Los Angeles Times

Catalonia braces for takeover by Spain

Madrid awaits Senate vote on implementi­ng direct rule to quell independen­ce bid.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske and Laura King

BARCELONA, Spain — In a crowd outside Catalonia’s ornate regional headquarte­rs in Barcelona, two men argued fervently. One was for independen­ce from Spain, the other against.

Like others elsewhere in Catalonia, Xaui Nicolau, 41, and Juan Antonio Martinez, 67, argued over whether the northeaste­rn region’s president, Carles Puigdemont, had miscalcula­ted by refusing to renounce secessioni­st aims.

Puigdemont, in a speech Thursday, ruled out early parliament­ary elections — some observers thought holding the elections might help stave off Madrid’s takeover — but not independen­ce.

Now, with the Spanish government poised to strip Catalonia of its regional autonomy and remove Puigdemont as soon as Saturday, Nicolau said a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce was “the only option” remaining.

But Martinez, like officials in Madrid, staunchly insisted that Catalonia’s independen­ce drive was illegal. “It’s the way you did it,” he said. “It’s not constituti­onal.”

Spain’s Senate is to vote Friday on implementi­ng direct rule in Catalonia to quell its independen­ce bid — a step never before taken in Spain’s democratic era by the central government.

After Puigdemont spoke, the regional parliament convened to try to plot a course in the face of Spain’s looming deadline. The talk continued into the night before recessing until Friday morning.

In his televised address, Puigdemont denounced the Madrid government’s plan to seize administra­tive control of Catalonia — a move that could entail the central government taking over the regional police force and Catalonia’s finances.

“This is an abusive step,” he said. “I do not accept these measures. They are unjust.”

As the hours ticked down, Spain’s deputy prime minister, Soraya Saenz de Santamaria, reiterated that the region’s independen­ce drive would not be allowed to go forward.

“The rule of law has the instrument­s to cope with such an extraordin­arily grave situation,” she told lawmakers in Madrid.

The struggle has pitted prosperous Catalonia, which has limited self-rule, against a central government that has branded the region’s independen­ce drive illegitima­te.

It is the most serious political confrontat­ion of the country’s nearly 40-year democratic era, which began after dictator Gen. Francisco Franco died in 1975.

Spanish authoritie­s and Puigdemont’s government have been headed for a showdown since regional leaders staged an independen­ce referendum on Oct. 1, defying Spanish court rulings. More than half the electorate stayed away, and police tried to stop the balloting, but the result was overwhelmi­ngly in favor of breaking away.

That set off weeks of bitter back-and-forth exchanges between Madrid and Barcelona, the Catalan capital. Puigdemont sent mixed signals, saying that the vote result was a mandate to declare independen­ce, but stopping short of doing so and then ignoring subsequent Spanish government demands that he clarify his position.

Last week, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy declared his intention to impose direct rule on the region using a constituti­onal provision known as Article 155. That would allow for the ouster of Puigdemont and senior deputies, along with a takeover of the region’s police and finances.

With the Senate set to vote Friday on use of the article, lawmakers in Madrid began debating the issue Thursday. Rajoy’s conservati­ve party controls the chamber and it was expected to back him.

Ander Gil of the opposition Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party suggested there was still time to find a way out of the impasse. “All things can fall back into place,” he told lawmakers. But both sides’ options appeared to be narrowing.

molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Twitter: @mollyhf laura.king@latimes.com Twitter: @laurakingL­AT Hennessy-Fiske reported from Barcelona and King from Washington. Special correspond­ent James Badcock in Madrid contribute­d to this report.

 ?? David Ramos Getty Images ?? SPANISH lawmakers could oust Catalan President Carles Puigdemont as soon as Saturday.
David Ramos Getty Images SPANISH lawmakers could oust Catalan President Carles Puigdemont as soon as Saturday.

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