The Standard (St. Catharines)

Spanish PM urges Catalans to defeat separatist­s at polls

- JOSEPH WILSON

BARCELONA, Spain — Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy urged voters in Catalonia on Sunday to defeat the separatist­s who led the region’s recent drive for independen­ce when they go to the polls in an early election next month.

Rajoy, who used previously untapped constituti­onal authority to call the Dec. 21 regional election, told members of his conservati­ve Popular Party at a Barcelona hotel that “we want a massive turnout to open up a new period of normalcy” in Catalonia.

Rajoy’s visit to Barcelona, Catalonia’s main city, was his first to the region since he used the constituti­onal powers to stifle the secession push led by the regional government.

After Catalonia’s Parliament voted Oct. 27 in favour of declaring independen­ce, Rajoy responded by firing top government officials, dissolving the Parliament and ordering the early election.

Spain’s Constituti­on says the nation is “indivisibl­e.”

“It’s urgent to return a sense of normality to Catalonia and do so as soon as possible to lower the social and economic tensions,” Rajoy said Sunday. “The threat of the separatist­s is destructiv­e, sad and agonizing. Secessioni­sm has created insecurity and uncertaint­y.”

Polls show a tight race between Catalan separatist­s and politician­s who want the region to remain a part of Spain. In Brussels on Sunday, those favouring independen­ce for Catalonia rallied near the European Union quarter.

Rajoy’s party has won three national elections since 2011, but secured less than 10 per cent of the vote in Catalonia’s 2015 regional election.

The Popular Party continues to poll behind several other parties in the region, including the pro-business Citizens and the Socialists, which both oppose secession.

The far-left separatist CUP party decided Sunday to participat­e in the December elections. The CUP is one of three pro-secession parties in the region.

Rajoy defended his decision to temporaril­y take over running Catalonia under a section of the Spain Constituti­on that allows central authoritie­s to intervene in regions where officials act outside the law.

Catalonia’s separatist­s, and even some moderates, have criticized the measures as heavyhande­d.

“Exceptiona­l measures can only be taken when there is no other option, and we adopted them to stop the increasing attacks to peaceful coexistenc­e,” Rajoy said.

Apart from the government takeover, 10 Catalan separatist leaders have been jailed while their roles in promoting secession are under investigat­ion. Catalonia’s deposed president and four former members of his Cabinet fled to Brussels and plan to fight extraditio­n to Spain.

Rajoy linked the continued economic recovery of Spain, and especially Catalonia, to the removal of pro-independen­ce parties from power.

Over 2,000 companies have relocated their headquarte­rs from Catalonia due to fears of being cast out of the European Union’s common market in the case of secession. Employment numbers also showed that Catalonia fell behind other parts of Spain in October.

“But I say that the recovery of legality and normalcy will help reactivate the economy,” the prime minister said.

 ?? EMILIO MORENATTI/AP PHOTO ?? Demonstrat­ors gather during a protest calling for the release of Catalan jailed politician­s, in Barcelona, Spain, on Saturday.
EMILIO MORENATTI/AP PHOTO Demonstrat­ors gather during a protest calling for the release of Catalan jailed politician­s, in Barcelona, Spain, on Saturday.

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