CORRECTION: At 3:05, we describe Francina Armengol as a Catalan native. As commenters have pointed out, this isn't quite correct - she is in fact from the Balearic Islands, where Catalan is widely spoken. Apologies for this sloppy error, and we hope you nonetheless enjoyed the video.
@@thevis5465 I don't remember anyone forcing James Stuart to become king of England and I don't remember anyone forcing the Scottish parliament to sign the acts of union. Scotland even had a referendum and voted to stay. Scotland may well leave when the next referendum occurs but it's disingenuous at best to pretend Scotland was forced into the UK against its will and can't leave. The fact you're comparing the UK to Austria-Hungary and Yugoslavia makes you a disgusting person considering the thousands of people who were genocided during the Balkan wars. The situations are incomparable.
@@utkarshverma7Or like France (occitan, breton, corsican, basque, catalan, flemish) or italy (sardinian, ladin, italian dialects that are as distinct as languages) or the UK (welsh, scottish, and you massacred every other language) As a matter of fact, multiple languages are not a Spain-exclusive thing
@@Eltener123 I think Scotland _was_ forced to sign the Act of Union, but by their bankruptcy after the failure of the Nova Scotia colony, not by the English.
This episode is seriously behind the times. We got home 🇨🇵 from Girona in Catalonia yesterday and follow the Spanish and Catalan press. The wave of separatism surrounding the referendum (and its aftermath) has passed, and the flavour of the moment is "increased autonomy within Spain".
As a catalan i i think you wrongly assumed that the fact that nobody talks about it with you means that no one is interested on the matter, as i said that statement is wrong, people doesn’t talk about it with foreginers because we know you wouldn’t understand a a thing about our fight, in the end you already have your own country and don’t know how precious it is to have a country for your culture.
@@llucsalaprat6508 I didn't talk to anyone about independence during my holiday, but the number of "star" flags on private balconies has dropped enormously. I am only writing about what I saw. Of course, you might move in circles where EVERYONE is pro-independence. I don't "have a country" (other people own them both) but have 2 passports. 🇨🇵🇪🇺🇬🇧 Good luck 🤞🍀👍. I do understand the history and the culture of Catalonia, so that overt implication was rather childish 🚸. You sound like a Catalan Brexiteer. 🤔
@@andrewrobinson2565 I am not a brexiteer, i defend the existence of the EU and that catalonia must stay in the EU but i want to be out of spain, is that compatible, i hope it is…
@@andrewrobinson2565 And i don’t move in cercles that are radical in the independence matter, i think i have a really relaxed posture compared to other people i would even consider a federation of iberian states but at least for me Catalonia will be always more important than spain.
Just one thing, Francina Armengol is not Catalan she is from the Balearic Islands. Another’s key issue, the support to make Sanchez prime minister does not include support for budgets
@@Kmlcvlk999 they are culturally very close, but different enough to not "feel" as the same people. Obviously some part of the population "feels" part of a greater catalan speaking country, but hell, there is even people that want independency without the catalans, and also people thaat HATE the idea of being compared to them. Wild thing, but I guess it happens everywhere in the world
@@JOKERATMI've known nobody who can distinguish between western catalan and valencian. On both sides of the Sènia river people speak the same dialect but some people say these people speak different languages. No! False! From Hospitalet de l'Infant to near Castelló de la Plana Alta people speak only one dialect of one language that can be call català or valencià. From Pallars (French border) to Guardamar (in the Alacant province) we all speak western dialects (with small differences, especially inside the Pallars). So… València CAE is not Catalunya CAE (Comunitat autònoma espanyola) but there are other meanings of Catalunya. As much it is not the same València CAE, València Spanish province or València city, there many meanings of Catalunya and one is the country of the people who speak valencian or catalan (Països Catalans).
The video titles function more like sub headlines with the text in image being the headline. Clickbait implies misleading or sensationalising. “Could spain break apart?” Is snappier and - admittedly - more urgent than “why separatists are on the rise in Spain”, but not unreasonably or misleadingly so. Separatist parties winning pluralities in regional elections does make the prospect of succession referendums, and these regions breaking from Spain, more credible. There is nuance, and such referendums are hardly a done deal, which is explained in the video, but I don’t think that in itself makes the headline clickbait.
