Above: People gather during a protest against police actions during the banned independence referendum in front of city hall in Pineda de Mar, Spain, October 3, 2017. (Reuters / Albert Gea)
Note: The article below is a combination of three articles from Catalan News. With the ouster of President Mariano Rajoy of Spain and his replacement by socialist, Pedro Sánchez, as well as the lifting of direct rule after seven months, there is hope for progress in Spain and Catalonia. There is work to be done, including the release of political prisoners and return of those in exile who worked for independence and dropping charges against them, but removing Rajoy who fought Catalonian independence with aggression is a positive step.
While there are high expectations among Catalonians, there are challenges ahead. As another article in Catalan News pointed out, “The deposed Catalan president, Carles Puigdemont, was among the first ones to react on Twitter. ‘If we wanted vengeance, today we could call ourselves satisfied. But as we want justice, today we still have nothing to celebrate. There is still a long battle and a long road ahead to defeat the injustices, which are numerous and long-lasting.’”[Emphasis in original.]
They also report that the spokesman of pro-independence party Esquerra in the Spanish government, Joan Tardà “asserted that his party is far from aligned with the Socialists because they were ‘complicit’ in the application of Article 155 in Catalonia, which led to the country being stripped of its self-rule. Despite this, he said that a Socialist government will be more open to dialogue than the People’s Party of Ciutadans.” KZ
New Spanish president Pedro Sánchez takes office
36 out of 47 Catalan MPs in Spain’s Congress supported his bid to oust Rajoy
The new Spanish president, Pedro Sánchez, took office this Saturday morning. One day after ousting Mariano Rajoy in a vote of no confidence in Parliament, he swore in before the king of Spain, Felipe VI, in the residence of the monarch, La Zarzuela. Sánchez is expected to nominate his ministers in the coming hours or days, and to form a new government shortly. One or more of his cabinet members are expected to be Catalan, and the bets are already open on who he will choose.
His initiative to strip Rajoy of the Spanish presidency was only successful after the supports of the Catalan pro-independence parties and the Basque Nationalist Party, along with the Socialists, Sánchez’s party, and Podemos, including Catalan En Comú Podem 12 MPs. All in all, 36 out of the 47 Catalan MPs in the Spanish Congress supported Sánchez as president, therefore rejecting Rajoy’s cabinet, the one which has been implementing direct rule in Catalonia for seven months.
While some lawmakers were more enthusiastic about stripping Rajoy of power than giving it to Sánchez, Catalan leaders already have high expectations for the seventh head of government in Spain since the restoration of democracy in the post-Franco era.
Reactions to Sánchez’s appointment
“The Socialists have been accomplice of the repression and the democratic regression” which Catalonia has gone through, said the newly elected president Quim Torra after Sánchez’s victory in Congress. He urged a meeting with his new Spanish counterpart asked him to “take steps and take risks.” Two weeks ago, Sánchez accused Torra of being “racist” and “supremacist.”
“There is still a long battle and a long road ahead to defeat the injustices, which are numerous and long-lasting,” said the deposed president Carles Puigdemont.
The leader of Unionist Citizens (Cs), Albert Rivera, said that he will be alert to the “concessions” that the Socialist leader made to grant the support of pro-independence parties. He especially accused the president-to-be Pedro Sánchez of being at the hands of “racist” Catalan President Quim Torra.
The mayor of Barcelona Ada Colau called on Sánchez to bring Catalan leaders imprisoned in the Madrid region closer to their homes. Although she recognized that the situation is “in the hands of judges,” she highlighted that Sánchez and his future government play “a very important” role “in bringing the prisoners closer” to their families.
Rajoy and Catalonia: a troublesome story
Ousted Spanish president took exceptional measures to crush the independence bid
Mariano Rajoy was ousted as Spanish president on Friday following a parliamentary no-confidence motion triggered by a corruption scandal. Catalan pro-independence parties were instrumental in putting an end to Rajoy’s rule and appointing Socialist leader Pedro Sánchez in his place—an unlikely alliance only made possible by a common foe.
