Separatist parties set to lose power in Catalan
regional election, polls show
Socialist party PSC looks like the clear winner in
Sunday’s vote, although it will fall some way short of achieving a majority
Sam Jones
in Madrid and agency
Sun 12 May
2024 23.34 CEST
Separatist
parties are in danger of losing their decade-long hold of power in Spain’s
northeastern Catalonia region, with the pro-union Socialist party poised to win
the most votes in Sunday’s election, according to a near-complete count of the
ballots.
The four
pro-independence parties, led by the Together party of former regional
president Carles Puigdemont, were set to get a total of 61 seats, short of the
key figure of 68 seats needed for a majority in the chamber.
The
Socialists, led by former health minister Salvador Illa, were on course to win
42 seats, up from 33 in 2021, when they also barely won the most votes but were
unable to form a government.
The
Socialists will still need to earn the backing of other parties to put Illa in
charge. Dealmaking in the coming days, perhaps weeks, will be key to forming a
government. Neither a hung parliament nor a new election is out of the
question.
But Illa’s
surge should bode well for the prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, and the
Socialists before European parliament elections next month.
The snap
election was called in March by Catalonia’s ERC president, Pere Aragonès, after
opposition parties voted down the budget proposed by his minority government.
The ERC
(Republican Left party) had governed in coalition with Junts, which is led by
the self-exiled former Catalan president Puigdemont, until festering
disagreements led the latter to abandon the government in October 2022.
Sunday’s
vote comes six and a half years after Puigdemont plunged Spain into its worst
political crisis in decades by staging an unlawful, unilateral referendum on
regional independence and following it up with a unilateral declaration of
independence.
The
conservative Spanish government of the time responded by sending in thousands
of police officers to stop people voting, often violently. It then sacked
Puigdemont and his cabinet, dissolved the regional parliament and took direct
control of Catalonia. Puigdemont fled Spain to avoid arrest, leaving other key
figures in the independence movement to face trial and prison.
Catalonia’s
president and Republican Left party (ERC) candidate, Pere Aragonès, votes as he
stands next to his wife, Janina Juli Pujol, and a child in Pineda de Mar.
Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters
Tempers
have cooled and tensions lowered since Sánchez became prime minister in 2018.
Almost three years ago, Sánchez pardoned nine independence leaders over their
role in the failed push to secede, and called for a new “era of dialogue and
understanding”. Although the pardons were controversial, they were nothing like
as contentious as the amnesty law that Sánchez introduced in April in order to
win the support of the ERC and Junts and thereby secure his return to office
after last summer’s inconclusive general election.
The law –
whose most high-profile beneficiary is Puigdemont – will apply to about 400
people involved in the symbolic independence referendum of November 2014 and
the poll that followed three years later.
Polls had
consistently pointed to a win for the PSC. Illa has acknowledged that some
people remain unconvinced by the amnesty, which the People’s party and others
have decried as a cynical, self-serving and craven piece of political
manoeuvring by Sánchez, but he has said the move and other conciliatory
gestures have greatly reduced tensions.
He accused
the ERC and Junts of being too obsessed with independence to improve
Catalonia’s declining public services or to prepare for the drought in the
region over the past three years.
In an
interview with the Guardian on Friday, Illa said a PSC-led government would
allow Catalonia to move past what he called a lost decade of rule by the ERC
and Junts.
“This
election could – and should – open a new era in Catalonia that I’d define in
two words: the verbs ‘unite’ and ‘serve’,” he said. “When you talk to people
about what matters to them, they talk about the drought, about education –
which was always excellent in Catalonia, but which is now lagging behind the
rest of Spain – about infrastructure, about safety, about healthcare.”
Puigdemont,
who is preparing to return to Spain once the amnesty law takes effect, has said
his party may abandon its support for Sánchez if it does not like the
composition of a PSC-led government.
During a
final campaign rally in the south of France on Friday, Puigdemont appealed for
the faithful to come out and vote “This vote will be a banged fist on the table
– a way of saying ‘enough!’,” he told supporters. “Enough of mistreating our
language and culture and saying sorry for who we want to be. The moment to say
‘enough!’ is now – saying it the day after the election will be too late.”
Aragonès
also urged pro-independence voters to turn out in force. “I ask you to fill the
ballot boxes with republican votes,” he said on Friday. “To build a future of
dignity and freedom. For independence, social justice, against the monarchy and
against corruption, and in favour of the whole of Catalonia.”
Recent
polls suggest the appetite for an independent Catalonia continues to diminish.
At the height of the crisis in October 2017, a survey by the Catalan
government’s centre for opinion studies found that 48.7% of Catalans supported
independence and 43.6% did not. A poll in March from the same centre found 51%
were against and 42% in favour.
Associated
Press contributed to this report

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário