another new email post

asdldlasdjlask lsakjakls l kjlkfasdf sdkfsdkf lkjkfs c lksauijckl m.

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testing for email

a new email post ;fdl;dfgk;dflg dfgk;dfkg;dflgk;l

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The growth of WM education in Caerffili

The recent announcement of details of the Welsh Government's £144.8m allocation of funds to be spent on new schools or improvements to schools was welcome, although not all of the bids were successful.

Among the Local Authorities that didn't win funding was Caerffili. It's bid included three projects, and details of them are here. The Council identified its top priority as improving Welsh-medium provision, based on the St Ilan/Plas-y-felin sites.

St Ilan's School was closed in 2007. It is the cluster of buildings in the top right of the picture, with the original block on the right and newer additions to the left and top. Plas-y-Felin Primary School is on the left of the picture, and Ysgol Gymraeg Caerffili is at the bottom right.

I don't particularly want to focus on the details of the bid—except to say that it does seem an obvious site to develop, as St Ilan's has been standing empty for almost three years—but to draw attention to the Appendix at the end of the report which, in the Council's words, "illustrates the growth in Welsh Medium education and the urgency for additional secondary places within the County Borough".

The first table shows the growth projection for Caerffili's existing WM Secondary:

 
  Ysgol Gyfun Cwm Rhymni - Pupil Projections
 
  DateNo. on roll  Capacity  Surplus/Excess  
     
  September 20091341  1448  - 107  
  September 20101410  1448  - 38  
  September 20111441  1448  - 7  
  September 20121447  1448  - 1  
  September 20131503  1448  + 55  
  September 20141540  1448  + 92  
  September 20151663  1448  + 215  
  September 20161763  1448  + 315  
  September 20171906  1448  + 458  
  September 20181999  1448  + 551  
  September 20192113  1448  + 665  
     

It is relatively easy to project secondary numbers, because they reflect the growth in primary numbers. The next table shows how primary numbers are increasing, the jumps tending to reflect when new WM schools are opened.

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Catalunya's journey to independence

I've been meaning to write something on the situation in Catalunya for some time, but the longer I left it, the more "out of the news" it became, to the point where I'd have to explain things over again. However, the massive demonstration on 10 July in support of Catalunya's right to decide its own future has brought the political situation in Catalunya back into the spotlight.

     

The demonstration was sparked by the decision of the Spanish Constitutional Tribunal (TC) to declare that some of the articles in Catalunya's Statute of Autonomy are unconstitutional. The Statute was passed in 2006 to replace the earlier version of 1979, which was part of Spain's transition to democracy after Franco's death in 1975. It was presented by the Catalan Parliament with support from all parties except the Partido Popular, then passed by the Spanish Parliament after amendment by them, then finally ratified by a referendum. Although the vote in favour was high (73.2% to 20.6% in favour) the turnout was 48.9% ... which either reflected the degree to which it had been watered down or showed that Catalans were not very interested in their constitutional position, depending on one's political standpoint.

The Statute had been challenged by the Partido Popular in the Constitutional Tribunal on matters relating to Catalunya's autonomy, and by surrounding autonomous communities on other matters particularly to do with finance. Although the "headline issue" was whether Catalans were allowed to consider themselves a nation or not, the ruling had many other facets, including:

•  the right of the Catalan Government to have a bilateral relation with the Spanish Government
•  the obligation to know Catalan language in order to work in the public sector
•  the Catalan Supreme Court of Justice as the highest court for certain kinds of laws
•  minimum levels of infrastructure investment and limit on the degree of fiscal equalization

Some of these rulings are inconsistent in that, for example: the bilateral relations are essentially similar to those enjoyed by Euskadi and Navarre and the proposed Justice Council of Catalonia is modelled on what other communities such as Andalusia already have. The fiscal provisions were intended to limit the amount that could be transferred from Catalunya to the remainder of Spain (it is the richest area in Spain second only to Euskadi) and to guarantee a minimum share of infrastructure investment, following the German model. These details are taken from this article, which is the most complete account of the ruling I have been able to find.
 

