The Oklahoman

Spain: Taking control means power transfer

- BY JOSEPH WILSON

BARCELONA, SPAIN — Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy left the nation breathless when he announced the steps he wants to take to crush the separatist movement in the prosperous Catalonia region.

Rajoy called on Spain’s Senate on Saturday to trigger a previously untapped section of the Spain Constituti­on that allows the central government to temporaril­y intervene in the running of a region if its leaders have broken the law.

Activating the constituti­onal authority granted by Article 155 is Madrid’s boldest response so far to avowals from Catalonia’s leaders to declare independen­ce based on an Oct. 1 referendum that a court has judged as illegal. These are some of the regional powers Rajoy is seeking by triggering Article 155:

Depose leaders

First and foremost, Rajoy wants to remove the members of Catalonia’s pro-independen­ce regional government. Catalan president Carles Puigdemont, vice president Oriol Junqueras, and the 12 regional ministers claim Catalonia is sovereign and not subject to Spanish law.

Impose control

Catalonia has secured the ability to govern itself in many areas since democracy returned to Spain following the death of dictator Gen. Francisco Franco in 1975. Education, health and policing are areas in which the region enjoys self-rule.

Rajoy proposes taking over the vast regional administra­tion and its roughly 200,000 civil servants after the top officials are removed. How Madrid’s management would work is unclear. One option would be for Spanish ministries to assume direct control of their regional counterpar­ts.

Rajoy said interim authoritie­s would have the power to fire public employees and that all decisions by regional administra­tors would need the central government’s approval.

Timetable for takeover

A special commission of 27 senators will assess Rajoy’s request on Tuesday. Regional president Puigdemont will have the chance to argue his case before the Senate on Thursday before it holds a vote expected Friday.

Difficult to enforce

Political observers across the ideologica­l spectrum agree Rajoy and his government may have to resort to using force if Catalonia’s leaders disobey orders to step down. Calls for resistance and disobedien­ce have become standard in the secessioni­st camp.

Hardcore separatist­s will put intense pressure on Puigdemont and his government to stay in office. There are fears such a standoff could lead to violent police raids like those that marred the referendum.

Snap elections

In all 17 of Spain’s regions, the right to call early regional elections belongs exclusivel­y to regional leaders. Rajoy wants that right passed to him temporaril­y in Catalonia. His request includes a commitment to call for regional elections within six months.

Catalan separatist­s, who won 48 percent of the vote in a 2015 election, currently hold 72 of the regional parliament’s 135 seats. Rajoy will be hoping a new election would tip the balance in favor of lawmakers opposed to secession, especially those worried about the hundreds of businesses who already relocated their headquarte­rs, fearing they would be out of the European Union if Catalonia secedes.

Limits on legislatio­n

While the prime minister isn’t asking to dissolve the Catalan Parliament, Rajoy wants to limit what it can do. Specifical­ly, the parliament would not be able to designate a new regional president until after Rajoy calls for new elections.

Nor would it be able to quiz the region’s interim authoritie­s, power that would temporaril­y go to Spain’s Senate. Catalonia’s Parliament also would not be allowed to pass laws countering the Article 155 measures and the central government would assume the right to veto bills.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Demonstrat­ors take part at a protest against the National Court’s decision to imprison civil society leaders Saturday in Barcelona, Spain.
[AP PHOTO] Demonstrat­ors take part at a protest against the National Court’s decision to imprison civil society leaders Saturday in Barcelona, Spain.

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