STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Referendum is set for November 9, 2014, pro-independence parties say
- "The vote will not be held," Justice Minister Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon responds
- Madrid says nation's constitution doesn't allow regions to unilaterally break away
- There have been mass demonstrations in favor of self-determinatio
Spokesman for Catalan regional
president Artur Mas speaks during a press conference on December 12, 2014 in
Barcelona.
|
By Al Goodman, CNN
Madrid (CNN)
-- Pro-independence parties in Catalonia defied the Spanish
government Thursday by announcing in Barcelona that they plan to hold a
referendum in November on whether the wealthy northeast region should be
independent.
Madrid staunchly opposes the referendum and Catalan
independence, and a Spanish government official
rejected the announcement.
"The vote will not be held," Justice Minister
Alberto Ruiz-Gallardon told reporters Thursday in the hallways of Spain's
parliament.
Even supporters admit that there is much to be done
before the vote can take place on November 9, 2014.
"We expect to open negotiations with Madrid. The
Spanish state can't be blind about it," said Joan Maria Pique, a top aide
and spokesman for Catalan regional president Artur Mas, who had a prominent
role Thursday when his Convergence and Union party announced the plan with
three other parties.
They had previously said only that the vote would be
sometime in late 2014. And they also announced the two-part referendum
question:
Do you want Catalonia to become a state? And if the voter
answers yes, then comes this: Do you want that state to be independent?
That's a different formula from the single question that
Scottish voters are due to get on September 18: Should Scotland be an
independent country?"
Pique said the two-part question in Catalonia was the
result of negotiations among the four pro-independence parties, but he noted
that Great Britain has agreed to allow the Scottish vote on self-determination,
while Spain has not followed suit yet for
Catalonia.
The Spanish government says that Catalonia, with 7.5
million people, already has broad home-rule powers, including its own
parliament, police force and control over
education and health.
And Madrid insists that the Spanish Constitution does not
allow any of Spain's 17 regions to unilaterally break away, even one like
Catalonia that has its own flag and language.
The four pro-independence Catalan parties hold a majority
in the Catalan regional parliament. There have been mass demonstrations in
favor of self-determination on the past two Catalan national days on September
11. This year, hundreds of thousands of people formed a human chain -- from
northern Catalonia, at the French border, to its southern border with the Valencia region -- to drive home the point.
Last year on September 11, an estimated 1.5 million
people demonstrated in Barcelona, the regional capital and Spain's
second-largest city, for self-determination.
Various opinion polls show a very large majority of
Catalans want the right of self-determination. But if independence makes it to
the ballot, polls show the result could be tighter, with some predicting a
victory in the 50% range.
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