Sánchez appoints Catalan veteran as foreign affairs minister

Former EU parliament president Josep Borrell is an outspoken critic of the independence movement

Josep Borrell presents his new book in Barcelona on November 11 2011 (by Maria Fernández)
Josep Borrell presents his new book in Barcelona on November 11 2011 (by Maria Fernández) / ACN

ACN | Madrid

June 4, 2018 07:39 PM

New Spanish president Pedro Sánchez has chosen a veteran of the Socialist party to be his Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Catalan politician Josep Borrell. During Felipe González’s long reign at the helm of the Spanish government, from 1982 to 1996, Borrell was one of the Socialist government’s best-known faces. However, a failed attempt to lead the PSOE Socialist party saw him instead move to the European Parliament.

After serving as President of the European Parliament from 2004 until 2007, Borrell has maintained his political standing, which he has drawn on to openly criticize the Catalan independence movement. Some commentators claim that his promotion as head of foreign affairs, one of the most important posts in the cabinet, is unlikely to help smooth relations between Catalonia and Spain.

Borrell’s disapproval of Catalonia’s secessionist movement has led him to become an active participant in the events organized by Societat Civil Catalana, a civic society that is fiercely opposed to Catalan independence. In fact, it was Borrell who coined a phrase that gained notoriety when he talked about “disinfecting Catalonia” of independence supporters, which even caused some of his party colleagues to distance themselves from him.

Born in 1947 in Pobla de Segur, in the northeastern county of Pallars Jussà, Borrell began in local politics before joining the PSOE party and eventually rising to ministerial level. The highest position he held was Minister of Public Works in 1991 before he moved to Environment in 1993. After giving up on his ambitions to lead the party, Borrell made the move to Brussels in 2004, where he was elected head of the European chamber. Borrell has a doctorate in economic science from the Complutense University of Madrid but has also studied at the French Institute of Petroleum in Paris and Stanford University in the US.