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Showing posts with label Sanchez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sanchez. Show all posts

Monday, November 10, 2014

Catalonia's symbolic independence referendum: What it means and why it would be wrong to ignore it

UPDATE (1:00pm) - As promised, here's an update on the results of Catalonia's symbolic independence referendum now that all votes have been counted.

Turnout: 2,305,290 people (around 37% of those eligible to vote)
Votes in favour of independence: 1,861,753 (80.76%)

 *****

ORIGINAL BLOG POST (9:55am)

Catalonia's symbolic independence referendum eventually went ahead yesterday. With 88.4% of votes counted, the Catalan government puts turnout at over two million people. Nearly 1.7 million of them (80.7%) voted in favour of Catalonia's independence from Spain. We will update the blog with the final results as soon as they come in.

This infographic from El País compares yesterday's turnout (far right column) with the 2012 Catalan regional elections and the 2006 (binding) referendum on the amended Statute of Autonomy of Catalonia:


In other words, less than a third (32.8%) of those eligible to vote cast their ballot yesterday. However, this is still quite impressive considering that Catalan voters knew yesterday's vote was purely symbolic. Furthermore, the percentage is calculated on a broader electoral base - since young Catalans aged 16 were allowed to vote in yesterday's referendum, unlike in regional elections where the voting age is 18.

On the other hand, the outcome of yesterday's vote is probably not a great indication of where the majority of Catalans stand on independence. Due to the non-binding nature of the referendum, there is likely to be a significant amount of self-selection bias. Many Catalans who felt strongly about independence thought it was worth queuing at polling stations to cast a non-binding vote and show defiance of the Spanish government, while many of those who would vote against independence in a real referendum, or were undecided, stayed home since they knew the result would have no legal validity. 

This certainly helped push up the pro-independence vote to nearly 81%. As a reference, the four pro-independence parties currently holding seats in the Catalan parliament won a total 2,093,709 votes in the 2012 regional elections

Recent opinion polls clearly show that the split is much more even than that. For example, a Metroscopia poll published by El País two weeks ago found that 44% of Catalans would vote for independence in a referendum and 42% would vote against. Interestingly, when offered a third option involving "new and bulletproof exclusive competences" for Catalonia, 46% of respondents said they would choose this option, while 29% would vote for independence and 17% would opt for the status quo.

So where does yesterday's vote leave the debate on Catalan independence?  

Pep Guardiola was one of over 2m Catalans who cast their vote
As we argued in our previous blog posts (see here, here and here), the situation in Catalonia has got to a point where the status quo is looking increasingly untenable. The issue has so far been handled quite poorly by both the Spanish and the Catalan governments, who have failed to engage in any meaningful negotiations.

Unsurprisingly, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has talked down the significance of yesterday's vote and stressed that, if anything, it makes future talks between him and Catalan President Artur Mas more difficult. However, Rajoy's unwillingness to engage in any real discussions with Mas so far makes this position look somewhat strange.

Furthermore, this approach sort of misses the point. The Spanish government continues to use a legal argument (the Spanish Constitution forbids regions from organising binding referenda without the authorisation of Madrid) to address a political problem. In this regard, the fact that the next Spanish general election is due next year is clearly an incentive for Rajoy to show even more inflexibility vis-à-vis Catalan demands.

That said, Madrid and Barcelona can't just keep talking past each other indefinitely. Constitutional reform giving Catalonia (and, why not, other Spanish regions) more powers to set and collect taxes, for instance, would probably go a long way to address Catalan voters' concerns that the wealthy region is paying too much towards the national coffers and getting too little out of it - although it would be simplistic to boil the Catalan question down to money only.

Incidentally, constitutional reform is being openly backed by the new Spanish Socialist leader Pedro Sánchez, the Matteo Renzi of Spain. Going forward, as we already argued no less than two years ago, a reform of the Spanish Constitution envisaging further devolution of powers may well impose itself as the most sensible solution for everyone.

Monday, October 27, 2014

No Podemos parar: Spain's six-month-old protest party comes second in new opinion poll

On this blog, we have been tracking Podemos, Spain's six-month-old anti-establishment party, since its very first success in the European Parliament elections in May - when the party came from nowhere to secure five MEPs (see here and here).