     

 
For information, it's probably worthwhile to look at the political parties in Catalunya, what they stand for, and their level of support. Ranked in terms of their vote in the 2006 election to the Catalan Parliament they are:

•  CiU - Convergència i Unió ... centre-right, pro-autonomy (31.5%)
•  PSC - Partit dels Socialistes de Catalunya ... centre left (26.8%)
•  ERC - Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya ... left, pro-independence (14.0%)
•  PP - Partido Popular ... right, anti-autonomy, pro-Spain (10.7%)
•  ICV - Iniciativa per Catalunya Verds ... coalition of left and Greens (9.5%)
•  Cs - Ciutadans ... left, anti-autonomy, pro-Spain (3.0%)

The current Catalan government is made up of a broad left alliance between the PSC, ERC and ICV. This coalition was formed after the 2004 election, and the ERC's participation in government was at the price of securing the new Statute of Autonomy with a PSC that had always been lukewarm about it before. Negotiations between Barcelona and Madrid were also helped by the fact that the socialist Zapatero had just become First Minister of Spain. Obviously CiU also wanted a stronger SoA, meaning that it had more than 80% support in the Catalan Parliament.

Now that several articles of the SoA have been struck down or amended, those same four parties formed the backbone of the demonstration on Saturday, along with a host of civic leaders and other prominent members of Catalan society. The principles that united them were that any constitutional question mark over the new SoA should have been sorted out when the it was being considered by the Catalan and Spanish Parliaments, and certainly before being approved in a referendum; and that it was up to the people of Catalunya to decide their constitutional future, not the Spanish State.

In all probability the march was organized on the basis that it is for the people of Catalunya to decide their future, and not to have something they have already approved retrospectively amended. However it was probably a surprise to some of the organizers that there were so many pro-independence banners in the crowd. It wasn't organized as a pro-independence march ... but that is definitely what it turned out to be. So it is worth considering why the public mood in Catalunya has shifted from respect for the enhanced autonomy the Catalans thought they had to independence. Up until now, the only pro-independence party has been the ERC. They are the party that Plaid Cymru and the SNP work with in the European Parliament as part of the EFA.
 

     

 
The current rise of support for independence probably springs from the series of non-official independence referendums that started with the one in Arenys de Munt in September. There was a second round in December. Both these resulted in over 90% support for independence from those who voted, making turnout the critical factor. In the second round the turnout was 27.3%, which would have been enough to secure a victory if the turnout had been about 52.4%. And if anyone thinks I was being over-clever with my maths, it was gratifying to see Artur Mas, leader of the CiU, echo what I had said. But subsequent rounds of voting have been more disappointing for those wanting independence, with the turnout falling to 20.2% in April and most recent round having a turnout of 13.7%.

There are two ways of viewing this. For unionists, it is a demonstration that support for independence is low, particularly in the more urban areas. However it should be noted that these referendums have been organized unofficially by volunteers without any the use of any official resources, most notably in terms of information and publicity. One useful parallel would be to compare these turnouts with the turnout for an official referendum and, as luck would have it, there was one of these in Barcelona in May this year on the future of the Avinguda Diagonal, one of Barcelona's main thoroughfares. Despite all the publicity events the use of official facilities and a budget of over €3m, the turnout in that referendum was only 12%.

But even so, there was a general sense of disappointment, that the independence referendums had not resulted in a higher turnout. However a new possibility has opened up, because it is now possible to organize official referendums on citizens' initiatives if they can collect 25,000 signatures. The Catalan government has allowed the initiative to go ahead, and signatures are being collected. There seems little doubt in my mind that the required number of signatures will be gathered, but what happens after that is more problematic. A similar referendum in Euskadi in 2008 was banned by the Spanish State.
 

     

The third development is that two more pro-independence groups have recently been formed. The first, Reagrupament, set itself up with the specific aim of either electing enough deputies to the Catalan Parliament on pro-independence mandate—either under its own name or by getting other parties to adopt that specific policy platform—to declare independence. The thinking behind this is that the Spanish won't let Catalans vote in a referendum, therefore declaring unilateral independence allows them to set up a referendum without Spanish interference. Other countries, as well as the EU and UN, would be almost certain to recognize that independence if it was confirmed in a properly held referendum, and the Spanish would not dare to take control by military force.

For some time there was speculation that Joan Laporta (the former chairman of Barcelona FC and unambiguously pro-independence) would join or even become co-leader of Reagrupament, but he has decided to set up his own party, Democràcia Catalana, as a vehicle by which to become President of Catalunya. Of course it is not out of the question for the two groups to form an alliance for the election.

Against that melting pot of possibilities, the thing that matters more than anything is public opinion. I pointed to a poll that showed 51% in favour of independence last December but didn't get round to mentioning the another poll conducted for El Periodico. But it just so happens that they have done a follow up poll and the results of both are:
 

     If an official referendum on independence for Catalonia was held,
      would you vote for or against?

     
 

     Parliament has accepted an initiative to hold an official referendum on
      independence. Do you think it appropriate to hold it at the moment?

     
 

     Do you think he the necessary signatures (25,000) will be collected
      to progress it?

