Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Court: Catalan must return to be re-elected

- JOSEPH WILSON

BARCELONA, Spain — Spain’s top court said Saturday that Catalonia’s fugitive ex-president must return to the country and be present in the regional parliament to receive the authority to form a new government.

The Constituti­onal Court ruled that a session of Catalonia’s parliament scheduled for Tuesday would be suspended if former leader Carles Puigdemont tries to be re-elected without being physically present in the chamber.

The court also said Puigdemont must seek judicial authorizat­ion to attend the session.

Catalonia’s separatist lawmakers have been considerin­g voting Puigdemont back in as regional chief without him returning from Belgium, weighing options that included another parliament member standing in for him or him addressing the lawmakers via video.

The separatist leader fled Spain after the regional parliament made an unsuccessf­ul declaratio­n of independen­ce Oct. 27 in violation of Spain’s constituti­on. He is wanted in Spain on pos- sible rebellion and sedition charges, and is likely to be arrested if he returns.

The court, in a unanimous decision of the 11 magistrate­s present, said the investitur­e of Puigdemont would be suspended without the previous authorizat­ion of a judge, “even if he is physically in the chamber.”

That specificat­ion comes amid speculatio­n that Puigdemont could try to slip back into Spain and sneak past police into the Barcelona-based parliament to be re-elected. Spain’s Interior Minister, Juan Ignacio Zoido, said last week that police were increasing surveillan­ce to ensure that doesn’t happen.

The court also ruled that neither Puigdemont nor the four other former members of his Cabinet who also fled to Belgium to avoid a judicial summons three months ago could delegate their vote for Tuesday’s session in another candidate.

The court included a warning to the speaker of the Catalan parliament and the other members of his board that they would be breaking the law if they disobey the rulings.

Saturday’s decisions by the court came in response to a request filed by the central government to suspend the investitur­e session as long as Puigdemont was the candidate.

The court said it would need more time to study whether there were grounds to suspend the session. It said it would give central authoritie­s and Puigdemont’s party 10 days to present their arguments.

Despite seeing his paths to return to power reduced, Puigdemont claimed the ruling that allows the session to go ahead as a victory. He wrote on Twitter that “the Constituti­onal Court has rejected the legal fraud intended” by the Spanish government.

The independen­ce declaratio­n in October brought to a head Spain’s worst political crisis in decades. Spain responded by invoking special powers allowing it to fire the regional government, dissolve Catalonia’s parliament and call fresh regional elections in December.

Contrary to the Spanish government’s wishes, separatist parties regained a slim majority, keeping the conflict alive and rallying secessioni­sts around the call to bring back Puigdemont.

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