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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Sam Jones in Madrid

Spanish PM Sánchez set to stay in power with controversial Catalan amnesty deal

Pedro Sánchez.
Pedro Sánchez is on the verge of securing another term in office after his socialist party won the support of pro-Catalan independence parties. Photograph: Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

Spain’s acting prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, is on the verge of securing another term in office after his socialist party won the support of Catalan separatists by offering a deeply controversial amnesty for those who took part in the illegal and failed push for regional independence six years ago.

The deal between the Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE) and the centre-right Junts (Together) comes after a week of tense negotiations and amid widespread concerns over the amnesty, which have led to street protests, dire warnings from conservative judges and questions from Brussels.

Speaking shortly after the agreement was announced on Thursday, the PSOE’s organisational secretary, Santos Cerdán, said the negotiations had yielded “a historic opportunity to resolve a conflict that could – and should – only be resolved politically”. He said the proposed amnesty bill would now be put before parliament, adding that a new, socialist-led government would offer a progressive alternative to an alliance between the conservative People’s party (PP) and the far-right Vox party.

“Our aim is to open the way for a legislature that will allow us to progress and to build an open and modern society and a better country,” Cerdán said. “[We want to] consolidate the gains we have made and not let the past determine the future.”

Carles Puigdemont, the former Catalan president who leads Junts and who fled Spain to avoid arrest over his role in masterminding the 2017 referendum, said the agreement heralded “an unprecedented stage” and raised hopes of a political solution to the so-called Catalan question.

The PP dismissed the agreement as “a shameful and humiliating deal” and said it showed the lengths to which Sánchez was prepared to go to remain in power. Its leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, accused the PSOE of “betraying its history and its principles” and said it would pay the price for its pacts.

The deal follows months of uncertainty caused by an inconclusive snap general election in July, in which the PP narrowly beat the PSOE. But the PP failed to muster the support it needed to form a government with Vox, leaving the way clear for the PSOE and its allies in the leftwing Sumar alliance.

To cobble together the necessary parliamentary support, however, Sánchez has been forced to rely on the support of smaller parties, including the two main Catalan pro-independence parties, the Catalan Republican Left (ERC) and Junts.

Both Catalan parties made their support conditional on an amnesty for all those who had taken part in the push for independence – including Puigdemont himself.

Although Sánchez now has the backing of both the ERC and Junts – meaning he can now attempt an investiture next week – the proposed amnesty law has infuriated the Spanish right and angered many traditional socialist voters.

A protester against a proposed amnesty of Catalan separatist leaders holds a placard reading ‘Pedro Sánchez traitor’ in front of police officers in Madrid, Spain, on Wednesday.
A protester against a proposed amnesty of Catalan separatist leaders holds a placard reading ‘Pedro Sánchez traitor’ in front of police officers in Madrid, Spain, on Wednesday. Photograph: Nacho Doce/Reuters

A poll in mid-September showed 70% of Spaniards opposed an amnesty, and about 200,000 people have taken part in three large, recent rallies against the measure, organised by the PP and Vox.

Confirmation of the agreement was followed by news that Alejo Vidal-Quadras, a former PP and Vox politician, had been shot in the face in a wealthy Madrid neighbourhood on Thursday. Vidal-Qatras, who also served as a vice-president of the European parliament, was being treated for his injuries while police investigated the unexplained attack.

Efforts to close the deal with Junts had suffered a setback on Monday, after a judge at Spain’s highest criminal court, the Audiencia Nacional, announced that Puigdemont and other separatists were being investigated as part of an inquiry into the actions of the secretive pro-independence platform Tsunami Democràtic.

The judge alleged that Puigdemont had played a leadership role within the platform, whose actions – such as closing roads and blockading Barcelona airport in October 2019 – “could be classified, in a preliminary way, as terrorism”. Any possible terrorism charges would not be covered by the amnesty.

Puigdemont’s legal team and advisers have dismissed such allegations as part of the “lawfare” being waged against the former regional president.

A paragraph in the agreement signed by the PSOE and Junts says the proposed amnesty law should take into account cases involving “lawfare” and the “judicialisation of politics”. It also says the law should cover all those facing judicial action over the symbolic independence referendum of 2014 and the unilateral, illegal one staged three years later.

On Tuesday night, 39 people, including 30 police officers, were injured amid continuing protests against the amnesty outside the PSOE’s Madrid headquarters.

The demonstration, which was attended by Vox members and by fascist and neo-fascist groups, led to skirmishes between protesters and riot police, who responded with teargas and baton charges.

Video footage of the event – which was attended by about 7,000 people – showed some participants calling Sánchez a “criminal” and a “dictator”, and using a homophobic slur to refer to Spain’s acting interior minister, Fernando Grande-Marlaska, who is gay. It followed three much larger, peaceful protests that were called in Madrid and Barcelona by the PP and Vox, and which were collectively attended by a total of about 200,000 people.

On Wednesday, the EU justice commissioner, Didier Reynders, wrote to the acting Spanish government asking for more details of the proposed amnesty law, adding that the issue had raised “serious concerns” and had become “a matter of considerable importance in the public debate”.

In a polite but blunt reply, the acting government pointed out that the Spanish constitution did not allow caretaker administrations to put legislation before parliament. Any such legislation, it added, would be proposed by political parties. It did, however, offer to provide more details to the commission if and when the amnesty bill was tabled.

On Monday night, the conservative-dominated General Council of the Judiciary, the body that appoints top judges, said that the mooted amnesty could lead to “the degradation, if not abolition, of the rule of law in Spain”.

Its warning came days after the Professional Association of Magistrates – a conservative group that represents most of the country’s judges – claimed the move was “the beginning of the end of democracy” that would “destroy the rule of law”.

Although the ERC and Junts have seized on the proposed amnesty as a means of reviving the stalled regional independence movement they are competing to represent, support for an independent Catalonia has plummeted in recent years.

At the height of the crisis in October 2017, a survey by the Catalan government’s Centre for Opinion Studies found 48.7% of Catalans supported independence and 43.6% did not. According to a survey conducted in July by the same centre, 52% of Catalans now oppose independence and 42% are in favour.

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