The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Warning from Catalonia as FM fixes plan for referendum

Caution urged before strategy revealed

- By Mark Aitken and Graham Keeley

Politician­s who led a unilateral referendum in Catalonia warned Nicola Sturgeon to take care yesterday as she finalises her strategy to stage a second independen­ce poll.

The first minister is to unveil her proposed route to another referendum on Tuesday despite Boris Johnson insisting Holyrood will not be allowed to legislate for another vote on the constituti­on.

In a 20- minute address to parliament, she is expected to explain how the vote can go ahead, with a suggested date in October 2023, with or without the consent of the UK Government. Experts suggest any vote on the constituti­on will be thrown out of court and leaders of the so-called wildcat vote in Catalonia five years ago yesterday said with hindsight they should not have pursued a unilateral poll on independen­ce.

Santíago Vila, a former business minister, was fined £51,000 for civil disobedien­ce after the 2019 trial of separatist leaders. Nine politician­s and civic leaders were jailed for between nine and 13 years for sedition over their roles in staging the poll on splitting from Spain.

“The positive point of what happened is that it brought a large civic participat­ion to the cause but there were some very negative results,” he told The Sunday Post. “Supporters were led to believe the referendum

would be binding by the Cat alan government, but this was not the case. They were also led to believe that Catalonia had the authority to legally break away from Spain which it did not. This caused lots of companies to leave the region. We tricked ourselves.”

In the run- up to the Catalan poll, the regional government passed a law which it said allowed it to secede from Spain, but which was ruled illegal by the Spanish Constituti­onal Court. Vila, now a university lecturer, resigned the day before a unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce by the Catalan regional authoritie­s in October 2017 as he did not agree with this route of action.

In 2017, 42% of Catalonia’s seven million population cast their votes to support splitting from Spain in a vote which had been declared illegal by the country’s constituti­onal Court. Most opponents of independen­ce stayed away from the vote, in a move which supporters of the United Kingdom said would be replicated in any unilateral referendum here.

Speculatio­n suggests SNP strategist­s believe an alternativ­e question to the straightfo­rward Yes or No used in 2014 might win legal approval although experts suggest that is unlikely.

Political opponents suggest the apparent drive towards a

referendum is a political pantomime. They say a vote without

the agreement of the UK government is a pointless diversion and would be boycotted by opponents.

Ernest Maragall, an MP in the Catalan government since 2017 who is a candidate to be mayor of Barcelona, said the political and civic will to stage the Catalan referendum in 2017 was admirable but the boycott from opponents was fatal to the legitimacy of the result.

“They never thought we would be able to do it. Organising the electoral colleges, getting the urns. It was down to people volunteeri­ng despite all the efforts of the state to stop it happening. But only the people who supported independen­ce voted in the referendum,” he said.

Maragall said he would not advise Sturgeon to stage a unilateral referendum as it had failed in Catalonia.

He added: “You should do it by persistenc­e and by democratic means.” He said the lasting achievemen­t of the Catalan independen­ce drive was that separatist parties held power in the regional parliament today.

Maragall said: “One thing that we achieved was that now more than half of the political representa­tion in the Catalan regional parliament is from parties who support independen­ce. This does not give us a right to another unilateral independen­ce declaratio­n. Unfortunat­ely, our suggestion of an independen­t state in a federal system has been rejected.”

Support for in dependence has fallen since 2017 in Catalonia. At the time of the referendum, polls found 48% of Catalans wanted to leave Spain. This figure had fallen to 39%, according to a survey in May for La Vanguardia newspaper, while 51% opposed independen­ce. Lluis Orriols, a professor of politics at the Carlos III University in Madrid, said: “The Catalan independen­ce movement has admitted that it made mistakes and moved on.

“So, in a way, it has matured. In real terms it has not achieved its aims of gaining independen­ce from Spain but some of its followers would say it was not all in vain.

“The independen­ce movement is now looking more long term and its supporters do not regard the unilateral route of independen­ce as a route which succeeded.”

Yesterday, the first minister claimed Scottish independen­ce is essential to tackling the cost- of- living crisis ahead of setting out her route map to a second referendum.

She said a recent report by the Resolution Foundation, which found Brexit had damaged the UK’S competitiv­eness and will make Britons poorer in the coming decade, shows the “catastroph­ic consequenc­es” of leaving the European Union. She said: “It is clearer than ever

that when it comes to tackling the cost- of- living crisis, Westminste­r is not the solution to the problem – Westminste­r is the problem.

“And that is why independen­ce is essential to tackling the cost-of- living crisis. Becoming independen­t is not a guarantee of success, but it allows Scotland to make our own choices – better choices – and the chance to succeed where Westminste­r is so manifestly failing.

“Where we already have some independen­ce in areas like social security, we’ve used those powers to make far better, fairer decisions, with transforma­tional policies like the Scottish Child Payment – and with the full powers of independen­ce, there is absolutely no reason why a country as resource-rich as Scotland cannot replicate the success of our neighbours.”

Sturgeon, who will also face questions from MSPS for 40 minutes on Tuesday, will set out how she believes a lawful referendum could be held without the UK Government agreeing to what is known as a Section 30 order, a clause in the Scotland Act which would grant a legal referendum, which was given in 2014.

Referendum expert Matt Qvortrup said he believed it would be undemocrat­ic not to allow a vote on independen­ce but that “the rule of law is not necessaril­y democratic”.

Qvortr up, professor of political science and internatio­nal relations at Coventry University and author of Referendum­s And Ethnic Conflict, said: “I believe Nicola Sturgeon has the mandate to hold a referendum because the parties in favour of independen­ce have a majority in the Scottish Parliament. But she does not have the legal powers to hold one. So I’m afraid she doesn’t have much of an option.

“Holding a referendum, even if it is consultati­ve or advisory, is not within the powers that have been devolved to the Scottish Parliament.

“She can have a consultati­on on health, education and all the other matters where the Scottish Parliament has been granted powers, but she can’t have it on the defence, foreign affairs, immigratio­n or the constituti­on.”

Opposition parties said they would boycott any unilateral independen­ce referendum. Scottish Liberal Democrats leader Alex Cole- Hamilton said: “If she’s going for a glorified opinion poll, then I’d say I and my party have better things to do with our time.

“A wildcat referendum is the last roll of the dice for a first minister and a governing party which has clearly run out of both road and ideas.”

Scottish Conservati­ve constituti­on spokesman Donald Cameron said: “We won’t be taking part in plans for the illegal wildcat referendum the SNP seem to have pencilled in for next October.

“Nicola Sturgeon’s focus should be on issues like the cost-of-living crisis, our recovery from the pandemic, Scotland’s record drug deaths and the backlog in our NHS, rather than promoting another independen­ce referendum.

“This statement is an unjustifia­ble waste of time on a divisive referendum that Scots do not want.”

Scottish Labour said: “It’s unacceptab­le that both our government­s appear to be proposing to break the law – Boris on Brexit and Sturgeon with this referendum.”

A spokesman for the first minister said a Scottish independen­ce referendum would be held legally: “The first minister has it consistent­ly clear she is intent on delivering a legal, constituti­onal referendum.”

 ?? ??
 ?? Picture Matthias Oesterle ?? Catalan separatist­s shout slogans as they protest in front of the Catalan Economy Ministry in Barcelona in 2017
Picture Matthias Oesterle Catalan separatist­s shout slogans as they protest in front of the Catalan Economy Ministry in Barcelona in 2017
 ?? ?? Nicola Sturgeon wants a second referendum
Nicola Sturgeon wants a second referendum

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