Ciutadans cut ties with Manuel Valls for backing Colau as Barcelona mayor

Capital’s city council agrees to hang yellow ribbon in solidarity with jailed and exiled leaders again

Manuel Valls, on the inauguration day in Barcelona city council on June 15, 2019 (by Gerard Artigas)
Manuel Valls, on the inauguration day in Barcelona city council on June 15, 2019 (by Gerard Artigas) / ACN

ACN | Barcelona

June 17, 2019 02:10 PM

Ciutadans has cut ties with Manuel Valls, the former French prime minister who ran in the Barcelona local election supported by the unionist party, after he helped Ada Colau get reelected as mayor.

In a surprising political u-turn, Valls offered Colau his votes in the city council to prevent what he saw as a greater evil: the capital of Catalonia having a pro-independence mayor, Ernest Maragall, who in fact won the election.

The former French politician and the newly elected mayor are seen to have opposite points of views on economic and social issues. Yet, Colau accepted bidding to stay in power, knowing her bid would be successful with Valls' votes.

But Ciutadans disagreed with him; half of the six councilors of the Valls group are, indeed, members of Ciutadans, and they voted against Colau in the opening plenary session.

Disparity of opinions on Colau

This meant a disparity in votes in the very first decision the group had to take, and has now led to the breakup between Valls and Ciutadans.

For the former, Colau is the lesser evil as she is not in favor of independence, but the latter see her as favorable to a Catalan republic and therefore not better than Maragall.

Yet the mayor’s party, Barcelona en Comú, tends to avoid this debate and vies for breaking the pro-independence and unionist blocs and bring the left-wing groups together.

Yellow ribbon back on town hall

Ciutadans’ speaker Inés Arrimadas said Colau was "putting the local council at the service of separatism" like Maragall would have done, on the grounds that the newly elected official backed hanging a yellow ribbon on the town hall’s balcony in solidarity with the jailed and exiled pro-independence leaders again.

 

Indeed, on Monday afternoon, the council decided to again hang the sign in an all-party meeting, with Colau’s group being crucial for the proposal to succeed.

Barcelona en Comú's Janet Sanz explained that they chose to do so in "solidarity with the people who are unfairly imprisoned" while other unionist parties criticized the decision, including People Party's Josep Bou who said he would take down the ribbon given if given the chance.

The ribbon was withdrawn when the electoral period started, thus complying with the electoral authority’s ruling.