Vote Fails to Settle Dispute on Secession by Catalonia

9/29/15
 
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from The New York Times,
9/28/15:

For three years, Catalonia has been at loggerheads with the central government in Madrid over whether the prosperous northeastern region — a fifth of Spain’s economy — could secede.

The latest round in that struggle, a Catalan parliamentary election held on Sunday in which separatist parties won almost 48 percent of the vote, fell short of the decisive victory secessionist forces had hoped for.

But neither did it do much to defang an issue that has become one of the most vexing for Spain’s conservative prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, threatening to destabilize Spain just as its economy has come out of a lengthy recession and banking crisis.

Instead, the outcome has left an exceptionally volatile issue to simmer on the front burner for Spain — and all of Europe — at a time when the European Union’s ability to find a unified response to crises has already been called into a question, whether on refugees, Greek debt or the euro.

Catalonia’s future will now become a more critical factor in year-end national elections in Spain, even as the issue continues to generate deep wariness in Brussels and across Europe, where the prospect of an independent Catalonia lends energy to separatist claims in other regions.

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