European Destination’s Deputy Mayor Calls for Brits to Choose Alternative Vacation Spots Amid Anti-Tourism Backlash

Are Brits No Longer Welcome in Tenerife? Politician Calls for ‘Higher Quality’ Tourists

High-Quality Tourists in Demand

DEMAND

might be charged a daily “tourist tax” to visit the Canary Islands.

80,000 people participated in the protest

Protesters filled a square in Santa Cruz, blowing horns, waving Canary Islands flags, and brandishing banners reading: “You enjoy we suffer.”

Anti-tourist graffiti had by then already begun to crop up on walls and benches in and around southern Tenerife.

Tenerife residents said they were “fed up” of “low quality” Brit tourists

Carlos Tarife’s Stance

STANCE

tourists seeking an ‘all-inclusive’ holiday should go elsewhere

Politician Carlos Tarife, the deputy mayor for Tenerife capital Santa Cruz, said the island wants to move away from “all-inclusive” tourism and wristband-wearing holidaymakers.

He urged travellers who want to stay in their hotel while on holiday to go elsewhere, telling Radio Marca Tenerife: “Where before there were hotels with 250 beds, today we are in hotels with fewer beds and higher quality.”

“I think that’s the tourism we need in our land, not the wristband and ‘all-inclusive’ kind of tourism of ‘I stay inside the hotel and do everything inside the hotel’.

Call for Change in Tourist Demographics

DEMOGRAPHICS

Canary Islands president Fernando Clavijo raised the possibility as tens of thousands of angry locals – up to 80,000, according to protest organisers – took to the streets in Tenerife to rage against the tourism industry and urge Brits to “go home”.

Bitter messages – including “your paradise, our misery” – have been plastered all over the tourism hotspot for months.

Some Brit holidaymakers called their hotels on the island for confirmation that they would be safe on their holidays.

Tenerife residents said they were “fed up” of “low quality” Brit tourists who only visit to indulge in cheap beer, burgers, and sunbathing.

Mr Tarife, who is the head of public services and the environment for Santa Cruz Council as well as deputy mayor, emphasised on Tuesday that he was against a tourist moratorium – but also that the Islands need to try and attract a different demographic of tourist.

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