@@yixiuss eh, maybe just vibes, but a lot more of ‘what if the worst case scenario’/more clickbaity then before. Ive enjoyed the channel for awhile, but I think they’ve kinda fallen into a rhythm.
The irony is that spain is a fascist country, and the royal family is the biggest example of that. Without the fascism spain would have been a free and democratic republic today.
Guys, what happened here? Usually your analysis might not be ultra-depth, but are right. In this case, though, there are quite a lot of failures. From Catalonia part: Armengol is from Mallorca, not Catalonia. The referendum thing is usual election talk, but no formal initiative had been taken (nor will be, because support for separation in Catalonia is in historical minimum and separatist know they will lose it. Maybe when the right wing is in government they have a chance), and Puigdemont have as much a chance of being president of the Generalitat as Richard Tice to be PM. BTW: the only party bringing the immigration to the forefront is Junts, being very right wing as they are. The government will be of Socialist party with support of ERC, and that is already well known unless something really big happens. About the Basques: EHBildu is not an "offshot of ETA". Some parties in the coalition (particularly EH) were. Look, politics in Spain is not chaotic, is just complicated. There are more axis than just left-right, like the unitarian-plurinational. And autonomic parties move also in a gradient between autonomism and separatism. So, when an analysis this in depth is done, you need a bit more expertais, and also consult a lot of sources, because many things are heavily polarized. Some of this polarization have filtered in your analysis and it shows.
I think the problem here is the political situation in Spain can not be explain in a 10 minutes video, you need at least 1 hour only for Catalonia and explain ERC, Junts, Omnium, CUP, ANC and what not 😅
Not to mention what they say at 1:20 about the statute of autonomy. They say it as if they somehow devastated Catalonia’s self government, when in fact, they gained way more autonomy that they previously had (Spain’s constitution doesn’t really consider taking back permanently competences that have been given and once the decision is final and accepted by the courts) and only a few articles were deemed unconstitutional
@@gonzalotorneralonso417 No. There are no far right parties with any substantial support in either country. Both countries' politics are entirely dominated by far-left and socialist political parties. Chega isn't remotely far right, and nor is Vox. They're mainstream conservatives. Perhaps Ergue-te in Portugal could be described as far right, but they have little to no support, and less than 0.1% of the vote.
@@VVGRestoration Stop. Do not define Portuguese politics by a warped American Overton window. Chega's regressive "conservatism" is well removed from our national consensus and well deserving of the far-right label. There is nothing "mainstream" about it. And doubly ridiculous when you label parties like BE that are barely left of typical social democracy as "far-left".
Separatism is on the rise? Really? Catalan separatist parties are polling lower today than the results they got in the 2021 regional elections. For the first time in decades the nationalists might not get a majority in the Catalan parliament. How on Earth is that a rise?
You can not determinate how much independentists there are if you dont make a referendum directly asking it, many CUP or Comuns-Sumar voters are going to vote for ERC this election and many ERC voters will vote for Junts or PSC, but thats because ERC did it pretty bad, nothing related with independentism
Depending on what polls you look. Some say they will keep the majority, others don't. That won't take than between 2010-2024 there has been a separatist government and even if they lose and the socialist form a government in 4 years there could be a separatist government again. And many polls don't count Catalan Alliance (right wing populist separatist party).
