In a brief press conference, Puigdemont celebrated what he
considered as a “change in tone” coming from the Spanish government.
According to him, the offer to present the referendum plans in Congress
is a recognition by the Spanish executive of the possibility of such a
vote happening. Puigdemont pointed out that his government will
“formally” send a referendum proposal to Madrid. On Monday, the document
will be presented during a conference by Puigdemont, Vice President,
Oriol Junqueras, and Foreign Affairs Minister, Raül Romeva, in the
Spanish capital. The Catalan President explained that the proposal is
based on the ideas of the National Pact for the Referendum, which got
“hundreds of thousands” of supports, as well as on the mandate of the
Catalan parliamentary majority.
The Catalan Vice President, Oriol Junqueras, said that the Catalans’
right to self-determination is “inalienable” and urged Madrid to
negotiate. “We want to invite the Spanish Government to our conference
again on Monday and urge it to withdraw all judicial complaints against
the Bureau of the Catalan Parliament for allowing a debate and a vote
about the same issue that the Spanish Council of Ministers discussed
today in its meeting,” he stressed.
Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría, the Spanish Vice President, admitted in a
previous press conference that the Council of Ministers had debated a
report that stressed that the Catalan President should present his
referendum plans to Congress and not in a conference in the Madrid Town
Hall, as it is now planned.