CNN.com
Separatist parties in Spain's Catalonia declare victory in election
(CNN)Voters in the Spanish region of Catalonia have backed pro-independence parties in elections
-- with more than 97% of the vote counted -- dealing a major blow to
leaders in Madrid, which has been desperate to quell the separatist
movement.
The Spanish
government had called the early vote in the hope of having a more
moderate Catalan administration to deal with -- the previous one held an
illegal referendum to secede from Spain and its MPs then declared
unilateral independence, triggering the country's worst political crisis
in decades.
No
single party has gained an outright majority, but the three separatist
parties took 70 seats, according to the nearly complete results. They
needed 68 to gain control of the 135-seat Parliament. If
they agree to govern in a coalition, it would put Madrid and Barcelona
back to where they were before the seismic political events.
Elsa
Artadi from Junts per Catalunya (Together for Catalonia), which gained
34 seats, declared victory in front of party supporters, who shouted
"Freedom."
Despite the clear support for separatist parties, it was actually the
anti-independence Ciutadans (Citizens) party that came up with the most
seats, winning 36 -- a sweeping gain compared to the 25 the party won
in the last vote -- in a sign of just how divisive the independence
issue has been.
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
two main parties do not have the same unity as when they won the
previous election, in 2015 -- and the situation is further complicated
by the fact that the head of the leading pro-independence party, Carles Puigdemont of Junts Per Catalunya,
is in self-imposed exile in Brussels. He said last week that he would
come back if he won, but he is likely be arrested by Spanish authorities
over the illegal referendum. His party won 34 seats.
Puigdemont led the previous government as president before Madrid fired him and his entire administration over the referendum and independence declaration, then called the snap election.
The
other leader -- Oriol Junqueras of Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya
(Republican Left of Catalonia), which won 32 seats -- is detained in a
Madrid prison over the referendum, on charges of sedition and rebellion.
Both leaders face 30 years in prison.
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