     
 

     If the signatures are obtained, do you think that the Catalan Parliament
      would approve holding the referendum?

     
 

     Do you think the Spanish government would allow this referendum to
      be held?

     
 

Apart from the headline figure showing a margin of 48.1% to 35.3% in favour of independence, what seems most interesting to me is the breakdown by political party. Of course supporters of ERC are solidly in favour of independence, and those of the PP and Cs are solidly against; but the other parties are more interesting.

-

The majority of CiU supporters, by a margin of almost 2:1, are in favour of independence (and the same was true in the breakdowns for last December). Now CiU has always been a Catalan nationalist party, but in favour of greater autonomy for Catalunya in Spain rather than independence. So the choices for the CiU leadership are stark, for no political party can stand against something that most of its supporters want. If CiU now shifted its policy to one of pro-independence, the chance of independence would grow dramatically because they are the biggest party in Catalunya, even though kept out of government by a coalition of the three left leaning parties. If it doesn't shift its policy, there is every chance that voters could shift from CiU to either Reagrupament or to Laporta's new party, which would position themselves on the centre right so as to catch those votes, knowing that left-leaning independence supporters would vote ERC.

It's a choice that CiU would much rather not have to make. So it is concentrating its effort, along with the PSC, on trying to get the Constitution of Spain changed so that there is no contradiction between it and the 2006 SoA. My opinion is that it's worth giving it a go for the sake of due process (and the ERC and ICV will join them in that) but that it won't happen. That's largely because public opinion in Spain has developed a markedly anti-Catalan streak, as I mentioned in this post.

-

Of the parties of the left, opinion among ICV supporters is fairly evenly divided, but with a very high percentage of don't knows. However that probably doesn't matter too much one way or the other for a party with less than 10% support. The PSC, on the other hand, has 27% support. Its problem is working out its relationship with its sister party in Spain, the PSOE. The situation is rather like that between Wales and Scotland and the UK. The PSOE needs PSC support to form a government in Madrid in just the same way as Labour needs its Welsh and Scottish MPs to have any chance of forming a government in Westminster.

So the chances of the PSC leadership agreeing to independence for Catalunya are very small, even though more than a third of their supporters want it.

-

The final factor is that the next Catalan elections will be held in September this year. Things are very fluid, and I'm finding it hard to pick up on all the nuances of what is happening.
 

     

 
Well, that's the background as I see it. And even though things are complicated, you wouldn't want me not to make some predictions ... so here goes.

The referendum initiative will get 25,000 votes without any trouble. The PSC and CiU will try and do nothing about it until after the elections because they want people to vote primarily along the left/right lines for which they are the biggest parties respectively. Therefore the name of the game for those who want independence is to make independence a greater issue than the normal left/right divide of everyday politics. If ERC, Reagrupament and Laporta can make this the burning issue of the summer, UiC will be under great pressure to decide whether to take a pro-independence stance for fear of losing votes if they don't. The size of the demonstration last weekend suggests it will be, but the UiC are doing very well in recent polls (over 40%) and may well think that they don't need to change anything.

I predict that UiC will commit themselves to holding a referendum. That's easy, but the big question is what position they will take when (for there's no question of it being an if) Spain refuses to let it go ahead, as they did with the Ibarretxe referendum in Euskadi in 2008. They not commit themselves, and that will lose them votes to Reagrupament and Laporta if independence can be made the main issue of the election.

Even though I would be disappointed to see them fall short, ERC, Reagrupament and Laporta will only get about 40% of the seats in the new Parliament. Because of CiU's previous commitment to a referendum it will be voted though in Parliament, but will be blocked by Spain. However neither CiU nor the PSC will be able to form a government that is not dependent on pro-independence parties of some political hue, and CiU deputies will not feel able to vote for a UDI because they were not elected on that mandate. So new elections will be necessary in Spring 2011. This time there will be nothing for the CiU to be ambiguous about, and they will have to adopt a pro-independence stance because all other avenues will be closed. The majority in the new Parliament will have been elected on a pro-independence mandate and will declare UDI, with a confirmatory referendum to be held within a few months.

It will be won.

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Catalunya's continuing journey to independence

I've been meaning to write something on the situation in Catalunya for some time, but the longer I left it, the more "out of the news" it became, to the point where I'd have to explain things over again. However, the massive demonstration on 10 July in support of Catalunya's right to decide its own future has brought the political situation in Catalunya back into the spotlight.
 