The real deal is not actually independence, but having a fiscal superiority compared to the rest of Spain, since these regions have always benefited from less fiscal pressure in order to attract foreign investment and industry, thus creating a feedback loop in which they have been the only ones to get richer, in detriment of the rest of Spain. Now that that reversed due to the instability brought upon by the referendum and the displacement of investment to Madrid and other regions (that have a more liberal tax code than Cataluña), they are complaining even more, and demanding special treatment. Last year Cataluña got 70.000 million € in debt pardoned as part of basically blackmail to keep Sanchez in power. About the Basque Country, it is well known that the roots of the Basque movement for independence lie in a supremacist and racist idea of the rest of Spain (look up Sabino Arana), which was later followed by the terrorists from ETA, many of whom have a voice in parliament now. It is disgusting. The real question is how long it will take for the rest of Spain to be fed up, not them. Obviously it is far more complex, with the oppression of languages during the dictatorship and all. But it is undeniable that they have received more care and attention than the rest of Spain. In the end, it all comes down to the education and ideals passed down through the extremely manipulated educational system, that each community controls, with 0 centralization. The real beneficiaries of these movements are the politicians, the rest of us (all of us) would only see downsides. It is also ridiculous since Spain is one of the most lenient and tolerant countries when it comes to the regional identities within. Imagine if the centralist iron fist of France was brought upon them. It is all a bunch on nonsense and hypocrisy in order to distract from the real problems haunting the country.
“I am firmly convinced that Spain is the strongest country of the world. Century after century trying to destroy herself and still no success.” - Otto von Bismarck, addressing Spain's secessionist problem.
Centuries after centuries? Spain as a nation was invented an created just roughly 2 centuries ago, since its first constitution, which defines itself as a nation , was manuscripted in 1812. Before it, Spain was just a kind of "Iberian Economic Community" rulled by a king that kicked out the rest of the Iberian kings, though he let each Basque territory be self ruled (independent , keeping their own parliaments and taxes), that's why the 4 Basque territories within Spain still collect their own taxes, have their own parliaments and goverments and are called "historical territories" in the current Spanish constitution of Spain (since their institutions precede to the "nation state" of Spain). French revolution invented the concept of "Nation" and homogonization, and then the brother of "King Charles of Spain" tries to copy-paste it if the spanish servants would kill his brother (then King Charles) and place him as a new king of a new invented "nation-state of Spain"....Charles lost it and only then Basques were forced to become "Spanish nationals". Which by action-reaction created the Basque National movement and other national movements .... and thus the Spanish non-national Empire gets keeps gettind fractured by the nationalism concept .... In the independence processes of the colonies of Spain in the Americas was started by people with strong Basque heritage and influence, like Simon Bolivar amongst others.... In my opinion the invention and implememtation of Spain as the current "nation-state" made it be as weak as ever for the last 2 centuries... It's first national or nationalist consutition of spain is proposed in 1812, and the current "nation-state" constitution of Spain is of 1978. As a nation Spain is "new" and even the US has a far longer and stronger "nation-state" history (simce 1788).
Spaniard here. Contrary what it might look actually the current situation is very stable. In Catalonia the independent movement is very much in declined. There are going to be elections for the catalonian party on May 12th and everything points that the nationalist parties are not going to get the majority in the parliament (first time in a decade). Plus, the 2 main catalonian parties (ERC and Junts) just can't stop fighting with each other and there is no way they will do a coalition. They rather join the PSE (catalonian PSOE). In the Basque country, both nationalist parties (Bildu and PNV) have made clear that they don't pursue independence but rather gaining more auto government.
Great. Nationalist party in Germany is on the decline too. - We gonna come over there and defend Spain if necessary. Puigdemon had the audacitiy to say, they wanna join EU after being independant. Not going to happen.
Some polls say separatism will keep the majority, others don't. They have been in power between 2010-2024. In May 12 we will know if we have 4 more years. There is also Catalan Alliance that they will likely enter in Parliament.
I live in Spain. Support for separatism in both Catalonia and the Basque Country ebbs and flows, and neither is likely to vote in the majority for independence. Basques actually already have a sweet fiscal deal, expect Catalonia to seek the same.
As a spanish, the idea that separatists are on the rise is completey false. In fact, they're in their utter downfall. The problem is Pedro Sanchez and his amnesty law, which puts the separatists more on top than the whole spanish population regardless where a normal spanish person is from. Separatists "are on the rise" only in paper. The only thing that puts them "in rise" is Pedro Sanchez's political ageda on dealling with catalan, basque and galician separatists, as well as russian influence.
Spain has this problem, because it has always been tolerant of other cultures. You just have to look at France, it not only had Catalans and Basques, but also Corsican Bretons, etc. All eliminated from the roots, everything that was not like Paris eliminated. The problem is over.
