and their geriatric rocking all over the Darby and Joan Club in Palma the other day, but ever more on the Sa Pobla-Alcúdia train, an ever more which just goes to show how what you read and where you read it can give a less than complete picture of the situation. In “The Bulletin” we learn, thanks to the mayor of Manacor, that there has been “wholesale opposition” to the proposed northern corridor for the rail extension into Alcúdia and that the regional government has “heeded the outcry from Alcúdia” whilst not heeding one in Manacor regarding the rail extension from there to Artà, work on which is due to start shortly.

 

This is not quite accurate. There has of course been opposition to the northern route, but it is not as great as is being made out. Recently Alcúdia town hall, which has invited “allegations” against the proposed route and which has also extended hours of opening in order to present information, received – on the first day of these extended hours – fifteen people who asked for information. Moreover, the town hall received only a few “allegations”. Asking for information does not mean wholesale opposition; it means asking for information. A few allegations do not represent wholesale opposition. 

 

It is not accurate to suggest that the government has “heeded the outcry from Alcúdia”. What it, or more specifically the transport ministry, has done is to suggest that if there cannot be agreement to the northern route, it (the ministry) would consider siting the rail extension elsewhere. Heeding the outcry actually means getting hacked off with the apparent intransigence at the town hall. The outcry itself is more one of political statements from the town hall; it is not a great public demonstration against the northern route. Yes, there have been protests, such as signs against the extension some months ago, but the Manacor mayor is overstating the situation. And those protests were essentially NIMBY in nature as they related to finca land that would be needed for a line into the centre of Alcúdia town.

 

In contrast to the report in “The Bulletin”, which deals only with what the Manacor mayor has to say, one from “The Diario” presents a rather different picture. And it is this. The president of the government, Francesc Antich, has met with the leader of the Unió Mallorquina party, Miquel Flaquer, in order to try and gain some sort of consensus to present before the regional parliament. It should be noted that the Alcúdia town hall mayor, Miquel Ferrer, is from the same party as Flaquer. On Tuesday next week, responding to a demand from the Partido Popular, which is in opposition at the regional government, there needs to be some sort of definitive statement from the parliament about the Alcúdia railway. What one concludes, from what “The Diario” is saying, is that the whole issue has now gone over the heads of the main protagonists in the saga – the transport minister and the mayor of Alcúdia. Going over their heads and banging their heads together. And not before time. 

 

The words of Manacor’s mayor, himself from the Partido Popular, are essentially political posturing, certainly where Alcúdia is concerned, as the extension there has nothing whatsoever to do with him. But they sum up what this story is all about: political point-scoring. The real issues of environment, convenience, boost to local economy, population density and all the rest have been put to one side while the politicians from differing parties adopt their stances. ‘Twas ever thus, you might say, and you would be right, but the fact that Antich has seen it necessary to get involved – overdue some might argue – is indicative of the inconclusiveness of the local political system and of political fighting. It should be remembered that Antich came into power with his “age of the train” declaration. Railways were his “big thing”. He should have been more intimately involved long ago.

 

Personally I don’t give a damn where the train goes, so long as it goes to Alcúdia which is the only sensible option in the north. Hopefully Antich can now, through the boss of the Unió Mallorquina, get Alcúdia town hall to accept the northern route, as quite clearly the transport ministry is not prepared to budge except to go to a different and less satisfactory municipality. 

 

 

Places that are closing

Chances are that this might become a regular slot on the blog in the coming weeks. One place that is going is Mulligan’s in Puerto Pollensa. Unfortunately, we can probably anticipate that there will be a number of others.

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Michael Row The Boat Ashore

Posted by andrew on July 13, 2009

The Unió Mallorquina party has a new leader. Again. Some eighteen months since the last one came in, in comes the latest new one – Miquel Àngel Flaquer who replaces another Miquel, Nadal of that name. Flaquer has promised that the past two years of instability in the party will now be put behind them. There is not just a sense of déjà vu about the election of a new leader, it exists also in that Nadal said much the same thing when he assumed the leadership. Flaquer had some words for Nadal, suggesting that he had used the party as a “personal instrument”. There will be a resumption of “munarismo” in the party, a reference to the matriarch of the UM, María Antonia Munar, now the president of the Balearic parliament and former president of the party. She was a founder of the party in 1982 and now looms over it in Thatcherite fashion, ready to handbag anyone who steps out of line. The leaders of the UM benefit from her patronage. Nadal was one; he was very much Munar’s boy when the last election was held. Not that it got him very far – well about eighteen months.

 

The fractious nature of the UM was in evidence prior to Nadal’s elevation. At one point during the leadership battle that he won, he actually took his bat home and withdrew his candidature, only to come back with the Munar handbag of approval and trounce both Alcúdia’s mayor Miquel Ferrer, who rictus-grinned through his gap-toothed smile having lost, and Miquel Grimalt, he of the notorious “Decreto Grimalt”, now the environment minister. All these Miquels – all these Michaels rowing the boat ashore into the rocks of political turmoil. Maybe now there is a Micky who will steady the ship. You wouldn’t really bet on it. But the UM does need to be stable. It does, after all, form part of the coalition that governs the islands, if govern is quite the right word – Nadal is also in a position of some importance as tourism minister.

 

As always, or seemingly as always, there was something a bit odd about the reporting of all this. Flaquer also had some words for the current state of Spanish politics, dominated, as it is, by the ruling PSOE and the Partido Popular. It fell, as all too frequently, to “The Bulletin” to provide the oddness. It referred to the PSOE as the National Socialists. Yep, the “n” and the “s” were capitalised. For anyone who might be a tad concerned, the PSOE is not a Nazi party. What should have been said was something along the lines of the nationwide socialist party – national socialists most certainly not. 

 

Finally on the UM, just as a reminder, it was the matriarch Munar who once complained about the “invasion of foreigners” into Mallorca. So, if you happen to be foreign and are planning an invasion, just bear in mind that María and her party are not among your greatest fans.

 

 

And coming back to our favourite newspaper. What exactly are we to make of its propaganda for the Calvia bar association and this association for “Europeans”, which now seems to be called “Europeos por España”? (It probably always was called that, just that it was reported wrongly as “Europa” rather than “España.) Once more, this propaganda appears in the Calvia section. The first understandably so, but the latter? But more importantly, are we to conclude that newspapers locally are mere vehicles for whatever association wants to publicise itself? Maybe we should. There was a very revealing interview in yesterday’s issue with a journalist from the Bulletin’s sister paper “Ultima Hora” who is due to retire next year. He said, inter alia, that journalism is “not about typing press releases”. How right he is. And if you really must, you can google and discover that there is a website for this esteemed European association. And no, I’m not giving out the address; what do you think this is, a propaganda exercise?  

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