Pro-independence parties end Socialist leader's bid to head Senate

Vote in Catalan Parliament blocks Miquel Iceta's appointment to Spain's upper house where he is Spanish government's choice to become speaker

The Catalan Socialist leader Miquel Iceta following the plenary session in Parliament on May 16, 2019 (by Guillem Roset)
The Catalan Socialist leader Miquel Iceta following the plenary session in Parliament on May 16, 2019 (by Guillem Roset) / ACN

ACN | Barcelona

May 16, 2019 05:01 PM

The leader of the Catalan Socialist party (PSC), Miquel Iceta, will not become the speaker of the Spanish Senate after the pro-independence parties in the Catalan Parliament voted against appointing him to a seat in Spain's upper house.

Acting Spanish president, Pedro Sánchez, had nominated Iceta to head the Senate, but in order to take up the post the PSC leader needed the Parliament to grant him the seat vacated for this purpose last week by former Catalan president, José Montilla.

What would normally have been a formality turned into something of a saga as the pro-independence parties -which together have a majority in the Parliament- dragged their feet over appointing Iceta due to his opposition to Catalan self-determination.

On Thursday morning, the Esquerra (ERC), Junts per Catalunya (JxCat) and Candidatura d'Unitat Popular (CUP) parties all voted against the appointment, with the unionist Ciutadans (Cs) and Partit Popular Català (PPC) parties abstaining.

Socialist leader challenges result

Shortly after the vote, Iceta announced that he had asked for protection from Spain's Constitutional Court. "Sectarianism has prevailed over legality and common sense," he said.

The Spanish government, also Socialist, preempted the result of the vote by warning the pro-independence parties that blocking Iceta "would have legal consequences," in reference to a challenge in the Constitutional Court, according to vice president, Carmen Calvo.

While it is in the power of the Catalan Parliament to grant the Senate seat, the Spanish executive will argue that it is the PSC's "right" to replace one of its senators with another, and that blocking the appointment breaks "the obligatory proportionality" of the chamber.