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BARCELONA, Spain -- Parties pushing for independence from
Spain won a majority of seats in Catalonia's regional Parliament in a
ballot Sunday, but failed to secure more than 50 percent of the popular
vote in an election they had hoped would give them a clear, unequivocal
mandate for secession.
With 98 percent of the
votes counted, the "Together for Yes" group of secessionist parties had
62 seats in the 135-member parliament, meaning they would need to join
forces with the radical Popular Unity Candidacy party - that secured 10
seats - to be able to push regional legislation through.
However, together they only won 47.9 percent of the popular vote, meaning opponents to independence were in a majority.
Here are some questions and answers about the Catalonia independence vote:
Q: How and why did the vote come about?
A:
Catalonia is a prosperous, industrialized region in northeast Spain
sharing a Mediterranean border with France. It has for centuries
treasured its own language and culture, but during the 1939-1975
military dictatorship of Gen. Francisco Franco, the Catalan language was
banned in spoken and written forms.
The
recent surge in independence sentiment stems from June 2010, when
Spain's highest court struck down key parts of a groundbreaking charter
that would have granted Catalonia more autonomy and recognized it as a
nation within Spain.
Artur Mas, Catalonia's
regional leader, began openly pushing for an independence referendum but
Spain's central government has repeatedly quashed moves for a
plebiscite, maintaining it would be unconstitutional.
Eventually, Mas decided to turn elections for the regional parliament into a substitute ballot on independence.
Q: Who has won?
A:
Mas has claimed victory as separatists had a majority of lawmakers
returned to parliament in Barcelona. However, opponents to independence
say the majority of votes were cast by those did not want to break away
from Spain.
Q: What does Spain's government think?
A:
The government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has made it clear it
will use all legal methods to prevent the independence of Catalonia,
which accounts for nearly a fifth of Spain's economic output.
Q: What's next?
A:
With both sides claiming some form of victory, moves to declare
independence will be opposed. Months of negotiations are likely.
Many
analysts believe the independence drive will be halted after Spain
holds a general election in December and decides whether Rajoy and his
Popular Party stay in power. Whoever wins, analysts say, the next
government is likely to start negotiating more autonomy and fiscal
powers for Catalonia.
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