Orlando Sentinel

Catalan secessioni­st parties leading election

Turnout heavy for parliament­ary vote, a test of power

- By Aritz Parra and Ciaran Giles

BARCELONA, Spain — Catalan political parties that support independen­ce from Spain were poised to regain a majority in Catalonia’s regional parliament, according to provisiona­l results with more than 90 percent of votes counted Thursday.

Unless the results change after the final votes are counted, the three secessioni­st parties together have won enough votes for 70 seats in the 135-seat assembly.

However, the pro-union Citizens party looks set to become the biggest single party, with 35 seats in the parliament.

The result would mean that the pro-independen­ce parties would once again get a chance to form a regional government, nearly two months after Spain dismissed the previous government following a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce by Catalan lawmakers.

Catalan voters turned up in force Thursday for a regional election seen as a crucial test of strength for the powerful movement that wants Catalonia to split from Spain.

The vote was called by the Spanish government in an attempt to end the political crisis that erupted in October over a banned referendum on independen­ce.

Opinion polls before the vote had predicted a close race between the separatist and unionist parties.

Voters chose between parties who want Catalonia to remain part of Spain and those who want to continue the push for turning the northeaste­rn region into an independen­t republic.

Catalonia’s election board said 68.3 percent, or 3.75 million of 5.5 million eligible voters, had cast ballots by 6 p.m., more than 5 percentage points higher than in the last regional election in 2015. Surveys in recent weeks had predicted record turnout numbers, but a final figure wasn’t immediatel­y given so it’s not clear if that milestone had been reached.

The election was held under highly unusual circumstan­ces, with several pro-independen­ce leaders jailed or in exile for their roles in staging the Oct. 1 independen­ce vote that was declared illegal by Spain’s highest court. Former Catalan President Carles Puigdemont campaigned from Belgium, where he is evading an arrest warrant in a rebellion and sedition probe.

“It’s not normal, an election that takes place with candidates in prison and candidates in exile,” Puigdemont said in the Belgian capital. In a tweet, he thanked an 18-year-old woman who cast a vote on his behalf.

Weeks of campaignin­g involved little debate about regional policy on issues such as public education, widening inequality and unemployme­nt. At the heart of the battle instead was the recent independen­ce push that led to Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

No incidents were reported during the election Thursday.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called the early election, which he is hoping will keep the separatist­s out of power. The strategy could backfire, however, if the election delivers a pro-independen­ce majority of lawmakers in the Catalan parliament. Even so, Rajoy says Catalan independen­ce would go against the Spanish Constituti­on and he refuses to accept the possibilit­y.

Ines Arrimadas, leader of the pro-Spanish unity party Ciutadans, said she wanted to end the bitter disputes over independen­ce that have divided Catalans and caused upheaval. “We are going to fight very hard for Catalonia to return to normalcy,” Arrimadas told reporters after casting her vote in Barcelona.

The outcome of the political battle is crucial for a region that accounts for 19 percent of Spain’s gross domestic product.

 ?? DAVID RAMOS/GETTY ?? A voter wearing a traditiona­l Catalan hat, known as a barretina, waves his ballot before casting it Thursday.
DAVID RAMOS/GETTY A voter wearing a traditiona­l Catalan hat, known as a barretina, waves his ballot before casting it Thursday.

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