“That”, said Rhodri, “is what a mass movement in support of an
independence referendum ought to look like.” In comparison, we in Wales can only dream of
the time when we might have mass support for the concept of independence along
with a political movement committed to achieving it.
I suspect that
part of what makes the Catalan movement so strong is precisely the way that they been
told that they 'cannot' have independence.
The establishment in the UK (in modern times, at least) has never been so blunt and
obstinate in its refusal – tolerance is sometimes more effective than
oppression.
In the
mid-1970s I was the Plaid Cymru guest speaker at an SNP rally. One of my fellow speakers was Jordi Pujol
(who later became president of the Generalitat of Catalunya, a post he held for
23 years). At the time, he wasn’t
arguing for independence. Not
necessarily because he didn’t want to, but because it was a crime against the
state in Franco’s Spain to even put the case, and he had served a couple of
years in prison already for his political activity. He argued instead for much more autonomy
within a federal state.
With the
dawning of a more democratic Spain, people have been freer and more confident
in putting the arguments; arbitrary imprisonment is no longer something that
they have to fear. But one major remnant
of the Franco regime remains, in this context – the legal fiction that
independence is impossible because the constitution forbids it.
Laws, processes,
and even constitutions put in place by people can survive only as long as the
people allow them to. The Spanish
central authorities will, no doubt, continue to say “no”; but faced with a
movement for independence which can mobilise 1½ million people – 20% of the
entire population – in a single demonstration, they’ll need a better argument
than the wording of the constitution.
2 comments:
Exactly John. The style and tone of the local nationalism is shaped by the attitude of the "parent" or imperial state and how it behaves.
In the UK there have been concessions, no written constitutional rules.
In Spain there has been dictatorship. Admittedly that gave way to significant local autonomy (more than Wales or Scotland have) for some parts of the Spanish state, but the experience under Franco bolstered the resolve of Catalonia and the Basque Country particularly.
Another factor plays in. Economy. Catalonia, the Basque Country and to an extent Scotland have a strong economic case. Wales is more like Galicia where the economic case is not as defensible. But there is nothing inevitable about that.
The only thing stopping independence in Wales is the people of Wales.
I'm pretty sure the people of England would be happy to unshackle themselves of a most ungrateful bunch of spongers.
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