A rally for unity in Catalonia
In region’s capital, hundreds of thousands rally in support of Spanish unity.
Hundreds of thousands of Spaniards oppose independence as a test of wills looms.
BARCELONA, Spain — In the first large-scale public rebuke of last week’s independence vote by the Catalan regional parliament, hundreds of thousands of supporters of Spanish unity surged into the streets of Catalonia’s capital on Sunday, decrying the breakaway bid as trampling the majority’s will.
A major test loomed Monday, the first full business day since the independence vote, as the central government moved to tighten its hold on the restive region. Catalonia’s ousted president, Carles Puigdemont, could face arrest, especially if he attempts to discharge any official duties, and some civil servants have threatened to ignore directives from Madrid as the workweek gets underway.
The raucous but largely peaceful pro-unity rally came against a backdrop of deep political polarization in the prosperous northeastern region, as illustrated by a new public opinion poll published Sunday that showed the region to be nearly evenly divided.
Madrid, calling the independence drive illegal and unconstitutional, has fired Catalonia’s secessionist leaders, dissolved its parliament and called new elections to take place in December.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy invoked a constitutional provision known as Article 155 that gives the central government the authority to strip a region of its autonomous powers in the event of a grave breach of law.
In the heart of the Catalan capital, marchers flooded an elegant main boulevard and spilled into side streets, waving the Spanish national flag or wrapping themselves in it, singing Spanish folk songs. Many described feelings of fear and anxiety over the independence bid, and spoke of their powerful ties to the region as well as to Spain as a whole.
In the crowd, schoolteacher Balbina Garcia de Polavieja, pregnant with her second child, said she embraced both identities.
“We have been in this country for hundreds of years,” said Garcia de Polavieja, who is Madridborn but a six-year resident of Catalonia. “To be Spanish is to share a history.”
Municipal police quoted by the Catalan public broadcaster put the turnout at 300,000, though organizers said it was far higher
The pro-unity rally contrasted with a night of wild rejoicing by independence supporters after Friday’s vote by lawmakers to break away from Spain. At Sunday’s march, speaker after speaker insisted that the parliamentary vote for independence had not reflected the will of the people.
Teresa Freixes, a Spanish jurist who teaches constitutional law at the University of Barcelona, called the anti-independence camp a “silent majority,” drawing cheers.
“We want to defend our values,” she said. “How can you proclaim a republic against the will of the majority? They want to rob us of this Catalonia that belongs to all of us.”
Voters in a banned Oct. 1 referendum overwhelmingly approved independence, but turnout was less than half the electorate after the central government branded the balloting illegal and urged people to stay home from the polls.
Opinion polls have pointed to a roughly equal split between pro- and anti-secessionists in the region, and a new survey published Sunday in a Spanish newspaper gave the anti-independence side a tiny edge heading into parliamentary elections that are just seven weeks away.
But the survey, conducted by the polling agency Sigma Dos and published in the conservative newspaper El Mundo, said the two sides were separated by less than 2 percentage points, within the margin of error.
Puigdemont on Saturday appealed for resistance to Spain’s direct rule using democratic means. It was unclear whether he envisioned separatists contesting the Dec. 21 elections called by Rajoy.
Spain’s foreign minister, Alfonso Dastis, told the Associated Press on Sunday that Puigdemont could “theoretically” run in parliamentary elections — if he wasn’t in jail by then.
Although some pro-independence politicians have urged a boycott, Puigdemont’s deposed vice president, Oriol Junqueras, said secessionists should consider participating, even if they did not accept Spain’s right to call the new elections. Junqueras wrote an open letter that was published Sunday in the Catalan newspaper El Punt Avui.
Pro-unity politicians promised to vigorously contest the vote.
“We Catalans are going to the polls,” anti-independence politician Xavier Garcia Albiol of the conservative People’s Party said in an interview broadcast on TV3.
“If Puigdemont wants to be independent, it will have to pass with a greater majority,” Albiol added, referring to the outcome of the disputed referendum.
Catalonia accounts for a fifth of Spain’s economy, and there is widespread anxiety about financial fallout from a continued independence push. Hundreds of corporations have moved or plan to move their headquarters out of Barcelona, worried about potential unrest and the fact that an independent Catalonia would need to apply separately for European Union membership, a process that could take years.
Sunday’s rally was organized by a grass-roots group called Societat Civil Catalana, whose leader, Alex Ramos, said pro-unity forces had not awakened early enough to the prospect of a direct and damaging confrontation between Catalan separatist leaders and the central government.
“We have organized ourselves late,” he acknowledged. “But we are here to show that there is a majority of Catalans who are no longer silent.”
Protesters Sunday spoke of painful family rifts created by Spain’s greatest constitutional crisis in decades.
Estrella Garcia, 56, said her husband supports Catalan independence, while she supports Spanish unity. The disagreement has hampered their relationship, she said, to the point where she often walks out of the room when he watches Catalan TV, which she perceives as biased.
“It’s very sad,” she said. “We fight and don’t speak.”