     

 
The demonstration was sparked by the decision of the Spanish Constitutional Tribunal (TC) to declare that some of the articles in Catalunya's Statute of Autonomy are unconstitutional. The Statute was passed in 2006 to replace the earlier version of 1979, passed as part of Spain's transition to democracy after the death of Franco in 1975. It was presented by the Catalan Parliament with support from all parties except the Partido Popular, then passed by the Spanish Parliament after amendment by them, then finally ratified by a referendum. Although the vote in favour was high (73.2% to 20.6% in favour) the turnout was 48.9% ... which either reflected the degree to which it had been watered down or showed that Catalans were not very interested in their constitutional position, depending on one's political standpoint.

The Statute had been challenged by the Partido Popular in the Constitutional Tribunal on matters relating to Catalunya's autonomy, and by surrounding autonomous communities on other matters particularly to do with finance. Although the "headline issue" was whether Catalans were allowed to consider themselves a nation or not, the ruling had many other facets, including:

•  the right of the Catalan Government to have a bilateral relation with the Spanish Government •  the obligation to know Catalan language in order to work in the public sector •  the Catalan Supreme Court of Justice as the highest court for certain kinds of laws •  minimum levels of infrastructure investment and limit on the degree of fiscal equalization

Some of these rulings are inconsistent in that, for example: the bilateral relations are essentially similar to those enjoyed by Euskadi and Navarre and the proposed Justice Council of Catalonia is modelled on what other communities such as Andalusia already have. The fiscal provisions were intended to limit the amount that could be transferred from Catalunya to the remainder of Spain (it is the richest area in Spain second only to Euskadi) and to guarantee a minimum share of infrastructure investment, following the German model. These details are taken from this article, which is the most complete account of the ruling I have been able to find.
 

     

 
For information, it's probably worthwhile to look at the political parties in Catalunya, what they stand for, and their level of support. Ranked in terms of their vote in the 2006 election to the Catalan Parliament they are:

•  CiU - Convergència i Unió ... centre-right, pro-autonomy (31.5%)
•  PSC - Partit dels Socialistes de Catalunya ... centre left (26.8%)
•  ERC - Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya ... left, pro-independence (14.0%)
•  PP - Partido Popular ... right, anti-autonomy, pro-Spain (10.7%)
•  ICV - Iniciativa per Catalunya Verds ... coalition of left parties and the Greens (9.5%)
•  Cs - Ciutadans ... left, anti-autonomy, pro-Spain (3.0%)

The current Catalan government is made up of a broad left alliance between the PSC, ERC and ICV. This coalition was formed after the 2004 election, and the ERC's participation in government was at the price of securing the new Statute of Autonomy with a PSC that had always been lukewarm about it before. Negotiations between Barcelona and Madrid were also helped by the fact that the socialist Zapatero had just become First Minister of Spain. Obviously CiU also wanted a stronger SoA, meaning that it had more than 80% support in the Catalan Parliament.

Now that several articles of the SoA have been struck down or amended, those same four parties formed the backbone of the demonstration on Saturday, along with a host of civic leaders and other prominent members of Catalan society. The principles that united them were that any constitutional question mark over the new SoA should have been sorted out when the it was being considered by the Catalan and Spanish Parliaments, and certainly before being approved in a referendum; and that it was up to the people of Catalunya to decide their constitutional future, not the Spanish State.

In all probability the march was organized on the basis that it is for the people of Catalunya to decide their future, and not to have something they have already approved retrospectively amended. However it was probably a surprise to some of the organizers that there were so many pro-independence banners in the crowd. It wasn't organized as a pro-independence march ... but that is definitely what it turned out to be. So it is worth considering why the public mood in Catalunya has shifted from respect for the enhanced autonomy the Catalans thought they had to independence. Up until now, the only pro-independence party has been the ERC. They are the party that Plaid and the SNP work with in the European Parliament as part of the EFA.
 

     

 
The current rise of support for independence probably springs from the series of non-official independence referendums that started with the one in Arenys de Munt in September. There was a second round in December. Both these resulted in over 90% support for independence from those who voted, making turnout the critical factor. In the second round the turnout was 27.3%, which would have been enough to secure a victory if the turnout had been about 52.4%. And if anyone thinks I was being over-clever with my maths, it was gratifying to see Artur Mas, leader of the CiU, echo what I had said. But subsequent rounds of voting have been more disappointing for those wanting independence, with the turnout falling to 20.2% in April and most recent round having a turnout of 13.7%.

There are two ways of viewing this. For unionists, it is a demonstration that support for independence is low, particularly in the more urban areas. However it should be noted that these referendums have been organized unofficially by volunteers without any the use of any official resources, most notably in terms of information and publicity. One useful parallel would be to compare these turnouts with the turnout for an official referendum and, as luck would have it, there was one of these in Barcelona in May this year on the future of the Avinguda Diagonal, one of Barcelona's main thoroughfares. Despite all the publicity events the use of official facilities and a budget of over €3m, the turnout in that referendum was only 12%.

