The first prime minister of the democratic era, the man who guided the transformation of Spain after the Franco dictatorship, passed away in Madrid on Sunday
Adolfo Suárez, Spain’s first prime minister following the Franco
dictatorship, the man who spearheaded a rocky but successful transition to
democracy by legalizing the outlawed Socialist and Communist parties and the
labor unions, died on Sunday after a long battle with Alzheimer’s. He was
81.
The former prime minister had been suffering from the disease for the
past decade and had not appeared in public since 2003, when he attended a
political rally for his son, Adolfo Suárez Illana.
On Friday, a tearful Suárez Illana announced at a news conference at
the Cemtro de Madrid clinic that physicians had given his father no more than 48
hours to live. "The disease has progressed a lot and everything indicates that
the end is imminent," he said.
The elder Suárez had been taken to the clinic on Monday suffering
from a respiratory infection.
History will remember Suárez for his bravery in standing up to a gang
of Civil Guard officers who tried to take over the young Spanish government in
an attempted coup on February 23, 1981. Led by Civil Guard Lieutenant Colonel
Antonio Tejero, the armed men stormed into Congress the day lawmakers were
voting on the prime minister’s successor, Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo.
As deputies ducked for cover when Tejero and his men began firing
their weapons, a stoic Suárez remained calmly seated without even flinching. The
entire event was captured by television news cameras.
Born in Cebreros, Ávila province, Suárez studied law at the
University of Salamanca. He held several top government posts during Francisco
Franco’s regime.
In 1976, months following the death of Francisco Franco, King Juan
Carlos had asked Suárez to take over as prime minister from Carlos Arías Navarro
– the dictator’s last prime minister – and organize free elections. The
monarch’s choice didn’t sit well with many leftists because Suárez had held
various Cabinet posts under Franco, including minister of the National Movement
– the only legal political organization during the dictatorship.
A mastered negotiator, Suárez ruffled feathers in the military and
among the far-right after he invited Socialist leader Felipe González, who had
been living in Paris, and Santiago Carrillo, the Spanish Communist Party (PCE)
chief who was in Moscow, also in exile, to join the democratic process.
“We had some very difficult challenges during the Transition not only
with the military but with the Catholic Church and labor unions as well. And
since then they have all recognized their duties,” said Santiago González who
served as his press aide from 1976 to 1982.
Through the Political Reform Law of 1976, Suárez was able to steer
Spain to hold its first free elections in four decades and legalize the unions.
He organized his own coalition, Democratic Center Union (UCD), and in 1977
became the first democratically elected prime minister following the Franco
dictatorship, capturing more than 34 percent of the vote.
González and his Socialists came in second with 29 percent
support.
The following year, Spaniards voted on a new Constitution in a
referendum.
Despite the large support for his democratic reforms, Suárez’s
government was plagued by the growing restlessness of pro-separatist regional
factions in the Basque Country, Galicia and Catalonia which openly began
discussing their drives for independence – issues that were taboo under
Franco.
At the same time, Suárez also had to deal with the soaring number of
murders and violence committed by the Basque terrorist group ETA, which became
bolder in its plots now that Franco was gone. The period during Suárez’s
government marked ETA’s most active years; the terrorist organization committed
more than 240 murders between 1978 and 1980.
While under pressure from different parties, unions and other groups,
Suárez, according to some historians, became fed up with factionalism inside his
own UCD. Although a conservative coalition, the organization he had founded
included members from a broad range of ideologies.
Suárez was also beset by the constant uneasiness inside the military,
which was still fuming over the prime minister’s decision to legalize the PCE –
a move seen as a slap in the face by many senior officers who fought a bloody
Civil War (1936 to 1939) to rid the country of Marxists and radicals.
Rumors that a coup was imminent had plagued Suárez throughout his
term. In 1978, the government put down one attempted military putsch known as
Operation Galaxia and one of its leaders, Antonio Tejero, was given a
seven-month sentence.
In January 1981, Suárez stunned the nation when he announced that he
was stepping down as prime minister. Congress met on February 23 to ratify
Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo as his successor but the vote was interrupted when Tejero
and his men broke into the chamber and held the deputies hostage throughout the
night.
The coup petered out when King Juan Carlos took to the airwaves
demanding that the armed forces respect the democratic institutions, prompting
millions of Spaniards to march out on the streets in support of democracy.
Tejero was given a 30-year sentence while other coup participants served various
jail terms.
After he stepped down as prime minister and left the UCD, Suárez
organized a new party, Democratic and Social Center (CDS) and announced his
candidacy for the 1982 elections. The CDS obtained poor results, while González
and his Socialists were swept into office.
Suárez toyed with politics for years afterwards but was never able to
gain the same momentum or raise similar excitement as he had in 1976.
He made frequent appearances at political rallies and official state
ceremonies, and preserved his long lasting friendship with King Juan Carlos, who
bestowed upon him the title Duke of Suárez.
Personal tragedy struck the former prime minister at the beginning of
the last decade when his wife, María del Amparo Illana Elórtegui, died from
cancer in 2001. Three years later, the disease took the life of his eldest
daughter María del Amparo ("Marian") Suárez Illana.
Suárez’s last public appearance took place in 2003 during a rally to
support his son, Suárez Illana, who unsuccessfully ran for regional premier of
Castilla-La Mancha on the Popular Party ticket. He lost to Socialist José
Bono.
After much press speculation about his health, in May 2005 Suárez
Illana announced on Spanish television that his father was suffering from
Alzheimer’s.
One of the last photographs of Suárez released to the press was taken
by his son in July 2008. The touching photo shows the king walking with his arm
around the former prime minister at Suárez’s home where the monarch had gone to
visit him.
“The king's relationship with my father has always been exceptional,"
the son said last week. “Thanks to the king, he was head of government. Thanks
to the king, he was able to do what he liked at a unique moment in the history
of Spain. Together, they changed the course of history."
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