Small glimmer of hope in Catalan crisis with new Spanish PM. >26
Sanchez may thaw icy ties between Madrid and Catalan separatists
BARCELONA: Socialist Pedro Sanchez’s arrival to power in Spain has brought a glimmer of hope that icy ties will thaw between Madrid and Catalan separatists, who are wary of the new leader but happy that veteran conservative Mariano Rajoy has gone.
It was Catalan separatist lawmakers – along with Basque nationalists – who swung the balance in favour of a no-confidence vote brought on Friday against Rajoy due to corruption woes afflicting his party.
As opposition leader, 46-year-old economist Sanchez was deeply critical of Catalonia’s secession bid last October.
He backed Rajoy’s imposition of direct rule on the region after separatist leaders declared Catalan independence. But he softened his tone as Catalan separatist lawmakers in the national parliament backed his no-confidence motion.
He has said he wants to “build bridges” with the new regional separatist government.
The fall of the conservatives in Madrid, along with the start of a new executive in Catalonia, could allow “the situation to improve”, says Joan Botella, politics professor at the Autonomous University of Barcelona.
Sanchez’s speech in parliament was not particularly ambitious where the wealthy divided region is concerned, he says.
But he could profit from divisions within the separatist camp.
The more moderate want to ditch the unilateral route to independence after several separatist leaders were jailed over their role in the secession bid.
Meanwhile, radicals like deposed president Carles Puigdemont, who is currently in Germany in selfexile, are in favour of keeping the conflict alive.
Sanchez’s swearing- in on Saturday coincided with that of new Catalan president Quim Torra’s executive, which automatically triggers the end of direct rule.
“The pro-independence movement is declining, there are internal divisions and with the new government Puigdemont is going to be less important,” says Botella.
“So maybe Sanchez will be lucky.” Things have not gone off to a good start.
Torra, a hardline separatist, criticised for writing tweets or articles deemed offensive to Spaniards, was described by Sanchez as a “racist” and “supremacist”.
Sanchez even dubbed Torra the Jean-Marie Le Pen of Spanish politics, referring to the controversial former far-right leader in France.
“The worst insults came from him and people from his (Socialist) party,” said a regional presidency source, who wished to remain anonymous.
“We don’t have a good opinion at all, but Rajoy was clearly worse. At least he’s of fresh disposition, and can defuse the situation and allow some detente.”
Since Rajoy came to power in 2011, ties between Madrid and Barcelona have consistently worsened.
The tensions escalated still further in the autumn with police violence during a banned independence referendum on Oct 1, a subsequent failed proclamation of a republic and the imposition of direct rule.