Constitutional Court in the Catalan Conflict and the European Union
Constitutional Court in Catalan Conflict
- 2006 Catalan Statute: Passed with 73% support; appealed by the Popular Party for unconstitutionality.
- 2010 Ruling: Constitutional Court ruled parts of the Statute unconstitutional.
- Referendum Suspensions: Suspended Catalan Referendum (Nov 9, 2014) and self-determination Law (2017).
- Political Sentiment: Catalan people felt high taxation without representation.
Spain's Federalism and Decentralization
- Political Structure: Spain characterized by imperfect federalism, asymmetrical federal state due to varying regional autonomy.
- Decentralization Issues: No consensus on model, resistance from government and conservatives, and potential threats to identity.
- Statutes of Autonomy: Political agreements between autonomous communities (AACC) and the state; changes require mutual consent.
- Competencies: Categorized into exclusive, shared, and regional competencies, covering areas like defense and local governance.
European Union Objectives
- Promote peace and well-being.
- Free movement of people, justice, and security without internal borders.
- Establish an internal market and economic union (Euro).
- Uphold European values.
EU Competences
- Exclusive Competences: Customs union, competition rules, monetary policy.
- Shared Competences: Internal market, social policy, freedom, and security.
EU Single Market
- General Principles: Free movement of goods, services, capital, and people.
- Benefits: More choices, competitive prices, business opportunities.
Legislative Processes in the EU
- Decision-making Bodies: European Council, European Parliament (directly elected).
- Challenges: Multiple languages, high number of MEPs, no legislative initiative from the Parliament.
Spanish Electoral System
- Size: 350 MPs elected from small constituencies.
- Representation: Sovereignty rests with the people, exercised through elected representatives.
- Political Parties: Reflect citizen interests and are central to the electoral process.
Political Parties in Spain
- Right vs. Left Dynamics: Fragmentation influenced by ideology and regional issues.
- Leftist Parties: United Left, Podemos, and others emerged from socio-political movements.
Social Cleavages in Spanish Politics
- Definition: Divisions based on social positions (e.g., young vs. old, urban vs. rural) impacting electoral behavior.
- Cleavage Theory: Connections between social divisions and political parties; historical roots in societal conflicts.
Active Cleavages and Regional Identity
- Catalonia Example: National identity cleavages are strong and lead to distinct political alignments.
- Complexity: Some regions have overlapping cleavages, while others show juxtaposition, influencing political behavior differently based on the individual context.