lunes, 3 de octubre de 2016

CATALONIA -- Catalan News Agency - Catalan Socialist Party heavyweights maintain their 'no’ to Rajoy’s investiture

Catalan News Agency - Catalan Socialist Party heavyweights maintain their 'no’ to Rajoy’s investiture

 

Catalan Socialist Party heavyweights maintain their 'no’ to Rajoy’s investiture


CNA / Sara Prim


Barcelona (CNA).- The Catalan Socialist Party
(PSC) insisted on their refusal to facilitate current Spanish
President, Mariano Rajoy
s investiture.
We can
t betray our principles
, stated this Monday one of the candidates to lead PSC in the upcoming primary elections, N
ú
ria Parlon, who stated that allowing Rajoy to form government would have
irreversible consequences
for the Catalan Socialists. In a similar vein, PSC
s leader in the Parliament considered it
a mistake
for Spanish Socialist
leader, Pedro S
á
nchez, to step down, which he did on Saturday after a week of turmoil within the PSOE. S
á
nchez,
who had fought to retain leadership of the PSOE since a coup against
him erupted last week, aimed to keep his position by holding a
leadership contest in three weeks
time. His proposal was rejected by 132 votes to 107 at the end of an 11-hour session which showed a deeply divided party.




PSC’s candidate to lead the party in the upcoming
primary elections and Mayor of Santa Coloma de Gramanet (one of the
biggest cities in Catalonia), Núria Parlon warned that PSOE abstention
in the vote to instate Rajoy as Spanish President would “legitimate a
fraud”. According to Parlón, the PSOE “would blow up their 137 years of
history” by facilitating a PP government in Spain.  Thus, she insisted
this Monday in an interview with Catalan radio RAC1 that PSC “will break
the discipline of vote” in the Spanish Parliament “and say ‘no’ to
Rajoy’s investiture”. “We want to be a party federated to PSOE, we want
to help as much as we can to solve the Socialists’ crisis, but we will
take this crisis as a opportunity to relaunch the PSC in Catalonia”, she
added.  However, she bid for revising the relationship between PSOE and
PSC, so that the latter could “recoup autonomy and sovereignty”. In the
last Catalan elections, which took place on the 27th of September 2015,
the PSC lost almost half of its seats and got 11 MPs, one of its worst
results ever.

The PSC’s leader in the Parliament, Miquel Iceta,
considered the PSOE’s decision to reject Sánchez's proposal to hold a
leadership contest and force him to step down “a mistake”. “Such an
important question should have been put to vote amongst the members”, he
stated after attending the executive committee’s meeting. “I think it
was a mistake and it will have undesirable consequences for the party”,
he added. According to Iceta, “the main reason behind the PSC’s support
for Pedro Sánchez” was his intention “to form an alternative government
to that of the PP”. An option which given the current situation “has
been dismissed”.

In a similar vein, Barcelona’s deputy mayor and PSC
member, Jaume Collboni, insisted that “PSC will keep their ‘no’ to Rajoy
until the end”. Collboni emphasised that the party’s “commitment to the
citizens’ mandate” means offering “an alternative government to that of
the Conservative People’s Party (PP)” since they are “the main party in
the opposition in the Spanish Parliament”.

PSOE crisis clears the way for Rajoys investiture

Some of the main representatives of PSC have clarified
the party’s position after a week of turmoil within the PSOE. On
Wednesday, half of the executive committee resigned in order to try to
force out the Spanish Socialists’ leader Pedro Sánchez and on Saturday,
after a long meeting of the party’s executive committee, Sánchez
admitted defeat and stepped down. His proposal to hold a leadership
contest in three weeks’ time was eventually rejected by 132 votes to 107
and soon after the party was put in the hands of a caretaker leadership
until a new secretary-general is appointed.

The PSOE crisis showed that the party is divided over
Rajoy’s investiture. The party’s former leader Felipe González accused
him of “lying” since he failed to facilitate Rajoy’s investiture in the
second debate. Susana Díaz, the leader of the PSOE in Andalucía and the
candidate most frequently touted as Sánchez’s successor, also insisted
that the needs of the country had to come before the needs of the party.

Sánchez had consistently argued that the party would not
do anything to support or facilitate the return to government of the
PP.  “My parents taught me that the most important thing is keeping your
word”, Sánchez said. “That was my word, which I gave to all the members
and to the federal committee, too, when it came to the party’s position
on Rajoy’s investiture process”, he added.











  • foto_3129935

Núria Parlon, Santa Coloma de Gramenet's Mayor and PSC's candidate to lead the party in Catalonia (by ACN)