In Catalonia, Spain PM Says 'Won't Allow' Challenge to Country's Unity
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said in Catalonia Saturday that he would not allow any challenge to national unity, on his first visit to the region since its symbolic vote on independence.
"I will not allow challenges to the unity of Spain," Rajoy said in a speech to supporters of his conservative Popular Party in the region's main city of Barcelona.
"No one should have to choose between being Catalan or Spanish."
It was Rajoy's first visit to the wealthy northeastern region since a symbolic vote on independence which Madrid tried to stop with a court injunction.
Rajoy, who had promised to go to Catalonia to "better explain" his position, slammed Catalan President Artur Mas, who now hopes to organize early regional elections centered on independence, which would include a joint list of candidates favoring secession.
"Never in history has a ruler lost so much time organizing elections, nor generated so much instability," Rajoy said, vowing to "maintain the stability" of Spain.
The Catalan government says 2.3 million people took part in the November 9 vote -- about a third of all eligible voters in the region.
Roughly 80 percent of those who took part said they wanted Catalonia to be an independent state. However the majority of anti-independence voters stayed at home.
Rajoy said Saturday that Madrid had helped Catalonia financially many times since the start of the economic crisis that has shaken Spain since 2008.
Many in the wealthy region dispute such statements, saying that Catalonia accounts for around a fifth of Spain's economic output but does not receive investments in proportion to the taxes it pays.