Wise conservatives often quote The Leopard,
the novel by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, in which a leading
aristocratic character comments that it is sometimes advisable to change
everything in order that everything may remain the same.
This wisdom does not appear to have touched Spain’s Partido Popular (PP) government, led since 2011 by Mariano Rajoy. He appears so determined to change nothing at all that he may soon find major changes happening very fast.
Rajoy survived a no-confidence
motion last week in which the far-left Podemos excoriated him for
failing to address the corruption scandals in which so many leading PP
members are mired. But since then the Socialist Party (PSOE) has taken a
sharp turn to the left, raising the prospect that the PP could be
ousted by a radicalised PSOE-Podemos coalition in future elections.
Meanwhile, the autonomous government of Catalonia
has set an October date for a referendum offering its citizens the
option of an independent republic. This is a sharp reminder that Spain is sleepwalking towards an existential crisis that no-one could have imagined 10 years ago.
It’s not at all clear that most Catalans want independence, but it is
increasingly clear that most of them want a choice in the matter. Yet
this is a choice that Rajoy repeatedly refuses to even consider granting
them. The irony, potentially a tragic one, is that the PP’s failure to
countenance changing the Spanish constitution to include a right to
self-determination only seems to make the independence option more
attractive to Catalan nationalists. It is not too late for the Spanish
conservatives to learn something from their British counterparts. As Scotland shows, engaging with independence movements can be much more positive than simply blocking them.
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