Podemos ally may hold key to Catalonia after polls

epa06365295 General Secretary of Podemos (We Can) party Pablo Iglesias gives a speech during an electoral rally of Catalunya En Comu-Podem (In Common We Can) party held in Sant Adria del Besis, Barcelona, Spain, 03 December 2017. Catalan elections are scheduled for 21 December 2017.  EPA-EFE/Alejandro Garcia

Bloomberg

The anti-establishment party Podemos is poised to become a key part of the puzzle when Catalan politicians come to piece together a new government after this month’s regional election. Polls suggest it’s a toss-up whether the three Catalan separatists parties retain their majority after the vote on December 21. If they fall short, Podemos’s Catalan ally, known as Catalunya en Comu, may determine whether the separatist bloc gets another chance to govern.
In a region polarized by October’s scorched-earth dash for independence, Catalunya en Comu is alone in the center ground, neither strongly for or against a break away from the rest of Spain. Instead, 43-year-old leader Xavier Domenech is calling on Spain to allow Catalans a vote on the issue, with opinion among his party colleagues divided on which side they should back if such a vote were to be held. “It’s necessary for all Catalans — not just some of us — to reach an agreement about the terms under which a referendum could take place,” Domenech said in an interview last week. “The pre-condition for having talks about a referendum is getting a broad agreement within Catalonia.”
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy called this month’s snap election as part of his plan to restore order in Catalonia after the regional parliament declared independence following an illegal referendum on Oct. 1. As well as dissolving the regional assembly, Rajoy fired the government and took direct control of the regional administration.
Ousted Catalan President Carles Puigdemont is up in court in Brussels on Monday where a judge will consider an international arrest warrant issued by Spain’s National Court. Puigdemont’s former vice president, Oriol Junqueras, faces his own hearing in the Supreme Court in Madrid as he seeks to be released from jail to join the campaign.
Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias attacked the separatists at a rally where he appeared alongside Domenech. “They have failed, after promising something that they knew perfectly well was a lie,” Iglesias said, according to Europa Press. “They’ve helped to awaken the most dangerous ghost for democracy, the ghost of fascism.” Domenech is betting that pushing for a referendum rather than independence itself may allow him to muster support from across the political spectrum in Catalonia. While polls show the separatist parties are set to win about 46 percent, about three out four voters are in favor of a referendum endorsed by the Spanish state.

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