Catalan separatist voters shrug off broken promises for elections

epa06335871 Ine Van Wymeersch, spokesman for the Brussels Prosecutor's Office, and Spokesperson of Brussels Federal prosecutor Gilles Dejemppe (R) give a press briefing  after Catalonian regional President, Carles Puigdemont hearing before the Belgian court Brussels, Belgium, 17 November 2017. The court appearance comes after Spain issued a European Arrest Warrant after Puigdemont travelled to Brussels in the wake of the Spanish government's dissolution of the Catalan executive following the declaration of independence by the regional parliament on 27 October. Puigdemont and four of his cabinet members on 30 October fled to Brussels after he was charged by a Spanish court with rebellion, sedition and embezzlement following the unconstitutional 01 October Catalonian independence referendum.  EPA-EFE/OLIVIER HOSLET

Bloomberg

Catalan separatist voters are standing by their political leaders despite the disappointments and broken promises of the past month, according to pollster Narciso Michavila.
After weeks of protests and the decision by more than 2,000 firms to move their legal base from the region, the group led by ousted Catalan President Carles Puigdemont and its two pro-independence allies may still get enough votes to secure another majority in the regional assembly when Catalans go to the polls on December 21, said Michavila, who’s chairman of GAD3, an independent polling firm.
Puigdemont is due to appear in court in Brussels where a judge will consider a Spanish request for him to be arrested and sent home. Eight members of Puigdemont’s former government have been jailed in Madrid as the National Court investigates potential rebellion charges against them.
The former president is running for a second term as Catalan leader despite fleeing to Belgium after last month’s declaration of independence when activist groups had been primed to defend him from Spanish police. At least three former members of Puigdemont’s government have since said they weren’t properly prepared to start their own republic and parliamentary speaker Carme Forcadell told the Supreme Court in Madrid the declaration was only “symbolic.” None of that has dented their support, Michavila said.
“The separatist camp has a child-like behavior in which fantasy plays the central role,” said Michavila, whose firm is preparing a poll to be released in the coming days. “On a scale of zero to 10, separatist leaders are scoring about 9 among their voters.” Puigdemont is seeking to form a list of candidates with politicians of his PDeCAT party as well members of separatists campaign groups. Jordi Sanchez, the head of the Catalan National Assembly, the largest of those organization, announced he is stepping down from his current position to be part of the list. Sanchez is in jail as part of a court investigation for alleged sedition.
If most Catalans want to be independent, politicians must address that reality, said Puigdemont in a Russia Today interview with former Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond. “We must be confident, resilient because we’ll win,” he said.
If the separatist parties fall short of a majority, the pro-Spain parties could potentially form a coalition led by Socialist candidate Miquel Iceta, Michavila said. The liberals of Ciutadans are likely to be the largest of the groups who want to stay with Spain, but Iceta may be in a better position to cut a deal because his group is more palatable for Catalunya en Comu, the anti-establishment party allied to Podemos. The electoral system in Spain gives more weight to voters in less-populated provinces, so separatists could win a majority of the seats in the chamber with less than 50 percent of the votes, as happened in 2015. Then the separatists won 72 seats in 135-strong chamber with 48 percent of the votes.
“In the same way that in the US a few states of mostly rural voters had a key role in the election of Trump, Catalonia’s relatively underpopulated areas such as Lleida province will be key,” said Michavila, who has worked as a consultant for Prime
Minister Mariano Rajoy’s People’s Party.

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