Tensions in Spain are rising over Catalonia's independence referendum

catalonia spain barcelona
catalonia spain barcelona

(Students attend a demonstration in favor of the banned October 1 independence referendum in Barcelona, Spain September 28, 2017.Juan Medina/Reuters)

  • Catalonia, a region in Spain, vows to vote on independence this Sunday in a referendum declared illegal by the Spanish government.

  • The Spanish government has recently cracked down on the referendum.

  • Even if the government manages to stop the vote, simmering tensions could pose a challenge for Spain going forward, analysts say.

Catalonia, a region in Spain that includes Barcelona, says it will vote on independence this Sunday in a referendum that has been declared illegal by Spanish authorities.

The question over the referendum has turned into one of Spain's "biggest political challenges" since the country returned to democracy after the death of dictator General Francisco Franco in 1975, according to NBC News.

Spain’s Constitutional Court ruled "that a regional government cannot call a referendum, because Spain’s constitution does not recognize the right to self-determination and establishes that sovereignty resides with Spanish citizens collectively," according to the Washington Post.

The Washington Post added:

"The Catalan government says that the Catalan people want a referendum, and the majority of the Catalan parliament supports it. The broader Spanish government insists that the referendum must not go forward because it goes against Spain’s democratic political institutions and its constitutional order. In this, it has the support of the majority of Spain’s parliament."

The Spanish government has recently taken a strong stance against the referendum by raiding offices, shutting down pro-independence websites, and arresting officials. Some analysts have argued that the recent crackdown has only helped to further unite the pro-independence groups in Catalonia.

The pro-independence movement in Catalonia, meanwhile, insists the vote will continue as planned this weekend. According the New York Times' Ellen Barry, "opinion polls suggest that about half of Catalonia’s 7.5 million people support breaking away from Spain, but the separatists’ influence ballooned in 2015, when independence parties won a majority in the region’s Parliament. There was already resentment that the Spanish government was siphoning too much of the region’s wealth."

Catalonia, which has its own language and culture, is one of Spain's economic powerhouses. It contributes nearly one-fifth of the country's total GDP, and has an economy larger than that of Portugal.

Even if the Spanish government manages to stop the vote, the simmering tensions could pose a challenge for the administration going forward, analysts say.