The rise of Podemos has continued since. According to a new poll released by Tele Cinco yesterday, the party led by Pablo Iglesias would finish second in a general election with 24.1% of votes - behind Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's Partido Popular (on 28.3%) but ahead of the Socialist Party (on 23.7%).


Podemos was only officially registered as a political party in March and is already polling as Spain's second most popular party. This is absolutely extraordinary in itself, but this second graph is even more interesting:


Essentially, this poll suggests we may be looking at the following two post-election scenarios:
  • A strongly anti-austerity left-wing coalition including the Socialist Party, Podemos and the United Left (53% of votes in total in this specific poll).
  • An unusual 'grand coalition' between the centre-right Partido Popular and the Socialist Party, an option which we discussed here.
The new Socialist leader Pedro Sánchez has so far ruled out joining forces with either Partido Popular or Podemos, but the next Spanish general election is still a year away - so things may well change. Opinion polls can certainly be wrong, but as we noted in our previous blog posts, the steady rise of Podemos should not necessarily come as a surprise. There was a gap in the market, so to say. Spain, the country that had given birth to the indignados movement, had no real anti-establishment party.

Now that Podemos has entered stage and is consistently polling well, traditional parties may be forced to engage with its arguments. At the same time, we would expect Podemos to come under greater scrutiny and pressure as Spaniards begin to contemplate its role as an opposition party or even as a member of a governing coalition.

One thing Spain's mainstream political forces should keep in mind is that, as Italy's Five Star Movement showed last year, simply ignoring a protest party and hoping it will go away can often backfire.

Monday, September 01, 2014

Headlines are all for AfD and UKIP, but the biggest shocker for traditional parties may come from Spain...

The surge of anti-EU, anti-euro and protest parties across Europe continues. Germany's anti-euro Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) is making headlines after winning 9.7% of votes in yesterday's regional elections in Saxony and securing its first ever seats in one of the country's regional parliaments.

In the UK, a Survation poll for the Mail on Sunday found that, following the defection of Douglas Carswell from the Conservatives to UKIP last week, UKIP is set to win the ensuing Clacton by-election with 64% of the vote - which would grant Nigel Farage's party its first elected MP.

However, the biggest shocker for mainstream parties seems to be coming from Spain. According to a new Sigma Dos poll for El Mundo, the anti-establishment (but not anti-EU) party Podemos would finish third in a general election with 21.2% of votes - only 1.1% less than the opposition Socialist Party. Being neck-and-neck with one of Spain's two traditional parties is an absolutely extraordinary result for Podemos, given that it was founded in March. The poll puts Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's centre-right Partido Popular in the lead on 30.1% - a 14.5% fall from the 44.6% the party scored at the November 2011 general election (click on the picture to enlarge).

 
If you didn't read it at the time, here is a portrait of Podemos and its leader, Pablo Iglesias, that we published in the aftermath of the European Parliament elections in May - when Podemos came from nowhere to win five seats in Strasbourg. We noted:
Call it left-wing, anti-establishment, anti-austerity (but clearly not anti-EU), the rise of Podemos is significant because - similar to what the Five-Star Movement has done in Italy - it can give Spaniards a channel through which they can voice their dissatisfaction with the political establishment (and the current eurozone economic policies), something which has been lacking at the peak of the eurozone crisis.
Indeed, looking at the latest polls, Podemos seems to be following exactly the same trajectory as Beppe Grillo's Five-Star Movement in terms of rocketing (potential) electoral support. And exactly as in Italy, the rise of a strong anti-establishment party may well force the centre-right Partido Popular and the Socialists to consider an unusual (and uncomfortable) 'grand coalition' if none of the two big traditional parties wins a majority in the next general election - due in November 2015.

While the speed of the rise of Podemos is certainly surprising, there has undoubtedly been a huge gap in the market for a protest party in Spain over the past few years - as we noted on this blog at the end of May. Despite sky-high unemployment, a struggling economy, a few political scandals and regional discontent, no party or movement had so far managed to shake the solid support for the two mainstream parties. But since Podemos entered stage, things seems to have changed. With a Catalan independence referendum potentially coming up in November and thoughts turning towards next year's general election, these are certainly interesting times in Spanish politics.