Spanish leader’s allies urging unity party to rule Catalonia
Clock ticking after vote that laid bare divisions in region.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s allies are trying to thwart attempts by separatists to form a government in Catalonia and exploit the fact that its two main leaders are in prison or self-imposed exile.
Pro-independence groups together won a majority in the Barcelona regional parliament last week, but Ciudadanos gained the most seats of any single party in the election and opposes any breakaway from the rest of Spain. Rajoy’s People’s Party is now leaning on Ciudadanos to explore ways to govern Catalonia, which accounts for a fifth of the country’s economy.
“There is an alternative and we have to put it to work because anything can happen in Catalonia,” Fernando Martinez Maillo, general coordinator of the People’s Party, said in a tweet Wednesday. “After winning the elections, the logical step would be to try to form a government.”
While Ciudadanos officials played down the idea because they don’t have the popular support to challenge the separatist majority, the clock is ticking for the Catalans after a vote that laid bare the divisions in the region and did little to put the issue of self-determination to rest following a tumultuous two months. The regional president must be chosen by Feb. 8.
There’s much that needs to be resolved before the separatists can turn their election victory into a working administration, not least who would lead it.
Carles Puigdemont, the regional president who was ousted by Spain after he led a unilateral declaration of independence in October, remains in Brussels. He faces arrest if he returns to Spain and said he would come back to be sworn in again only if the “right guarantees” are offered.
Then there’s Oriol Junqueras, his former vice president and stalwart of the independence push. He’s being held in jail awaiting trial as a judge ascertains whether he and other pro-independence campaigners participated in a rebellion against Spain.
It’s still unclear how either man could be named president if they can’t turn up in person for an investiture vote, said Argelia Queralt, professor of constitutional law at Barcelona University. Any decision to let them attend would be in the hands of the Supreme Court judge, she said.