Opposition leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo, whom polls suggest could be Spain’s next prime minister, admitted Thursday (1 June) he didn’t speak English but brushed it off saying there were always “translators”.
“My problem is English… I have to start studying it,” he told Telecinco television in his first interview since his right-wing Popular Party (PP) scored a major victory in Sunday’s local and regional elections.
“I already had an English teacher set up to start learning on Monday, but now it turns out I’ve been called to a general election. Well, no problem,” Feijóo said.
“International summits normally have translators and what’s most important is that I know what I want to say.”
On Monday morning, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez – whose ruling Socialists suffered a drubbing in Sunday’s polls – caught the country off guard by calling snap elections on July 23.
Spain takes over the rotating presidency of the European Union on July 1.
During the regional election campaign, Feijóo went viral after he was caught on camera mispronouncing US rock legend Bruce Springsteen’s name, calling him “Bruce Sprinter” during a party rally.
Spain has had a long history of prime ministers who do not speak English.
One was the former PP prime minister Mariano Rajoy who, when asked a question in English by the BBC at a press conference in 2017, dismissed it with a wave.
“Hombre, no,” he retorted, or “Oh man, no”, despite years of private English classes dating back to 2009 when he was opposition leader.
Sanchez is Spain’s first prime minister to be fluent in English.
Read more with EURACTIV
Spain’s possible ‘Melonisation’ strengthens ‘patriots’ EU plansIn today’s edition of the Capitals, find out more about the Albanian prime minister mediating with Vucic in Moldova, the German Greens calling for Hungary’s EU presidency stint to be postponed, and so much more.
Source: euractiv.com