“It is a total irresponsibility. They are leading us to an administrative collapse,” Catalonia’s vice president Oriol Junqueras said Monday, adding the measure was “unprecedented”.
Spain’s conservative government announced Friday it would take over the payment of essential services and public workers’ salaries in Catalonia to prevent it from spending money on the referendum slated for October 1st.
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Catalonia’s pro-separatist government challenged the measure in Spain’s Supreme Court but a court spokeswoman told AFP it was “in force” and would not be suspended while judges rule on its legality.
“It is a de facto suspension of Catalonia’s financial autonomy,” said Alain Cuenca, an expert on the regional financing at the University of Zaragoza who opposes Catalan independence.
Spain’s regions pay taxes to the central government and are then given a quota to spend on health care, education and public infrastructure.
Catalonia, which is roughly the size of Belgium and home to around 7.5 million people, receives about €1.5 billion ($1.8 billion) a month from Madrid to cover essential services.
“This means that from now on (Catalan leaders) no longer have their money,” said a spokeswoman for Spain’s budget ministry.
They won’t have the right to carry out any “extra expense” beyond those already foreseen, she added.
‘Less autonomy’
“Does this mean they have less autonomy? Of course! But the seriousness of the measure goes hand in hand with the seriousness of the events,” said Francisco de la Torre, a lawmaker with the centrist Ciudadanos party, an ally of Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservative government.
Madrid announced the measure after the Catalan government said it would no longer comply with a request made in July that it provide weekly accounts of its spending to ensure no money was being used to stage the contested referendum.
Junqueras said the freezing of the accounts is a disguised way of taking away Catalonia’s autonomy, a measure which could in principle only take place after a debate and a vote in the Senate, Spain’s upper house of parliament.
“This implies not being able to devote one euro to spending in sectors such as industry, commerce, agriculture, livestock, culture, research, sports, youth, social affairs, housing” which are considered to be non essential, he said.
For Madrid, paying the salaries of the roughly 170,000 employees of the Catalan regional government will not be an easy task.
Spain’s central government will needed their complete details such as bank account info or the number of sick leave days they have in order to calculate the amount they are due.
Catalan regional vice-President and chief of Economy and Finance, Oriol Junqueras waves as he takes part in the official launch of the Catalan main separatist parties’ campaign for an independence referendum, Photo: AFP