But even so, there was a general sense of disappointment, that the independence referendums had not resulted in a higher turnout. However a new possibility has opened up, because it is now possible to organize official referendums on citizens' initiatives if they can collect 25,000 signatures. The Catalan government has allowed the initiative to go ahead, and signatures are being collected. There seems little doubt in my mind that the required number of signatures will be gathered, but what happens after that is more problematic. A similar referendum in Euskadi in 2008 was banned by the Spanish State.
 

     

The third development is that two more pro-independence groups have recently been formed. The first, Reagrupament, set itself up with the specific aim of either electing enough deputies to the Catalan Parliament on pro-independence mandate—either under its own name or by getting other parties to adopt that specific policy platform—to declare independence. The thinking behind this is that the Spanish won't let Catalans vote in a referendum, therefore declaring unilateral independence allows them to set a referendum up without Spanish interference. Other countries, as well as the EU and UN, would be almost certain to recognize that independence if it was confirmed in a properly held referendum, and the Spanish would not dare to take control by military force.

For some time there was speculation that Joan Laporta (the former chairman of Barcelona FC and unambiguously pro-independence) would join or even become co-leader of Reagrupament, but he has decided to set up his own party, Democràcia Catalana, as a vehicle by which to become President of Catalunya. Of course it is not out of the question for the two groups to form an alliance for the election.
 

     

 
Against that melting pot of possibilities, the thing that matters most is public opinion. I pointed to a poll that showed 51% in favour of independence last December but didn't get round to mentioning the another poll conducted for El Periodico. But it just so happens that they have done a follow up poll and the results of both are:
 

     If an official referendum on independence for Catalonia was held,
     would you vote for or against?

     
 

     Parliament has accepted an initiative to hold an official referendum on
     independence. Do you think it appropriate to hold it at the moment?

     
 

     Do you think he the necessary signatures (25,000) will be collected
     to progress it?

     
 

     If the signatures are obtained, do you think that the Catalan Parliament
     would approve holding the referendum?

     
 

     Do you think the Spanish government would allow this referendum to
     be held?

     
 

Apart from the headline figure showing a margin of 48.1% to 35.3% in favour of independence, what seems most interesting to me is the breakdown by political party. Of course supporters of ERC are solidly in favour of independence, and those of the PP and Cs are solidly against; but the other parties are more interesting.

The majority of CiU supporters, by a margin of almost 2:1, are in favour of independence (and the same was true in the breakdowns for last December). Now CiU has always been a Catalan nationalist party, but in favour of greater autonomy for Catalunya in Spain rather than independence. So the choices for the CiU leadership are stark, for no political party can stand against something that most of its supporters want. If CiU now shifted its policy to one of pro-independence, the chance of independence would grow dramatically because they are the biggest party in Catalunya, even though kept out of government by a coalition of the three left leaning parties. If it doesn't shift its policy, there is every chance that voters could shift from CiU to either Reagrupament or to Laporta's new party, which would position themselves on the centre right so as to catch those votes, knowing that left-leaning independence supporters would vote ERC.

It's a choice that CiU would much rather not have to make. So it is concentrating its effort, along with the PSC, on trying to get the Constitution of Spain changed so that there is no contradiction between it and the 2006 SoA. My opinion is that it's worth giving it a go for the sake of due process (and the ERC and ICV will join them in that) but that it won't happen. That's largely because public opinion in Spain has developed a markedly anti-Catalan streak, as I mentioned in this post.

-

Of the parties of the left, opinion among ICV supporters is fairly evenly divided, but with a very high percentage of don't knows. However that probably doesn't matter too much one way or the other for a party with less than 10% support. The PSC, on the other hand, has 27% support. Its problem is working out its relationship with its sister party in Spain, the PSOE. The situation is rather like that between Wales and Scotland and the UK. The PSOE needs PSC support to form a government in Madrid in just the same way as Labour needs its Welsh and Scottish MPs to have any chance of forming a government in Westminster.

So the chances of the PSC leadership agreeing to independence for Catalunya are very small, even though more than a third of their supporters want it.

-

The final factor is that the next Catalan elections will be held in September this year. Things are very fluid, and I'm finding it hard to pick up on all the nuances of what is happening.
 

     

 
Well, that's the background as I see it. And even though things are complicated, you wouldn't want me not to make some predictions ... so here goes.