In power since 2011, Rajoy has been Spain’s central figure in its response to Catalonia’s push for independence from the outset of the movement, and throughout the escalation that led to a referendum and a declaration of independence last October, which plunged Spain into the country’s worst political crisis in decades.
The emergence of the independence bid is inseparable from Rajoy’s decisions as head of the Spanish government. In 2012, in the midst of the economic crisis, the then Catalan president Artur Mas asked Rajoy for a better financial deal. Rajoy said no. In response, Mas called a snap election and won by championing a new demand: a referendum to decide on independence.
Although a majority of lawmakers in Catalonia supported a referendum, Rajoy blocked all attempts to agree on a vote. In 2014, the Spanish parliament dismissed the petition with 299 votes against and only 47 in favor—including those of Catalan parties.
Carles Puigdemont would eventually replace Mas as the head of Catalonia’s pro-independence government. Again, he opened talks with Rajoy about holding a referendum. He received the same answer as his predecessor: independence from Spain is not a matter for discussion.
The Catalan government held an unofficial vote on independence in 2014, with a 40% turnout and with 80% of those people voting to leave. Spain banned the vote, but let it go ahead.
Puigdemont pledged to organize another vote on independence despite Rajoy’s opposition. This time, though, the results would be binding—which means that independence would be declared should the ‘yes’ vote be the preferred option.
In the meantime, Rajoy lost his absolute majority in the Spanish parliament following two consecutive elections that ended in deadlock. As opposition parties failed to form an alternative government, Rajoy stayed in power with the support of the liberal Ciutadans—a party with a hardline stance against Catalan independence.
Unlike the 2014 vote, the Spanish government pledged to stop the new referendum. Rajoy sent thousands of police officers to Catalonia in order to halt preparations for the vote, deemed illegal by the judiciary.
Despite Spain’s opposition, the referendum went ahead on October 1, 2017. In an operation criticized by international organizations for its “excessive use of force,” police officers cracked down on voters and left more than a thousand people injured, according to Catalan government figures.
Catalan parties went on to declare independence following a ‘yes’ victory and a 43% turnout. In an unprecedented move in Spain’s democratic history, Rajoy triggered Article 155 of the Constitution to impose direct rule on Catalonia, sack Puigdemont and all his ministers, and call a new election. Rajoy was backed by Ciutadans, as well as the Socialists—with whom pro-independence parties would subsequently unite to oust Rajoy.
Rajoy would then take a backseat role as the courts entered the ring to prosecute Catalan leaders. As of today, and with a final trial still pending, there are nine pro-independence leaders preemptively jailed in Madrid and seven more seeking refuge from prosecution in other European countries.
Puigdemont was among those who traveled abroad. Although standing from Brussels, the deposed president managed to secure enough seats in last December’s election to reclaim his post. The Catalan branch of Rajoy’s People’s Party (PP) got its worst result in decades and became the smallest party in Parliament with four MPs.
Yet, the Spanish courts blocked all attempts to appoint Puigdemont, as well as other candidates subsequently put forward, who were also facing prosecution for their role in the independence bid. Rajoy remained in control of the Catalan government all this time.
Pro-independence parties would eventually elect Quim Torra as president. He pledged to reinstate the ministers dismissed by Rajoy last October, who were either in jail or abroad, but the Spanish president used his rule over Catalonia to block the appointments.
In order to unblock the political standstill, Torra gave up on his promise and nominated alternative candidates. In one of his last decisions as Spanish president before being ousted, Rajoy greenlighted the new cabinet and authorized direct rule to be lifted with the formation of a new government on Saturday.
Where it all began
Mas put the call for a new state at the center of Catalan politics. Yet the pro-independence movement was already looming at the grassroots level. Shortly before the meeting in Madrid, a massive demonstration flooded the streets of Barcelona with a clear motto: “Catalonia, a new state in Europe.” The first clear-cut pro-independence rally of many to come.
