Yorkshire Post

Spain crisis could lead to new election

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

WORLD: Catalan separatist and right-wing politician­s in the Spanish parliament’s lower house have rejected the government’s 2019 budget plan, opening up a new political crisis. An early election may be called.

CATALAN SEPARATIST and right-wing politician­s in the Spanish parliament’s lower house have rejected the ruling Socialist government’s 2019 budget plan, opening up a new political crisis.

The Spanish prime minister’s office said Pedro Sanchez plans to announce on Friday whether he will call an early election, after losing the vote by 191-158, with one abstention.

The Moncloa Palace said Mr Sanchez’s decision will be announced after a weekly cabinet meeting.

Two officials in the ruling Socialist party said the best date for an election at the moment is April 28, less than one month before local, regional and European Parliament elections set for May 26.

One of them said that despite losing the budget vote, the Socialist party and the government are still considerin­g “all options”.

The only other time that a Spanish government lost a budget vote, in 1995, the Socialists were forced to dissolve the parliament and call an election.

Opposition leader Pablo Casado, head of the conservati­ve People’s Party, said yesterday’s vote was “a de facto confidence vote against Pedro Sanchez”.

Catalan deputies from proindepen­dence parties had demanded to open talks on the north-eastern region’s self-determinat­ion in exchange for supporting Mr Sanchez’s spending proposal, but the centre-left minority government had rejected that.

The Socialist party holds only 84 seats in the 350-seat lower house. Its votes and those of the anti-austerity Podemos party were not enough to counter a majority of centre-right, conservati­ve and smaller parties voting in favour of six blanket objections.

Mr Sanchez became prime minister in June when the Catalans joined the anti-austerity Podemos and other smaller parties in backing a no-confidence vote against his conservati­ve predecesso­r Mariano Rajoy.

Without parliament­ary support, Mr Sanchez’s government cannot pass significan­t legislatio­n and would need to prolong Mr Rajoy’s 2018 spending plan.

That leaves the centre-left administra­tion without funds for social policies that are key to retaining Podemos’s support.

Mr Sanchez rushed out of the lower house’s chamber shortly after the vote, dodging questions by reporters. His finance minister, Maria Jesus Montero, said it made sense that Mr Sanchez’s term, which ends next year, would be shortened with the budget rejection – but that it was up to the prime minister himself to decide if and when to call a new general election.

Talks between Mr Sanchez’s government and a new separatist coalition that took power in Catalonia after 2017’s failed independen­ce push broke down last week when the government refused to accept self-determinat­ion talks. The ongoing trial against a dozen politician­s and activists who drove the breakaway attempt in Catalonia two years ago has further angered many pro-independen­ce supporters.

The trial entered its second day on yesterday with the Supreme Court prosecutor criticisin­g what he said were defence lawyers’ attempts to turn the proceeding­s into an examinatio­n of the Spanish state and judiciary. Twelve Catalan politician­s and activists face years behind bars if they are convicted of rebellion or other charges for having pushed ahead with a unilateral independen­ce declaratio­n.

Opposition leader Pablo Casadoc said it was ‘a de facto confidence vote against Pedro Sanchez’.

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