The referendum initiative will get 25,000 votes without any trouble. The PSC and CiU will try and do nothing about it until after the elections because they want people to vote primarily along the left/right lines for which they are the biggest parties respectively. Therefore the name of the game for those who want independence is to make independence a greater issue than the normal left/right divide of everyday politics. If ERC, Reagrupament and Laporta can make this the burning issue of the summer, UiC will be under great pressure to decide whether to take a pro-independence stance for fear of losing votes if they don't. The size of the demonstration last weekend suggests it will be.

I predict that UiC will commit themselves to holding a referendum. But the big question is what position they will take when (for there's no question of it being an if) Spain refuses to let it go ahead, as they did with the Ibarretxe referendum in Euskadi in 2008. They will fudge the issue. That will lose them votes to Reagrupament and Laporta.

Even though I would be disappointed to see them fall short, ERC, Reagrupament and Laporta will only get about 40% of the seats in the new Parliament, and Laporta will be elected President. Because of CiU's previous commitment to a referendum, it will be voted though but will be blocked by Spain. However neither CiU nor the PSC will be able to form a government that is not dependent on pro-independence parties, and CiU deputies will not feel able to vote for a UDI because they were not elected on that mandate and would be split on the issue anyway. So new elections will be necessary in Spring 2011. This time there will be nothing for the CiU to be ambiguous about, and they will either choose to adopt a pro-independence stance or be reduced to a rump. The majority in the new Parliament will have been elected on a pro-independence mandate and will declare UDI, with a confirmatory referendum to be held within six months.

It will be won.

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Catalunya

Catalunya

I've been meaning to write something on the situation in Catalunya for some time, but the longer I left it, the more "out of the news" it became, to the point where I'd have to explain things over again. However, the massive demonstration on 10 July in support of Catalunya's right to decide its own future has brought the political situation in Catalunya back into the spotlight.

Picture of demo

That demonstration was sparked by the decision of the Spanish Constititional Tribunal (TC) to declare that some of the articles in Catalunya's Statute of Autonomy are unconstitutional. The Statute was passed in 2006 to replace the earlier version of 1979, passed as part of Spain's transition to democracy after the death of Franco in 1975. It was presented by the Catalan Parliament with support from all parties except the Partido Popular, then passed by the Spanish Parliament after amendment by them, then finally ratified by a referendum. Although the vote in favour was high (73.2% to 20.6% in favour) the turnout was 48.9% ... which either reflected the degree to which it had been watered down or showed that Catalans were not very interested in their constitutional position, depending on one's political standpoint.

The Statute had been challenged by the Partido Popular in the Constititional Tribunal on matters relating to Catalunya's autonomy, and by surrounding autonomous communities on other matters particularly to do with finance. Although the "headline issue" was whether Catalans were allowed to consider themselves a nation or not, the ruling had numerous practical consequences:

At this stage it might be worthwhile to look at the political parties in Catalunya, what they stand for, and their level of support. Ranked in terms of their vote in the 2006 election to the Catalan Parliament they are:

•  CiU - Convergència i Unió ... centre-right, pro-autonomy (31.5%) •  PSC - Partit dels Socialistes de Catalunya ... centre left (26.8%) •  ERC - Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya ... left, pro-independence (14.0%) •  PP - Partido Popular ... right, anti-autonomy, pro-Spain (10.7%) •  ICV - Iniciativa per Catalunya Verds ... coalition of left parties and the Greens (9.5%) •  Cs - Ciutadans ... left, anti-autonomy, pro-Spain (3.0%)

The current Catalan government is made up of a broad left alliance between the PSC, ERC and ICV. This coalition was formed after the 2004 election, and the ERC's participation in government was at the price of securing the new Statute of Autonomy with a PSC that had always been lukewarm about it before. Obviously the CiU also wanted a stronger SoA, meaning that it had more than 80% support in the Catalan Parliament.

Now that several articles of the SoA have been struck down or amended, those same four parties formed thae backbone of the demonstration on Saturday, along with a host of civic leaders and other prominent members of Catalan society. The principles that united them were that any constitutional question mark over the new SoA should have been sorted out when the it was being considered by the Catalan and Spanish Parliaments, and certainly before being approved in a referendum; and that it was up to the people of Catalunya to decide their constitutional futurem, not the Spanish State.

In all probability the march was organized on the basis that it is for the people of Catalunya to decide their future, and not to have something they have already approved retrospectively amended. However it was probably a surprise to some of the organizers that there were so many pro-independence banners in the crowd. It wasn't organized as a pro-independence march ... but that is definitely what it turned out to be. So it is worth considering why the public mood in Catalunya has shifted from respect for the enhanced autonomy the Catalans thought they had to independence. Up until now, the only pro-independence party has been the ERC. They are the party that Plaid and the SNP work with in the European Parliament as part of the EFA.
 

