Catalan Separatists Win Slim Electoral Majority Despite Jailing & Exile of Pro-Independence Leaders
In a major setback for Spain, Catalan separatist parties have won a slim majority in the Catalan Parliament. Voters went to the polls Thursday in a snap election called for by Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who had sacked the previous separatist government. Thursday's vote comes after Catalonia's regional Parliament voted in October for independence by a margin of 70 votes to 10. The Spanish Senate in Madrid swiftly responded by granting Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy unprecedented powers to impose direct rule on Catalonia under Article 155 of the Constitution, which had never been used before in modern Spain's democratic history. The move stripped the northeastern region of its autonomy in efforts to crush Catalonia's growing independence movement. Rajoy then called for new elections, counting on Catalan voters to support pro-unity parties. We speak with Sebastiaan Faber, professor of Hispanic studies at Oberlin College and author of the new book "Memory Battles of the Spanish Civil War: History, Fiction, Photography."