Four separatist parties in Spain's
Catalonia looked set to win a majority in regional elections on Sunday, partial
results showed, but the main one was on course to lose some seats, possibly
undermining its bid to call an independence referendum.
With half of votes counted, the ruling Convergence and Union alliance, or CiU, was winning 48 seats in the 135-seat local parliament, well down from its current 62 seats
The separatist Republican Left, or ERC, was winning 20 seats, with two other smaller separatist parties taking a total of 16 seats, giving the four parties 60 percent between them.
Regional President Artur Mas, of CiU, had campaigned on a pledge to hold a referendum on independence, in response to a resurgent separatist movement among Catalans who are frustrated with Spain in a deep economic crisis.
Opinion polls had forecast that CiU would retain 62 or more seats in the local Parliament and that all four separatist parties would have more than two-thirds of the seats. Neither of those projections was met as the results began to come in.
With half of votes counted, the ruling Convergence and Union alliance, or CiU, was winning 48 seats in the 135-seat local parliament, well down from its current 62 seats
The separatist Republican Left, or ERC, was winning 20 seats, with two other smaller separatist parties taking a total of 16 seats, giving the four parties 60 percent between them.
Regional President Artur Mas, of CiU, had campaigned on a pledge to hold a referendum on independence, in response to a resurgent separatist movement among Catalans who are frustrated with Spain in a deep economic crisis.
Opinion polls had forecast that CiU would retain 62 or more seats in the local Parliament and that all four separatist parties would have more than two-thirds of the seats. Neither of those projections was met as the results began to come in.
Without
the psychological backing of a two-thirds majority, analysts have said, it may
be hard for Mas to defy the constitution and the central government in Madrid
and try to hold a referendum.
Turnout
was very high in the election, 68 percent, 10 percentage point higher than in
the previous vote two years ago.
With
more people than Denmark and an economy almost as big as Portugal's, Catalonia
has its own language. Like Basques, Catalans see themselves as distinct from
the rest of Spain.
Growing
Catalan separatism is a huge challenge for Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who is
trying to bring down painfully high borrowing costs by persuading investors of
Spain's fiscal and political stability.
Mas
converted to separatism after huge street demonstrations in September.
Up
until recently Mas was a moderate nationalist who had pushed Spain to give
Catalonia more self-governing powers. He has followed the popular mood in
converting to a more radical separatism, but it is not clear he can hold a
referendum legally.
Many
Catalans are angry that Rajoy has refused to negotiate a new tax deal with
their largely self-governing region. Annually, an estimated 16 billion euros
($21 billion) in taxes paid in Catalonia, about 8 percent of its economic
output, is not returned to the region.
Home
to car factories and banks that generate one fifth of Spain's economic wealth,
and birthplace of surrealist painter Salvador Dali and architect Antoni Gaudi,
the region also has one of the world's most successful football clubs, FC
Barcelona.
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