Hi nettimers,

What is obscured by the flight of Puigdemont to Brussels, is that Catalan 
coalition parties PDeCat and ERC (together: JxSi), and even the anti-capitalist 
CUP, announced they will participate in the Catalan elections that have been 
called by Madrid on December 21. A schizophrenic situation since the same 
parties have backed the proclamation of independence in Catalan parliament last 
Friday. So is there a Catalan Republic or not? 

In that light, I found the reflections by Barcelona citizen Oscar Reyes 
straightforward and instructive. Copy/pasted below.

Cheers from the Frisian north,
Richard

---

Oscar Reyes [1]
October 28 at 10:29am

Too many hot takes on Catalan “independence” already, so apologies for another 
but I can’t help it as I’m seeing a whole lot of celebratory/ “support the 
Republic” postings from international leftie friends. The tone of that feels 
really off from where I'm sitting (a part of Barcelona where the level of 
fireworks celebrating independence was less than what you’d hear when Barca 
score against Real Madrid). 

“Ni DUI ni 155” means neither a unilateral “independence” declaration nor 
article 155 of the Spanish constitution. “Not in my name”, as Ada Colau (Mayor 
of Barcelona) wrote.

The case against direct rule from Madrid is fairly obvious, I think. It’s 
massively undemocratic, and it means Catalonia will for now be ruled by the PP 
(governing right-wing party), which got just 8.5% of the vote here in the last 
elections. The Spanish Senate, whose second string politicians woke up for once 
to actually pass this direct rule vote, was able to find just 1 Catalan senator 
to vote in favour of the motion.

The DUI is a disaster too. It really seems like a premature ejaculation by 
over-eager politicians who haven't yet built a broad social consensus for 
independence (judged by either successive polls, or the last regional 
elections). The DUI will lead to inevitable disappointment and, moreover, seems 
to pass up the opportunity (which would require years of careful political 
work) to build a broader "democratic" front against the Spanish state, which 
isn't short on giving away political opportunities for that to occur. It looks 
to me like a disastrous miscalculation on the part of politicians trapped by 
their own rhetoric: the electoral platform of JxSi promised an independence it 
couldn't yet deliver, and was particularly delusional on the role of the EU. I 
think the CUP’s utopia that a socialist-feminist Catalan republic could be 
built by allying itself with the centre-right was also a bit fanciful, to be 
honest… 

What will actually happen now, alongside a whole lot of repression, will be 
direct rule (in the short term), which will try to dismantle aspects of Catalan 
institutions, followed by elections on 21 December. There’ll be a lot of state 
repression that needs to be resisted, and they’ll likely take a bunch more 
political prisoners (a process that already started). 

It's not clear yet who will stand (or even be allowed to stand) in the December 
elections, but the agenda from Spain’s right wing parties (PP and Cs) looks 
like it always looks: cuts and privatization. What they don’t achieve through 
direct rule they’ll hope to achieve via some kind of pro-Spanish Bantu sham 
government. Encouraging big banks (and other large companies) to re-register 
their headquarters outside Catalonia will be used to justify cuts: the Spanish 
government will use these “moves” to claim Catalonia is less productive, 
thereby squeezing revenues that go to the Generalitat. Call it what you will: 
austerity, shock doctrine or simply a punishment beating. But please consider 
that before you start cheering. 

Please also consider what’s at stake: the Generalitat (Catalan gov't) that was 
just taken over by Madrid controls a €24 billion budget (including €4.8 bn 
education, €8.8 bn health). 

Cuts and endless repression aren’t the only possible outcome. It’s just about 
possible to imagine positive scenarios, if you wear glasses that have a 
sufficiently rosy tint. Maybe Catalunya en Comú stands for election, does well 
and absorbs a lot of support from pro-independence and pro-referendum (not the 
same thing) voters, just as En Comu Podem did in the last national elections. 
Maybe a stronger route will emerge for continuing the fight for 
self-determination in Catalonia, and a constituent process across Spain (all of 
which starts with bringing down the PP). According to the latest polling, 
there’s a clear majority of support for socially and economically progressive 
parties here in Catalonia, although whether that’ll find expression in any 
election called by Madrid (which would require a lot of tactical nose-holding) 
remains doubtful.

One final thought. As a shorthand, I'd say: put away the Orwell and the flag 
waving romances and try to watch what Ada Colau says, or Pablo Iglesias, or 
many more people on the Spanish and Catalan "plurinational" left who aren't 
celebrating right now but are lamenting a political disaster.

[1] Facebook post: 
https://www.facebook.com/oscar.reyes.5036/posts/10154731564606710

#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to