The voting in Catalonia is
over. Now watch the political scheming begin.
Almost one in three Catalans – 2.3m according to the final
result – took part in an informal poll on Sunday to say whether the northern
Spanish region should be an independent country or not. The consultation went
ahead in the face of protests from Madrid, and despite a ruling by Spain’s
constitutional court to formally suspend the vote. With virtually all pro-union
Catalans choosing to stay at home, it came as no surprise that more than 80 per
cent of voters supported a break with Spain.
The days and weeks ahead are
now likely to offer a distinct shift in tone inside the Catalan independence
camp. Until now, political leaders in Barcelona have managed to largely paper
over their differences, setting aside old rivalries in an effort to maintain a
united front against Madrid. But with crucial decisions looming about where the
campaign goes next, the ties that have held together an unusually disparate
coalition will face perhaps their toughest test yet.
Artur Mas, the Catalan president,
appeared to be aware of the political risks that lie ahead. Amid the triumphant
boasts on Sunday night (he hailed the poll as a “total success”), Mr Mas urged
the independence campaign to remain united. “When we are together, we can go
farther. That is the message we must keep in mind.”
The political tussle in
Barcelona will be dominated by two protagonists: Mr Mas, who heads the
conservative, moderately nationalist Convergència i Unió movement (CiU), and
Oriol Junqueras, leader of Esquerra Republicana, a leftwing pro-independence
party. Both agree that the next logical step for the Catalan campaign is an
early regional election, but they differ sharply on how.
Josep Rull, secretary-general
of CiU, outlined the party’s strategy ahead of Sunday’s poll: “We will use an
ordinary election, supervised by the state with all the democratic guarantees,
and we will transform this into a referendum. How? Our proposal is to form a
grand national list of candidates that has the capacity to win an absolute
majority and with one electoral programme: If you vote for us, we have the
mandate to achieve independence.”
Esquerra leaders, however,
argue that a joint list uniting CiU and Esquerra risks diluting rather than
boosting support for independence. Anna Simó, leader of the Esquerra
parliamentary group, said: “It is not clear that a list led by Artur Mas will
win more support than if we stand separately – especially in areas like
metropolitan Barcelona. We believe that, a priori, diversification is good”.
The disagreement may appear
tactical – but at heart it is over who should be at the helm of the Catalan
independence campaign. CiU wants a joint pro-independence list to be headed by
Mr Mas, a move that would allow him to remain de-facto leader of the movement
and effectively hand the Catalan president another term in office. Should
Esquerra and CiU stand separately, however, there is a strong chance that the
leftwing party – and Mr Junqueras – will come out on top.
Maintaining unity in the
independence camp, however, is not the only challenge for Mr Mas. On Sunday
evening, he again appealed for negotiations with Madrid – but the political
fallout from the poll may make such a process even more distant.
Mariano Rajoy, Spain’s prime
minister, is weakened from a series of corruption scandals that have rocked his
party. He also faces accusations from all sides that he has mismanaged the
Catalan vote: despite voicing firm opposition to the process, Mr Rajoy
ultimately failed to stop it from happening – a worst-of-all-worlds stance that
upset supporters and opponents of Catalan independence alike.
Prospects for a political
settlement between the Spanish government and the Catalan parties appear slim.
“The two sides are like ships passing in the night,” said Ángel Pascual-Ramsay,
of Esade business school. “Here in Madrid the government talks about legality.
In Barcelona, they talk about the right to decide their own future. What is
lacking at the moment is the political courage and skill to bring these two
discourses together.”
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