Separatist parties in Spain's Catalonia win majority in election
Story highlights
- Parties will need to form a coalition, with no single party winning an outright majority
- The anti-independence Citizens gained the most seats but doesn't have the allies to rule
(CNN)Voters in the Spanish region of Catalonia have delivered a blow to Madrid by backing pro-independence parties in regional elections.
Former
Catalan President Carles Puigdemont celebrated the results from
Brussels where he's been in self-imposed exile since Spanish authorities
announced they were seeking his arrest.
Puigdemont was pushed from power after holding an illegal independence referendum and declaring the region's unilateral independence from Spain.
"The
Catalan Republic has won," he announced in Brussels in the early hours
of Friday morning. "The Spanish government was defeated."
The
Spanish government had called an early election in the hope of quelling
the separatist movement, whose push for independence triggered the
country's worst political crisis in decades.
But
Madrid's hopes were clearly dashed. With more than 99% of the vote
counted, no single party gained an outright majority but the three
separatist parties together took 70 seats. They needed 68 to keep their grip on the 135-seat Parliament.
To
govern the pro-independence parties will need to join in a coalition.
Such a scenario pushes the Madrid-Barcelona relationship back to where
this all began three months ago, with a provocative separatist
government in Barcelona rattling Madrid.
The anti-independence Ciutadans (Citizens) did win the most seats of any party, but not enough to form a majority government.
'The Catalan republic has won'
Puigdemont's
party -- Junts per Catalunya (Together for Catalonia) party won 34
seats in Thursday's vote. He said the Spanish Prime Minister, Mariano
Rajoy, had "received a hit, a blow by the Catalans."
"They lost their coup d'etat," he said.
Marta
Rovira, from the other main separatist Esquerra Republicana de
Catalunya (Republican Left of Catalonia) party, also declared victory
after her party won 32 seats. She shouted "Freedom" in concert with
party supporters after the results emerged.
Prime
Minister Rajoy's People's Party (Partido Popular) lost most of its
seats in the Thursday election, dropping from 11 to three.
The
result was also a clear rejection of Madrid's response to the
turbulence. The Spanish government sent in thousands of police to shut
down the October 1 referendum, and officers were seen pulling elderly
voters by the hair from polling stations and firing rubber bullets at
relatively clam protesters.
Madrid seized control of the region after dismissing the entire Catalan government and Parliament.
Rise of the center-right Citizens party
Despite
the clear support for the pro-independence side, it was actually the
anti-independence Ciutadans (Citizens) party that came away with the
most seats, winning 37 -- a sweeping gain compared to the 25 the party
won in the last vote, and a sign of just how divisive the independence
issue has been.
The party benefited from a record turnout of 82%.
The party candidate, Inés Arrimadas, was likely hoping to win and form a coalition of other anti-independence parties, but the numbers do not stack up in her favor.
Nonetheless, she gave a victory speech of her own.
"We are all Catalonia and the first political force in the Catalan parliament is called Ciutadans," she said.
"The
10 most-populated cities in Catalonia are right now orange, so thank
you to all the people who have made that possible," she said, referring
to the party's color.
Political negotiations to come
The
results, however, do not necessarily mean easy sailing for the
independence movement. There will likely be intense negotiations,
particularly over the issue of who would become Catalonia's next
president.
The question is further complicated by the fact that Puigdemont is in self-imposed exile in Brussels. He said last week that he would come back if he won, but he could still face arrest by Spanish authorities over the illegal referendum if he does.
The other separatist leader -- Oriol Junqueras of Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya -- is detained in a Madrid prison over the referendum, on charges of sedition and rebellion. Both leaders face 30-year jail terms.
The
two parties told CNN last week that they would join in a coalition in
this scenario, but the movement has shown signs of fracture and is not
as united as it was in the 2015 vote.
The
two parties will also have to please the marginal Candidatura d'Unitat
Popular (Popular Unity Candidacy), as they would not pass the 68-seat
threshold without it. The party was kingmaker in 2015 as well,
propelling Puigdemont to the presidency in an 11th-hour deal.
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