President Puigdemont started his talk by reminding the audience of the “historic results” of the 27-S Catalan Elections. “On
27 September, the people of Catalonia expressed their views through the
ballot boxes, voting massively with a turnout of 74.9%, the highest
ever in the history of elections for the Parliament of Catalonia”, he
emphasised. “A majority of Catalans adopted a position in favour of
independence, of embarking on their own way forward, to uphold who we
are but, above all, to progress and to enjoy greater wellbeing”.
Therefore, the Catalan government enjoys “majority support to instigate a
process towards independence”, assured Puigdemont but admitted that “to
get there” a “larger majority” is needed. “This is a task that needs to
be addressed over the coming period”.
“We stood in the elections with the promise of completing the step
towards independence within approximately 18 months”, explained
Puigdemont. During this time, the government’s commitment is “to prepare
and have the state structures available that do not currently exist”
and which are “necessary” for Catalonia “to operate as an independent
state”. “Once this process has been completed, it will once again be the
turn of our citizens, who will need to decide at the ballot box whether
they want to choose a new constituent parliament and move towards a
definitive proclamation of independence”, he stated and nuanced that the
Catalan government “will not take this definitive step without
democratic validation”.
“Europe will not let Catalonia go”
After the talk some of the attendants addressed questions to
President Puigdemont, most of them regarding the Spanish government’s
attitude towards the process and its refusal to negotiate. “We would
like to do it in the Scottish way” insisted Puigdemont “but to be like
Scotland, Spain should act like the UK and this is not likely to
happen”, he lamented. In this vein, he emphasised that Catalonia’s
priority is “to reach an agreement” and conduct this process “with as
much as consensus as possible”. However, “to agree a democratic
consultation there must be someone at the other end of the table”.
Regarding the fitting of a potential Catalan state within the EU,
Puigdemont said that he is convinced that “Europe will show its big
ability to adapt” and “won’t let Catalonia go”, bearing in mind that “it
represents 2% of the European GBP, has a strong potential in terms of
entrepreneurship, knowledge and the a strong brand which is Barcelona”.
Moreover, Puigdemont assured that an independent Catalonia will
“fitwithin the context of the free and democratic nations in the world”
and to ensure this, the Catalan government “will adopt the 3,363
international treaties which Spain has signed in order to know how the
Catalan state will be able to relate to the rest of the world”.
Willingness to negotiate a referendum with Spain
Puigdemont assured that the Catalan government will “follow with much
interest” the upcoming movements to form a new government in Spain. “Of
course we will be willing to negotiate a referendum”, he answered in
response to a journalist’s question “but we will not lead such a demand,
because we have already done it, so many times: we asked that from the
Spanish Parliament, and they said ‘no’, we asked for that from the
Spanish President, Mariano Rajoy, and the answer was, again, ‘no’”, he
lamented. However, he assured that the Catalan government will be “the
last to give up on negotiating”.
Much more than an economic movement
“Catalonia’s push for independence is not an economic movement”, he
stressed. “We want to contribute to the development of the poorest
regions in Spain but we want to do so in an equitable way” as
“Catalonia’s loss of economic resources which never return to Catalonia
is absolutely unfair”, he stated. “It is unfair that we don’t have
enough money to attend the needs of the most vulnerable considering that
we are a rich region which contributes to the funding of
infrastructures in Spain which are useless and loss-making”, he
lamented. “To cape it all, we suffer constant aggression toward our
culture and language and repeated unfulfilment of economic commitments
and planned infrastructures for Catalonia”, he concluded.