Jorge Verstrynge

Jorge Verstrynge
Verstrynge in 2013
Secretary General of People's Alliance
In office
1979–1986
Preceded by Manuel Fraga
Succeeded by Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón
Member of the Congress of Deputies
In office
1982–1989
Constituency Seville and Madrid
Personal details
Born (1948-09-22)22 September 1948
Tangier
Political party AP
PSOE
Spouse(s) María Vidaurreta[1]
Mercedes Revuelta[1]

Jorge Verstrynge Rojas (September 22, 1948) is a Spanish former politician, activist and political scientist, professor in the Complutense University of Madrid.[2] Secretary General of People's Alliance in the 1980s, he experimented along his political career an ideological switch towards leftist positions.

Biography

Talking to Alfonso Guerra in 1982

Born 22 September 1948 in Tangier,[2] he is son of a Spanish mother and a Belgian father, Willy Verstrynge-Thalloen, follower of Léon Degrelle during the Second World War.[3][1] During his youth in Morocco and Algeria he was also influenced by his stepfather, a French communist called René Mazel.[1] He moved from France to Spain in order to finish his secondary education and entering the University.[4] He became one of the proponents of Nouvelle Droite ideas within People's Alliance (AP).[5][lower-alpha 1] Secretary General of AP from 1979 to 1986,[2] he was considered the protégé of Manuel Fraga, leader of the party. He also was, within People's Alliance, one of the promoters of the Club del Sable ("Club of the Sabre").[8]

He ran as AP's Mayoral candidate in the 1983 Madrid City Council election, but his candidature was beaten by the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), led by the Mayor Enrique Tierno Galván.[1] After a rift with Fraga, he left AP in 1986;[1][2] he became member of the PSOE in 1993.[1][2] He left the party, and became advisor of Francisco Frutos, leader of the United Left.[1]

Notes

  1. According to César Vidal, he was allegedly close to CEDADE neo-Nazi group before becoming Secretary General of People's Alliance.[6] Xavier Casals argues his entry in the Spanish far-right scene —despite signing an article in the CEDADE journal (actually a work by his father)— was not actually through the CEDADE ranks.[7]

References

Bibliography

  • Barbó, Jorge (2014-06-21). "Los extremos de Verstrynge". El Correo.
  • Casals, Xavier (1995). Neonazis en España. De las audiciones wagnerianas a los skinheads (1966-1995). Barcelona: Grijalbo. ISBN 84-253-2804-7.
  • González Castillejos, Jorge (2014). "Gestación y desarrollo de Alianza Popular en la provincia de Ciudad Real durante los años de la Transición (1976-1982)" (PDF). Cuadernos de Estudios Manchegos (39): 121–146. ISSN 0526-2623.
  • González Cuevas, Pedro Carlos (2009). "Las "otras" derechas en la España actual: teólogos, "racionalistas" y neoderechistas". Bulletin d'histoire contemporaine de l'Espagne. Université de Provence (44): 263–278. ISSN 0987-4135.
  • Rodríguez, Antonio (2014). "La insólita evolución política de Verstrynge". Tiempo de hoy. ISSN 0213-1951. Archived from the original on September 14, 2014.
  • Vidal, César (2000). In: Uriel Macías Kapón, Yolanda Moreno Koch, Ricardo Izquierdo Benito (Eds.). "El antisemitismo en la España contemporánea". Los judíos en la España contemporánea: historia y visiones, 1898-1998. Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha. ISBN 9788484270447.
  • Vicent, Manuel (1983-05-07). "Jorge Verstrynge o el ardor". El País.
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