Beard is a slang term for a partner who disguises the other partner's true sexual orientation. Let me say straightaway that I do not suggest for one moment that either Mariano Rajoy or Alfredo Rubalcaba would have a beard (except of course that both of them, in a hair sense, do) and that either is anything other than 100% heterosexual. That said, a touch of gayness might play well with Rubalcaba's more liberal audience, while it wouldn't with Rajoy's conservative constituency.
José Luis Zapatero's announcement of a November general election ushers forth, earlier than expected, the battle of the beards; the hustings of the hirsute will take place sooner than we had thought.
Zapatero, clean-shaven, will be succeeded by greying facial hair of either the left or right. The good money, at present, is on a right-wing full set, but Rubalcaba could yet take a Gillette to Rajoy, the polls suggesting that he has already started to trim the Partido Popular beard.
With Zapatero's departure in November, we will lose one of the great comedy characters of European politics. What beckons next for José Luis Bean? A series of "The Thin Blue Line"? Inappropriate perhaps, if only in terms of colour. With his going, we will be deprived of one of the finest lookalikes to ever step onto the world stage, but we could yet get another.
Rubalcaba is a dead ringer for Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (in his younger, less beardy days that is). And then there's his name. Rubal? Ruble? Is there a closet Russian in the PSOE house, an old-time Commie waiting to emerge and lead Spain from its hard-labour Gulag of economic crisis? Or indeed plunge it deeper into crisis?
Unfortunately, we are unlikely to ever know or to ever have the satisfaction of having a former Russian novelist meeting Putin or Medvedev at European leaders' gatherings. Instead there will be Rajoy, the greyest man of Spanish politics, bereft of charisma and any redeeming comedic features.
But whoever wins the upcoming election will be starting from a position of handicap. Both Rajoy and Rubalcaba can consider themselves already stripped of some support. Why? Because politicians with beards have been shown to poll worse than those without.
Spanish political facial hair has generally been absent since the days of Franco, who sported a sort of Hitler but never a beard. José Maria Aznar brought the moustache back into political fashion, along with hair dye, but Zapatero reverted to the clean-shaven presidential (or prime ministerial, if you prefer) look that had been favoured by Felipe González.
Now, though, the electorate is faced not only by faces with moustaches but those also with beards. It will make for a very difficult choice. On the basis that men with beards cannot be trusted, both may fail to win.
This is not anti-beardism on my behalf, but a statement of the fact that politicians with beards don't go down that well with electorates. And if one considers some of the leading political beards of the generation, you can begin to appreciate why: various Iranian ayatollahs as well as Ahmadineyad, Castro, David Blunkett.
When Europe's political leaders line up for photos at economic crisis meetings any time after the Spanish elections, there will be one particularly conspicuous leader. Who's the weird beard, will go the question. All other of Europe's politicians have engaged the use of the razor. David Cameron, Nicolas Sarkozy, Angela Merkel; none of them bearded, or even close to being. Yet, there will be Rajoy (or Rubalcaba) in the glare of the cameras with bits of Euro-leaders' lunch clinging to the chin. At a time when Moody's is threatening to downgrade Spain's credit rating, the last thing Spain needs is a future prime minister who can't be trusted.
It is the beard factor that makes any prospect of Rajoy turning Spain's fortunes around to be illusory. The question is, therefore: will he (or Rubalcaba) do the decent thing, in the name of Spanish economic recovery, and have a shave?
But to come back to the beard slang term, there is a definite contrast in style to the two political beards who will be battling it out in November. Rubalcaba's Solzhenitsyn hints at something vaguely Bohemian and liberal. His beard is in keeping with the social policies that Zapatero has so successfully managed to introduce. It is the beard of a left-wing university lecturer who insists on wearing sandals.
Rajoy's, on the other hand, is a studious and serious affair, as befits a studious and serious man disinclined to approve of liberal frivolities. It is the beard of a suited management consultant sent in to effect swingeing cuts. Which is exactly what he will do of course.
Bring on November, bring on the beards, and let's get ready to stubble.
Any comments to andrew@thealcudiaguide.com please.
Index for July 2011
Associations, business and tourist - 27 July 2011
Balcony diving - 2 July 2011
Beaches and umbrellas - 10 July 2011
Butane gas service - 24 July 2011
Can Picafort ducks: legal change called for - 28 July 2011
Catalan v. Castilian - 29 July 2011
Chemists threatening to close - 22 July 2011
Competitiveness, tourism - 21 July 2011
Dogs - 23 July 2011
Election, Spanish general - 31 July 2011
Fiesta funding - 3 July 2011, 7 July 2011
Fiesta parties - 13 July 2011, 19 July 2011
Full English breakfast - 20 July 2011
Holiday lets, private - 5 July 2011, 8 July 2011
Hotel conversion - 8 July 2011
Hotels for sale - 12 July 2011
Language gaffes - 14 July 2011
Maps - 18 July 2011
News Of The World - 11 July 2011
Newspapers, iPad and - 17 July 2011
No Frills Excursions and social media - 9 July 2011
Pollensa Music Festival - 1 July 2011, 4 July 2011
Restaurant business failure - 16 July 2011
Russian tourists - 25 July 2011
Subbuteo and table games - 26 July 2011
Tenders - 6 July 2011
Tradition industry, Mallorca's - 30 July 2011
TV Mallorca to close - 15 July 2011
Sunday, July 31, 2011
The Battle Of The Beards
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