Spain’s former prime minister Adolfo Suarez in Oviedo, in northern Spain, in this file picture that was taken in November 1996. Photo: ReutersSpain’s former prime minister Adolfo Suarez in Oviedo, in northern Spain, in this file picture that was taken in November 1996. Photo: Reuters

Former prime minister Adolfo Suarez, who died yesterday, steered Spain through one of the most turbulent periods in its political history and built bridges between the “two Spains” after fascist dictator General Francisco Franco died in 1975.

Suarez, who was 81, was hospitalised on March 17 with a respiratory infection. He had suffered from Alzheimer’s disease for many years. His death was reported by state television.

Many Spaniards remember Suarez’s unruffled demeanour during one of the most tense moments in the country’s modern history, an attempted coup on February 23 in 1981.

Six years earlier, after Franco’s death, King Juan Carlos called on Suarez, a young Francoist minister, to try to unite the two factions who were still in a sense fighting the 1936-1939 civil war, and indeed were further apart than ever after nearly 40 years of fascism exiled thousands of left-wingers.

At the time, his Francoist colleagues called him a turncoat and the main opposition Socialists accused him of opportunism.

The immediate aim was to organise Spain’s first democratic elections since the war, which Suarez ended up winning in 1977, serving as prime minister for four years in which the country was beset by myriad economic, political and secu-rity problems.

He drew criticism from all sides and eventually resigned. But decades later, Suarez came to be recognised as one of the founding fathers of modern Spain.

A 2007 poll showed that Spaniards regarded him as the most respected prime minister since Franco’s death.

“Prime Minister’s Suarez political career calls to mind the highest spirit of our democratic transition: recognition of dissenting voices, promotion of tolerance and the practice of dialogue.

“Thanks to that attitude he had the capacity to forge great agreements,” Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, who served as prime minister from 2004 to 2011, said.

He steered the country from post-Franco turmoil

Handsome, charming both in and out of the political arena and acting with a notable sangfroid at potentially explosive times, Suarez was made a duke in 1981 and formed a close friendship with the King.

“He was a great statesman,” said King Juan Carlos in a TV address.

“Suarez saw with clarity and great generosity that the welfare and the future of everyone depended on consensus.”

PM Mariano Rajoy announced three days of official mourning, starting today.

“We have lost one of the great men of our time,” Rajoy said in a live TV address. “Adolfo Suarez was the best bridge for reconciliation between Spaniards.”

The death of a figure such as Suarez, respected for making sacrifices for the good of the nation, seems particularly poignant at a time when polls show that corruption has eroded Spaniards’ faith in the political class.

One of the most controversial steps in the transition process was Suarez’s 1977 legalisation of the Communist Party, which had been persecuted by Franco as the backbone of the forces against him.

Suarez carried out the move in stealth during the long Easter weekend, having agreed in advance with the exiled head of the Communists, Santiago Carrillo.

The surprise decision provoked fury in the establishment and the military, as well as fear amongst ordinary Spaniards who had been told for decades that the Communists and Carrillo were arch-enemies of the state. But Suarez understood it was unavoidable if Spain was to become a democracy after years of dictatorship.

“He was a transformational leader whose main priority as a politician was national reconciliation. This was probably due to the fact that the legacy of both sides of the Civil War was very much part of his family history,” biographer and historian Charles Powell said.

“When he was asked whether it was a good thing that former Francoists had played such a prominent role in the transition, he used to say: ‘I never asked anyone where they came from, only where they wanted to go’.”

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.