Gulf Today

Catalans to vote in election that is key to stability

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BARCELONA: Catalans vote on Sunday in a regional election that could determine the stability of Spain’s Socialist-led government and also gauge the strength of a pro-independen­ce movement that has roiled the country for a decade.

A government led by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s Socialist party in Catalonia after a decade of separatist government­s would usher in a new era, said political scientist Toni Rodon.

“If the separatist­s lose their absolute majority in parliament, it would definitely represent a change of cycle,” Rodon said.

“Whether this is temporary or long-term, we shall see.”

But a win for the Junts party would bolster the separatist cause and create further predicamen­ts for Madrid.

Junts’ candidate is Carles Puigdemont, who was Catalonia’s president during an ill-fated attempt to wrest the region from Spain in 2017, and he has vowed to resurrect an independen­ce bid.

Since taking office for a second term last November, Sanchez has relied on a fragile alliance with separatist­s to pass legislatio­n in the national parliament, earning the ire of conservati­ve opponents.

Puigdemont, who faced prosecutio­n in Spain over the failed independen­ce bid and has been living in self-exile but who is set to return home soon thanks to an expected amnesty, has warned that Junts might withdraw its support if the next Catalan government is one he cannot accept.

Opinion polls forecast a comfortabl­e lead for Socialist candidate Salvador Illa in the election, ahead of Junts and its more moderate rival Esquerra Republican­a de Catalunya (ERC), which currently governs the wealthy northeaste­rn region.

The Socialists stand to win 40 seats with Junts getting 34 seats and ERC 26 seats, according to a poll of polls by El Pais newspaper.

But some surveys also show around 40% of voters are undecided, so any outcome is possible.

Illa has focused his campaign on pledges to revive the region’s economy, which since the independen­ce drive has seen its economy fall behind Madrid’s. “Catalonia has been performing way below its capacities in the past 10 years,” Illa said earlier this week in a televised debate, saying he would develop clean energy.

He def ended the socialists’ conciliato­ry approach with separatist­s seven years after they ignored a court ban and held an independen­ce referendum, triggering Spain’s worst political crisis in decades.

Puigdemont fled to Belgium in 2017 to escape prosecutio­n. But he plans to return to Catalonia thanks to an amnesty bill put forward by the governing Socialists that would annul the arrest warrant he faces, once it comes into force in late May or June.

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