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Spain’s scandal-hit royals pin hopes on prince

MADRID (AFP) – Losing popularity and besieged by a corruption  scandal that has reached an official in the palace itself, Spain’s royals are  looking to the dashing heir to the throne, Prince Felipe, to save their image.

At 75, King Juan Carlos shows no sign of abdicating as his contemporary  Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands has done – but he said in a recent interview  that Felipe was “well prepared” to take over when the time comes.

Spanish Crown Prince Felipe (C) arrives at the International Tourism Trade Fair (FITUR) on his 45th birthday in Madrid .REUTERS

Spanish Crown Prince Felipe (C) arrives at the International Tourism Trade Fair (FITUR) on his 45th birthday in Madrid .REUTERS

The palace spent last year turning Felipe, who turned 45 on Wednesday, into  its most visible public representative.  He had more official engagements than

any other member of the family in 2012, while Juan Carlos recovered from  operations to replace both hips – one due to a fall during a luxury  elephant-hunting safari in Botswana, for which he apologised to the nation.

Felipe spent part of his 45th birthday on Wednesday charming the crowds as  he inaugurated a tourism fair in Madrid. In line with the palace’s new  recession-era regimen, no official celebration was announced.

A typical item on his diary of official engagements, it received less media  coverage than the other news story concerning the palace: a corruption case  affecting Felipe’s brother-in-law, Inaki Urdangarin.

An investigating judge ruled on Wednesday that Urdangarin and an associate  must post eight million euros ($11 million) in civil bail, while waiting to see  if they will go on trial accused of embezzling public funds.

Separately, the palace reacted to the judge’s decision to summon Carlos  Garcia Revenga, secretary to the king’s daughters Elena and Cristina -  Urdangarin’s wife – to be questioned in the case.

The palace said it was keeping Garcia in his post and would take no action  until he goes before the judge on February 23 – when Urdangarin himself is  also due to appear, for the second time.

Juan Carlos won wide respect for helping guide Spain to democracy as a  parliamentary monarchy after the death of dictator Francisco Franco in 1975,  and for helping quell an attempted military coup in 1981.

It is a hard act for Felipe to follow. A generation after those historic  events, the palace faces a challenge to convince the nation that the monarchy  is still needed.

A poll in early January by El Mundo newspaper showed support for the  monarchy as an institution overall fell to a record low of 54 per cent. Felipe said in a speech in 2011 that he wanted to “constantly adapt and  adjust the institution to the times we are living in, working to unite our  history with our future, to link our traditions to a cutting-edge spirit and  progress”.

The towering prince – who according to Spanish media is 1.97 metres  (almost six feet, five inches) tall – appears smiling and approachable when  greeting the public and can give speeches in English with a cut-glass English  accent.

His wife Letizia, a former television journalist, and their blonde  daughters, the Infantas Leonor, eight, and Sofia, five, are darlings of the  glossy celebrity magazines.

Observers say Felipe needs to work his charms still harder to win over a  sceptical nation, currently suffering its worst economic hardship since Juan  Carlos helped steer the country to democracy in the late 1970s.

Abdication by Juan Carlos would be a risky move currently, “with the  Urdangarin case up in the air and with Felipe still not having broken the wall  that separates him from the public”, said Pilar Urbano, a prominent author  specialising in royal matters.

“Letizia represents an opportunity to make the monarchy more sociable. It  is still all about balconies, protocol and the throne,” she said.

“It would be good to see them both out shopping in the sales.”

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