     

 
The current rise of support for independence probably springs from the series of non-official independence referendums that started with the one in Arenys de Munt in September. There was a second round in December. Both these resulted in over 90% support for independence from those who voted, making turnout the critical factor. In the second round the turnout was 27.3%, which would have been enough to secure a victory if the turnout had been about 52.4%. And if anyone thinks I was being over-clever with my maths, it was gratifying to see Artur Mas, leader of the CiU, echo what I had said. But subsequent rounds of voting have been more disappointing for those wanting independence, with the turnout falling to 20.2% in April and most recent round having a turnout of 13.7%.

There are two ways of viewing this. For unionists, it is a demonstration that support for independence is low, particularly in the more urban areas. However it should be noted that these referenda have been organized unofficially by volunteers without any the use of any official resources, most notably in terms of information and publicity. One useful parallel would be to compare these turnouts with the turnout for an official referendum and, as luck would have it, there was one of these in Barcelona in May this year on the future of the Avinguda Diagonal, one of Barcelona's main throughfares. Despite all the publicity events the use of official facilities and a budget of ----------, the turnout in that referendum was only 12%.

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But even so, there was a general sense of disappointment, that the indepndence referenda had not resulted in a higher turnout. However a new possibility has opened up, because it is now possible to organize official referendums on citizens' initiatives if they can collect 25,000 signatures. The Cataln government has allowed the initiative to go aherad, and signatures are being collected. There seems little doubt in my mind that the required number of signatures will be gathered, but what happens after that is more problematic. A similar referendum in Euskadi in 2008 was banned by the Spanish State.
 

     

 
The third development is that two more pro-independence groups have recently been formed. The first, Reagrupament, set itself up with the specific aim of either electing enough MPs to the Catalan Parliament on pro-independence mandate—either under its own name or by getting other parties to adopt that specific policy platform—to declare independence. The thinking behind this is that the Spanish won't let Catalans vote in a referendum, therefore declaring unilateral independence allows them to set a referendum up without Spanish interference. Other countries, as well as the EU and UN, would be almost certain to recognize that independence if it was confirmed in a properly held referendum, and the Spanish would not dare to take control by military force.

For some time there was speculation that Joan Laporta (the former chairman of Barcelona FC and unambiguously pro-independence) would join or even become co-leader of Reagrupament, but he has decided to set up his own party, Democràcia Catalana, as a vehicle by which to become President of Catalunya. Of course it is not out of the question for the two groups to form an alliance for the election.
 

     

 
Against that melting pot of possibilities, the thing that matters most is public opinion. I pointed to a poll that showed 51% in favour of independence last December but didn't get round to mentioning the another poll conducted for El Periodico. But it just so happens that they have done a follow up poll and the results of both are here:

     If an official referendum on independence for Catalonia was held, would you vote for or against?

     

     Parliament has accepted an initiative to hold an official referendum on independence. Do you think it appropriate to hold it at the moment?

     

     Do you think he the necessary 25,000 signatures will be collected to progress it?

     

     If the signatures are obtained, do you think that the Catalan Parliament would approve holding the referendum?

     

     Do you think the Spanish government would allow this referendum to be held?

     

Apart from the headline figure of a margin of 48.1% to 35.3% in favour of independence, what seems most interesting to me is the breakdown by political party. Of course supporters of ERC are solidly in favour of independence, and those of the PP and Cs are solidly against; but the other parties are more interesting.

The majority of CiU supporters, by a margin of almost 2:1, are in favour of independence (and the same was true in the breakdowns for last December). Now the CiU has always been a Catalan nationalist party, but in favour of greater autonomy for Catalunya in Spain rather than independence. So the choices for the CiU leadership are stark, for no political party can stand against something that most of its supporters want. If CiU now shifted its policy to one of pro-independence, the chance of independence would grow dramatically because they are the biggest party in Catalunya, even though kept out of government by a coalition of the three left leaning parties. If it doesn't shift its policy, there is every chance that voters could shift from CiU to either Reagrupament or to Laporta's new party, which would position themselves so as to catch those votes.

It's a choice that CiU would much rather not have to make. So it is concentrating its effort, along with the PSC, on trying to get the Constitution of Spain changed so that there is no contradiction between it and the 2006 SoA. My opinion is that it's worth giving it a go (and the ERC and ICV will join them in that) but that it won't happen. That's largely because public opinion in Spain has developed a markedly anti-Catalan streak, as I mentioned here.

