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Hundreds of thousands march for unified Spain, poll shows depths of division in Catalonia

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BARCELONA — Hundreds of thousands of supporters of a unified Spain filled Barcelona’s streets on Sunday in one of the biggest shows of force yet by the so-called silent majority that has watched as regional political leaders push for Catalan independen­ce.

Political parties opposing a split by Catalonia from Spain had a small lead in an opinion poll published on Sunday, the first since Madrid called a regional election to try to resolve the country’s worst political crisis in four decades.

Polls and recent elections have shown that about half the electorate in the wealthy northeaste­rn region, which is already autonomous, oppose secession from Spain, but a vocal independen­ce movement has brought the current crisis to a head.

Spain’s central government called an election for Dec. 21 on Friday after sacking Catalonia’s President Carles Puigdemont, dissolving its parliament and dismissing its government. That followed the assembly’s unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce in a vote boycotted by three national parties.

The regional government claimed it had a mandate to push ahead with independen­ce following an unoff icial referendum on Oct. 1 which was ruled illegal under Spanish law and mostly boycotted by unionists.

Waving thousands of Spanish flags and singing “Viva España,” protesters on Sunday turned out in the largest display of support for a united Spain since the beginning of the crisis — underlinin­g the depth of division in Catalonia itself.

“I’m here to defend Spanish unity and the law,” said Alfonso Machado, 55, a salesman standing with a little girl with Spanish flags in her hair.

“Knowing that in the end there won’t be independen­ce, I feel sorry for all the people tricked into thinking there could be and the divisions they’ve driven through Catalan society.”

SLIGHT UNIONIST LEAD

The poll of 1,000 people by Sigma Dos for newspaper El Mundo showed unionist parties winning 43.4% support and pro-independen­ce parties 42.5%.

The survey was taken from Monday to Thursday, just as the central government prepared to take control of Catalonia.

Madrid said on Saturday that secessioni­st politician­s, including Puigdemont, were free to take part in the election. The hardline CUP has been unclear if it would.

The deposed Catalan government will soon have to make difficult decisions, Puigdemont’s former deputy Oriol Junqueras said on Sunday in an editorial in online newspaper El Punt Avui. He stopped short of saying his ERC party would take part in the election.

“We need a shared strategy... it’s important to weave solid alliances with those who are willing to build a state that serves its citizens,” he said, possibly alluding to a rumored alliance between the ERC and the Catalan arm of the anti-austerity Podemos party.

Such an alliance could put the independen­ce movement in difficult position as it would mean a main secession supporter joining forces with parties that reject Madrid’s hard line but do not support separatism.

With weeks to go before the election, the poll showed the CUP, kingmaker for the prosecessi­onists in the dismissed 135-seat parliament, would win seven seats, down from a current 10.

The pro-independen­ce coalition Junts pel Si, which held 62 seats previously, was split into parties PDeCat and ERC for the poll as they are unlikely to run on a single platform. The two would win between 54 and 58 seats in total, the poll showed.

At Sunday’s rally, former European Parliament president Josep Borrell called for unionist voters to turn out in December to ensure independen­ce supporters lose their strangleho­ld on the regional parliament. —

 ??  ?? PROTESTERS wave Spanish and Catalan Senyera flags during a pro-unity demonstrat­ion in Barcelona on Oct. 29. Pro-unity protesters gathered in Catalonia’s capital Barcelona, two days after lawmakers voted to split the wealthy region from Spain, plunging...
PROTESTERS wave Spanish and Catalan Senyera flags during a pro-unity demonstrat­ion in Barcelona on Oct. 29. Pro-unity protesters gathered in Catalonia’s capital Barcelona, two days after lawmakers voted to split the wealthy region from Spain, plunging...

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