Chattanooga Times Free Press

Catalan separatist­s lose majority as Spain’s Socialists win elections

- BY JOSEPH WILSON

BARCELONA, Spain — Six years after plunging Spain into its worst political crisis in decades, Catalonia’s separatist parties are in danger of losing their hold on power in the northeaste­rn region after the pro-union Socialist Party scored a historic result in Sunday’s election.

The four pro-independen­ce parties, led by the Together party of former regional president Carles Puigdemont, were set to get a total of 61 seats, according to a near-complete count of the ballots. That is short of the key figure of 68 seats needed for a majority in the chamber.

The Socialists, led by former health minister Salvador Illa, savored their best result in a Catalan election, claiming 42 seats, up from 33 in 2021, when they also barely won the most votes but were unable to form a government. That was the first time the Socialists led a Catalan election in both votes and seats won.

“Catalonia has decided to open a new era,” Illa said. “Catalan voters have decided that the Socialist Party will lead this new era, and it is my intention to become Catalonia’s next president.”

Illa led Spain’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic before Sánchez sent him back to Barcelona to lead his party. The 58-year-old Illa’s calm tone and focus on social issues convinced many voters that it was time to change after years of separatist­s pressing for severing centuryold ties with the rest of Spain.

Sánchez congratula­ted Illa on social media for the “historic result.”

The Socialists will need to earn the backing of other parties to put Illa in charge. Dealmaking in the coming days, maybe weeks, will be key to forming a government. Neither a hung parliament nor a new election is out of the question.

But there is a path for Illa to reach the goal of 68 seats. The Socialists are already in a coalition government in Madrid with the Sumar party, which now has six seats in the Catalan parliament. But the hard part will be wooing over a leftist party from the separatist camp.

Regardless of those negotiatio­ns, Illa’s surge should bode well for Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and the Socialists before European Parliament elections next month.

Separatist­s have held the regional government in Barcelona since 2012 and had won majorities in four consecutiv­e regional elections. But polling and a national election in July showed support for secession has shrunk since Puigdemont led an illegal — and futile — breakaway bid in 2017 that led to hundreds of businesses and Catalonia’s major banks leaving the region.

“The candidacy that I led had a good result, we are the only pro-independen­ce force to increase in votes and seats, and we assume the responsibi­lity that entails,” Puigdemont said. “But that is not enough to compensate the losses of the other separatist­s parties.”

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