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Of the parties of the left, opinion among ICV supporters is fairly evenly divided, but with a very high percentage of don't knows. However that probably doesn't matter too much one way or the other for a party with less than 10% support. The PSC, on the other hand, has 27% support. Its problem is working out its relationship with its sister party in Spain, the PSOE. The situation is rather like that between Wales and Scotland and the UK. Labour needs its Welsh and Scottish MPs to have any chance of forming a government in Westminster, in just the same way as the PSOE needs PSC support to form a government in Madrid.

So the chances of the PSC leadership agreeing to independence for Catalunya are very small, even though more than a third of their supporters want it.

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The final factor is that the next Catalan elections will be held in September this year. Things are very fluid, and I'm finding it hard to pick up on all the nuances of what is happening.
 

     

 
Well, that's the background. And even though things are complicated, you wouldn't want me not to make some predictions.

The referendum initiative will get 25,000 votes without any trouble. The PSC and CiU will try and do nothing about it until after the elections because they want people to vote primarily along the left/right lines for which they are the biggest parties respectively. So the name of the game for those who want independence is to make independence a greater issue than the normal left/right divide of everyday politics. If ERC, Reagrupament and Laporta can make this the burning issue of the summer, UiC will be under great pressure to decide whether to take a pro-independence stance for fear of losing votes if they don't.

I predict that they will commit themselves to holding a referendum. But the big question is what position they will take when (for there's no question of it being an if) Spain refuses to let it go ahead, as they did with the -------------------------. They will fudge the issue. That will lose them votes to Reagrupament and Laporta.

Even though I would be disappointed to see them fall short, ERC, Reagrupament and Laporta will only get about 40% of the seats in the new Parliament, and Laporta will be elected president. Because of CiU's previous commitment to a referendum, it will be voted though but will be blocked by Spain. However neither CiU nor the PSC will be able to form a government that is not dependent on pro-independence parties, and CiU deputies will not feel able to vote for a UDI because they were not elected on that mandate and would be split on the issue anyway. So new elections will be necessary. This time there will be nothing for the CiU to be ambiguous about, and they will either choose to adopt a pro-independence stance or be reduced to a rump. The majority in the new Parliament will have been elected on a pro-independence mandate and will declare UDI, with a confirmatory referendum to be held within six months.

It will be won.

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I agree with pretty much everything Leigh said, particularly that we mustn't be complacent. But I think the way we fight is going to have to reflect the fact that there isn't any serious opposition. We have to move from trying to persuade (there isn't really an agrument to win, because there isn't any opposition) to trying to reassure. It's a bit like the way "big brands" do advertising. They're not primarily trying to win customers, they're more trying to show that they are looking after the customers they've got. I think the biggest problem will be that it will become so obvious that we'll get a Yes vote, that people don't turn out because there's no need for them to. We'll get a 67% to 33% vote, but on a low turnout of less than 50%. - ED. No it wouldn't ... at least not according to what Clegg said yesterday. I agree that it would seem logical to hold the constituency vote for Wales and Scotland on AV rather than FPTP as well, but it would complicate things ... for there are bound to be some people who would want that as a way of getting rid of the regional lists. The real prize would be to get STV for the Senedd (and Holyrood) and the precedent is that Stormont is already elected by STV. I think there is a real chance of getting that now, and therefore I fear that changing the current system a little bit will preclude the bigger change we really want. It would be a tricky balance between principle and pragmatism. The Labour Party want to keep FPTP in Wales, because it gives them such a huge advantage. Therefore we will not get any change unless it is imposed on us by Westminster. I think it is inevitable that we will get a new Government of Wales Act within a few years, which will give us some borrowing and tax-setting powers rather than for us to continue to rely totally on the block grant. We would have to change the current Act anyway because of fewer Westminster MPs, and look again at the total number of AMs. So I'd expect a GoWA 2012, 2013 or 2014 to be in place in time for the 2015 election. If we're lucky, it will be elected by STV. Failing that, it would be AV for the constituencies (assuming this AV referendum is successful, which looks likely from this poll) but with a larger proportion of regional seats. If any part of the House of Lords is elected, it will probably be on STV as well. - CoP. Yes, that's what I've been saying for the past few years. Labour were not in favour of primary lawmaking powers while they were in control at Westminster, because it gave them a "double lock" on what the Assembly could do. As soon as they realized that they would lose control at Westminster, they switched to being in favour of primary lawmaking powers. It was only ever a question of waiting for the right moment.
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Sarchasm

The gulf between sarcasm and the person who doesn't get it. jackcake
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