There
are always dangers in ‘reading across’ from one situation to another; all
countries have their own political traditions and experiences and those shape
events and attitudes. With that caveat,
there are also similarities and parallels at times.
The
PSOE in Spain occupies a similar part of the political spectrum as does the
British Labour Party, and the two parties are part of the same grouping in the
European Parliament. The response of the
PSOE to the situation in Catalunya has been to give its full support to the
conservative government in its response to the referendum and any declaration
of independence. It argues for that
position on the basis of upholding the Spanish constitution, and it is as
absolutely committed to the unity of the Spanish state as the conservative
government.
It
isn’t a question of ‘left’ vs ‘right’, although historically the ‘left’ and the
independentistas in Catalunya found
themselves on the same side during the Civil War. With the benefit of hindsight, and looking at
the stance of the ‘left’ today, that almost seems to be more by accident than
by design; having a common enemy to fight against doesn’t mean agreement on what
should follow the defeat of that enemy.
Although
the Catalan government is led by a broadly ‘centrist’ party, the more centrist independentistas in Catalunya were
pushed into holding the referendum by the more ‘left-wing’ parties in the
coalition there, but PSOE nevertheless prefer to side with the PP (Conservative)
government rather than support a more leftist vision for Catalunya, even though
many would argue that the PP are, effectively, the heirs to Franco. Preferring to work with the central political
‘right’ rather than the independentista
political ‘left’ is a clear echo of the Labour Party’s position on Scotland and
Wales.
Fortunately
for Catalunya, the independentistas,
whatever their political perspective, have long ago given up any hope that the
Spanish ‘left’ will aid or support them, and have instead depended on a range
of parties promoting the Catalan viewpoint, from a range of positions on the
political spectrum. There are clear
lessons there for those independentistas
in Wales who still harbour the illusion that the Welsh branch of the British
Labour Party can somehow be nudged or cajoled into supporting the aspirations
of those who seek independence. When
push comes to shove, they will always show their true colours as we have
clearly seen time and again in Scotland; spending time trying to cosy up to and
influence a British party (which is what the strategy of some seems to be) is a diversion from the real job of winning the
hearts and minds of Welsh voters.
* I generally try and avoid terms like
‘left’ and ‘right’; they’re far too simplistic and general to be meaningful in
many contexts. I think, however, that
the generalizations make at least some sense in this specific context.
3 comments:
So what's new? We are stuck with a gang of true blue socialists in Wales also.
Gwyn
The language issue in Wales prevents the vast majority of hearts and minds in Wales from supporting even the most tentative steps towards independence.
Let's see how Royston Jones and his cohorts fair circumnavigating this issue on 4th November. I suspect we might all learn quite a lot!
kp
I don't agree that the language issue "prevents the vast majority of hearts and minds in Wales from supporting even the most tentative steps towards independence", but what I would agree with is that the perception of Plaid as predominantly a party for Welsh speakers deters people from voting for that party. That's an entirely different question, especially given Plaid's own reluctance to argue for independence anyway.
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