Item 1 of 20 Far-right demonstrators make the fascist salute as they march towards Spain’s Parliament under the slogan “Join us to save Spain” in Madrid, Spain, November 8, 2025. In Spain, the public display, distribution, or use of dictator Franco symbols and propaganda is not a crime unless it humiliates the victims or there’s a glorification of the dictatorship. REUTERS/Alejandro Martinez Velez
[1/20]Far-right demonstrators make the fascist salute as they march towards Spain’s Parliament under the slogan “Join us to save Spain” in Madrid, Spain, November 8, 2025. In Spain, the public display, distribution, or use of dictator Franco symbols and propaganda is not a crime unless it humiliates… Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab Read moreFranco nostalgia swells among disaffected Spanish youth amid cost-of-living and housing crisesSocial media spreads AI Franco clips and revisionist narrativesSignificant minority now view Franco era positively, polls showVoting intention for far-right Vox party climbed to record 18.9% by July this yearGovernment promotes ‘democratic memory’ laws; right-wing parties resist
MADRID, Nov 19 (Reuters) – A spike in support for Spain’s far right is reviving memories of late dictator Francisco Franco and burnishing his legacy among disaffected young Spaniards, even as the left-wing government seeks to eradicate symbols of the fascist past.
AI-generated clips of Franco railing against modern ills proliferate on social media along with revisionist history lessons and nightclubs playing techno remixes of Spain’s fascist-era anthem.
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A survey by state‑run pollster CIS last month showed that more than one in five – 21.3% – of Spaniards saw the Franco era as “good” or “very good” for the country, compared to 11.2% when asked a similar question in 2000.
Pie chart on how Spaniards rate the Francoist regime years as of October 2025
In another CIS poll from July, 17.3% of Spaniards aged 18-24 said they preferred an authoritarian government to a democratic one, a 10-point jump from 2009.
Stacked bars on how Spaniards view Francoism between 1985 and 2000.Multiple lines on Spanish preference for authoritarian rule with data from 2007, 2009 and 2025
Spaniards are largely split along the right-left divide over how to handle the legacy of the four-decade dictatorship that followed the 1936-39 civil war, which ended with Franco’s death 50 years ago on Thursday at age 82.
Hitherto, democratic Spain has done little of the soul-searching of other nations with troubled pasts like South Africa, with its Truth and Reconciliation Commission, or Chile, with the jailing of generals from its past military regime.
Former Spanish dictator General Francisco Franco speaks from the balcony of Madrid’s Royal Palace next to the then Prince Juan Carlos of Spain. REUTERS/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
Since coming to office in 2018, the Socialist-led government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has stepped up efforts. It has exhumed the remains of victims of Francoism, designated sites of repression as places of “democratic memory”, removed Franco-era symbols from public spaces, and run advertising campaigns about the benefits of democracy.
The conservative People’s Party (PP) and far-right Vox are contesting those measures in court, calling them divisive and partisan by focusing only on victims from one side.
SOCIAL MEDIA SUPPORT
Riding a wave of anger over concessions to separatist movements and increased immigration, far-right Vox has nearly doubled its projected vote share since 2023.
Voting intention for Vox climbed to a record 18.9% by July this year, while CIS polls also show Vox’s backing among youth rising from low single digits in 2019 to double‑digit support, especially among men.
Vox lawmaker Manuel Mariscal said that thanks to social media, “many young people are discovering that the post-civil war years weren’t a dark period, but rather one of reconstruction, progress and reconciliation to achieve national unity”.
Steven Forti, a historian at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, agreed that social media was breeding affinity with authoritarianism, along with anti-establishment and revisionist narratives aided by the passage of time.
“It’s obvious that young people today haven’t experienced the dictatorship, and in most cases, neither have their parents,” Forti said.
CLASH OF NARRATIVES
Defenders of the dictator say life was more affordable under Franco compared to the current housing and cost-of-living crises disproportionately affecting young Spaniards. However, all economic indicators have improved significantly since Franco died.
They also cite Franco’s public works such as dams, hospitals and housing, as well as containing the spread of Communism or preserving the unity of European Union member state Spain.
Historians say Franco’s regime executed tens of thousands of dissidents, operated a vast network of prisons and forced-labour camps, and tortured detainees. Political parties, trade unions and regional separatist movements were banned while women needed permission from their husbands or fathers for basic administrative procedures.
The remains of people killed by late Spanish dictator Francisco Franco’s forces during the civil war, lie during the exhumation of a mass grave at Nuestra Senora de la Salud cemetery in Cordoba, southern Spain, November 13, 2025. REUTERS/Jon Nazca Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
Censorship and secret police enforced Franco’s blend of Spanish nationalism and ultra-Catholicism. Millions went into exile fleeing repression and famine.
WHAT’S NEXT?
The Madrid government has vowed to dissolve the Franco Foundation, a non-profit organisation set up by the late dictator’s sympathisers, but the process is expected to be lengthy and eventually resolved in court.
“They can extinguish it and outlaw it, but they’ll never extinguish ideas. They’ll keep on flowing with time, so it’s a totalitarian measure that won’t lead us anywhere,” the foundation’s president, Juan Chicharro, told Reuters.
Chicharro said the leftist government frequently drew the “Franco card” to divert attention from other problems.
Emilio Silva, who heads a group campaigning for victims of Francoism, said Franco had never really gone away.
“Francoism remains in Spain. There are hundreds of traces. Franco is still buried in a tomb paid for with my taxes.”
A visitor performs a fascist salute in front of an informal shrine to late Spanish dictator Francisco Franco at Mingorrubio-El Pardo cemetery in Madrid, where his body was reburied after being exhumed from the Valley of the Fallen — now called the Valley of Cuelgamuros — which holds the remains of more than 30,000 people from both… Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab Read more
Carmina Gustran, a historian heading the government’s commemorative events called “Spain: 50 Years Of Liberty”, told Reuters it must tackle disinformation and revisionist narratives with strengthened education and digital literacy programmes.
Spain must give up the notion that burying the past would birth a healthy democracy, she added.
“You cannot close a wound that hasn’t healed; if it isn’t cleaned it will get infected,” she said.
Grouped columns on Spaniards opinion on the country’s transition to democracy
Reporting by Emma Pinedo, David Latona and Silvio Castellanos; additional reporting by Jesús Calero and Susana Vera; editing by Aislinn Laing and Mark Heinrich
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