Demonstrations against the imprisonment of Catalan ministers have been held in many parts of Catalonia
The Spanish left
wing political party Podemos, which was formed in 2014 in the aftermath of the 15-M
Movement protests against austerity and corruption, is struggling to
maintain a unified position on Catalan independence. In the 2015 elections to
the Spanish parliament the party received 21% of the vote and became the third
largest party in the parliament, with 70 out of 350 seats.
When the
Catalan parliament declared independence on 27 October, Pablo
Iglesias, leader of Podemos, called the declaration illegal
and illegitimate. He said that the pro-independence sector “had an electoral
result that allows them to govern, not to declare independence.” At the same
time, Iglesias positioned himself against Article 155, saying that it would “do
a lot of damage to Catalonia and to Spain.”
Iglesias later
tweeted “We are against repression and for a negotiated referendum [which the
Madrid government refused to Catalonia] but the declaration of independence is
illegitimate and favours the strategy of the PP [People's Party, headed by
Spanish premier Mariano Rajoy].”
Essentially,
national Podemos’ position is that direct rule of Catalonia from Madrid be ended, Catalan
leaders should be released from prison and charges against them dropped and a
legitimate referendum on independence be held. Podemos doesn’t want to belong
to any coalition standing on an independence ticket at the Catalan regional
election on December 21, which Madrid insists must be held.
But this
middle of the road response doesn’t appear to be holding though as tensions
escalate and Catalonia moves towards a possible independence. Podemos is really
an alliance of many political parties and groupings in Spain, and some
component members of the alliance are now breaking ranks.
The
Anticapitalistas current in Podemos (spokepersons MEP Miguel Urban and Podemos
Andalusia general secretary Teresa Rodriguez) have now issued a statement
recognising the result of the October 1 referendum.
Here is an
extract from the statement:
“On 27
October, in fulfilment of the mandate of the referendum of 1 October in which
despite police repression more than two million people participated, the
Catalan Parliament proclaimed the Catalan Republic. In a Spain with a monarchy
that is a direct successor of the dictator Franco, a Republic that opens up a
constituent process is without doubt a proposal that breaks with the 1978
regime, with its political consensus and with a constitutional order that
serves the elites.”
“This is the
time to defend the possibility of a democratic solution to the diktats of the
State. It is time to (re)start the patient construction of a project that goes
beyond the 1978 regime and is capable of building fraternal relations between
the different peoples of the Spanish State. The elites have proven incapable of
solving the problems of the Spanish State; today more than ever, it is urgent
to recover the leading role of politics for those below.”
Read the full statement here.
Read the full statement here.
The leader of
the Catalan grouping within Podemos is also at odds with the national party.
‘Podemos sources’ cited by OK Diario state:
"Albano Dante Fachin, spokeperson of Podemos Catalonia has decided that he
is not the general secretary of Podemos Catalonia but a politician in Catalonia
with his own agenda."
In his press
appearance on November 1 Fachín said that Podemos Catalonia would talk to all
parties and movements in Catalonia before deciding its orientation to the
December 21 elections. This goes against the line decided by Podemos at the
level of the Spanish state, which is to support the campaign to be run by
Catalunya en Comú ("the commons") according to the slogan
"neither 155 nor UDI".
Iglesias has
demanded that Podemos Catalonia conduct a poll of members to decide if it will
run with Catalunya en Comú in the forthcoming Catalan elections. Catalunya en
Comú reserves third place on its December 21 election ticket for Podemos
Catalonia, but this position will not be filled by Podemos Catalonia leader Fachín,
who is boycotting the referendum of Podemos members in Catalonia, imposed by
Podemos at the level of the Spanish state.
Fachin says
that the membership consultation imposed from Podemos at the state level is not
acceptable in democratic terms, and "kills the spirit of October 1". He said "Pablo Iglesias has intervened in Podem Catalunya in
the same way as Mariano Rajoy has intervened in Catalonia."
Fachin has denounced "a war" by Spanish state leader
Iglesias to remove him as general secretary. Fachin states that the attack,
which consists in having various Podemos branches in Catalonia demand a special
congress to vote on his position, is unconstitutional because Podemos statutes
says that such a call cannot be made before 18 months have passed since the
elections of the general secretary (in Fachin´s case, in January 2018, given
that he was elected in July 2016).
Fachín has
told radio RAC1 that his "future is not in another party. What we will try
is to build is a citizens' response above and beyond parties."
A legitimate referendum on Catalan independence seems to be the only way to fairly resolve this crisis, but the Spanish government refuses to allow this to happen. In the circumstances, who can blame the pro-independence Catalans from using the enforced December election as an opportunity to stand on an independence ticket? Opinion polls are now showing them on course to win a majority in the Catalan parliament, just like they did last time.
The Spanish government cannot decide on allowing a legally formed referendum, it is a decision effectively above and beyond them. It would need to fulfil the constitution and would require cross party collaboration to make changes to the constitution to allow this to happen.
ReplyDeleteThe Spanish constitution had a very high support throughout the electorate of Spain and was supported by around 90% of Catalans.
The constitution needs to change, this is just an excuse from the Spanish government. They refuse to even talk about it.
ReplyDelete