In 2010, another huge demonstration in the Catalan capital paved the way for the outset of the pro-independence movement. People gathered to protest against a Spanish Constitutional Court ruling, which cut down a new Statute of Autonomy backed by Catalan parties.
The regional carta magna was brought to court by Spain’s People’s Party (PP), which launched a country-wide campaign against the text. The party was already led by the then head of the opposition Mariano Rajoy.
Catalan government takes office in emotional event, lifting direct rule
Seven months after suspension of self-government, Catalonia has an executive once more
Direct rule in Catalonia is history after 219 days in force. This, as an automatic result of the new Catalan government’s inauguration taking place this Saturday morning. On October 27, the now ousted Spanish government implemented suspension of self-rule following the declaration of independence. After some leaders being sent in prison, others in exile, a Catalan election and five months until a president was appointed, this Saturday a new term starts in Catalonia. But the exceptional circumstances were clear on Saturday with the symbolism in the inauguration, including a yellow ribbon set in the first row of the audience. Yellow has become the color to show solidarity with the leaders in jail and abroad.
But the symbolism and remembrance of the leaders in jail and abroad went further during the event, which was highly emotional. Relatives of some of those leaders read some letters addressed to the Catalan president, including the four ministers who were prevented from being reinstated in May. Some of these relatives were in tears during the event, as some of the newly elected ministers and audience.
Messages from officials in jail and abroad
“Road for an independent Catalonia is a noble, legitimate, democratic, peaceful cause. No prison or unfair judicial case will make me give up,” said jailed and deposed Presidency minister Jordi Turull through his wife.
In a letter read by his sister, ousted Health head Toni Comín said from Brussels that he knew the Puigdemont cabinet could be subject to Spain’s repression. “When appointed, I had the feeling that that would not be just another government, as it had the mandate of the people for Catalonia to become an independent state.”
“We’ve been imprisoned for having defended legitimate ideas, for having respected the people’s mandate,” says jailed and deposed Territory minister Josep Rull through his wife.
“Restitution spirit has triumphed,” read Lluís Puig’s daughter. The deposed Culture minister is has been in Brussels for 7 months.
“I ask you to not forget us, I ask you to continue asking for our freedom,” said in a letter former Catalan parliament speaker Carme Forcadell from prison, through her husband.
Torra pledges “construction of independent Republic”
President Torra also made some remarks to the audience. “We assume the commitment to move forward towards the construction of an independent Republic,” he said. Torra also claimed that cabinet will prioritize road to independence, dialogue with Spain, restore laws suspended by Constitutional Court, and social and economic progress.
Torra’s speech came after the Catalan cabinet members took their oaths, which officially meant the lift of direct rule in the country.
Who are the new ministers?
The new government which took office this Saturday is formed of 13 ministers, including six women, making it the most egalitarian ever. Here’s the list of cabinet members who inaugurate this Saturday, with a longer bio in this link:
VICE PRESIDENCY AND ECONOMY: Pere Aragonès, the new Oriol Junqueras
PRESIDENCY & SPOKESPERSON: Elsa Artadi, one of Puigdemont’s closest allies
FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Ernest Maragall, former MEP takes Foreign Affairs
HOME AFFAIRS: Miquel Buch, new Home Affairs minister
EDUCATION: Josep Bargalló, back to Education after 15 years
HEALTH: Alba Vergés, Parliament bureau member
TERRITORY AND SUSTAINABILITY: Damià Calvet, big challenges in infraestructures ahead
CULTURE: Laura Borràs, former Institute of Catalan Letters president
JUSTICE: Ester Capella, a feminist lawyer to head Justice
LABOUR & SOCIAL AFFAIRS: Chakir El Homrani, a union leader
BUSINESS: Àngels Chacón, expert in international trade
GOVERNANCE AND DIGITAL POLICY: Jordi Puigneró, new minister of Governance and Digital Policy
AGRICULTURE: Teresa Jordà, from the Spanish Congress to the ministry of Agriculture