Well, Switzerland also has 4 different languages and very diverse culture. To manage this, the country is organised very federal, with a lot of regional independence, and a lot of tolerance towards other cultures. And still, Switzerland is probably the most stable country in the world. I would say it is BECAUSE of the tolerance in politics, not despite of it. What makes Switzerland unique, is the way politics work. All executives are councils of 3-9 people. And they always include all major parties. This means, Switzerland never has an "opposition". And it also means, that when the voting outcome changes after a next election, the is not a drastic left-to-right swing, but only a slight shift. Like this, parties are much more incentivised to shift to the middle and compromise than polarise. In case of Spain, this would mean an executive counsil, that includes one catalan (since they are significantly populous) and more regional independence.
@@aurelspecker6740 yeah but you definitively cannot take Switzerland as an example that can be followed, the country truly is a unique case in the world, wether it's politically, culturally or economically speaking.
I don't think that our mediterranean Brothers (italian here) Will be so stupid to risk leaving the EU. If catalonia, basque, canary, whatever ever leave Spain, they Will be blocked forever from joining the EU. What for? It seems to me that it's Just posturing
Thing is eu wants to remove vetoe, also you understimate how bad spanish economy would after those looses, also, due to pyrenees spain would loose land conections with teh hole eu
Catalan here. We are very aware of the current situation that would form if we left Spain as of right now. It is very undesirable and extremely infuriating that Spain's last backup to force us into staying in it is to threaten to isolate us economically if we did succeed. Aldough, while this is far from an ideal situation, there's no reason to believe that Spain would be able or even want to keep Catalonia and the Basque Country out of the EU forever. Firstly, the right to veto is as of right now being reevaluated by the entire EU, to the point that it's quite likely that it gets scrapped and substituted by qualified majority. Is such case, the accession of the newly independent countries in the EU would be very smooth and quick, since they would have already been part of the EU in the past. Secondly, even if the right to veto stays in place and Spain decides to use it to stop the Basque Country and Catalonia, that wouldn't be something that would last forever. Denying the entry of Catalonia and the Basque Country to the EU would deteriorate Spain's image internationally, since the independent countries would be a perfect fit for the EU, but Spain just decides not to let them in because of past issues. There would be a lot of pressure from the EU to let them in, and eventually, Spain would have to step back. Finally, we've been assuming that Spain would veto Catalonia and the Basque Country from rejoining the EU, but, why would they even do that? It isn't like they would be able to convince them to rejoin Spain by actively deteriorating their economies. Spain would gain nothing from doing something as stupid as this, so why the fuck even bother. The best course of action from Spain in a situation like this would be to try to improve its relation with their new neighbors. This would help the three countries to keep their financial relations, and it would lower the impact that Spain would suffer from such regions leaving. All in all, I have no doubt that the situation would be dire politically, but eventually, the Basque Country and Catalonia would be able to rejoin the EU in no more than a few years.
I understand your points. The scrapping of unanimity Is more geared towards other issues in my opinion (i.e. preventing minnows like Hungary from paralyzing the whole block). Don't forget though that very few member states Will want to foster independent movements. Spain Is not the only country currently facing such issues. Just saying. Of course I don't have a crystal ball, but that's what Logic says, at least in the short term
It's not as simple as that. It's not just Spain that will decide whether Catalonia can join the EU. Many regions in Europe seek independence, but if Catalonia were to achieve it, it might face opposition from countries like Romania, Germany, Italy, and Belgium. This sets a precedent against EU stability and unity. Spain could consider a federated state model like Germany's, but outright independence isn't beneficial for anyone in the EU. Addressing social and economic issues should take precedence over nationalist agendas without clear plans for succession. We shouldn't be swayed by populist ideas, as seen in the UK. Furthermore, Barcelona would suffer economically. Many companies would relocate, prioritizing stability and EU market access over nationalist movements. Assuming Catalonia could seamlessly remain in the EU post-secession is overly optimistic.
As other have commented, this video contains so many inaccuracies that you would do well in deleting it and either making a new one or focusing on topics you know better about. Something that has not been so pointed out is that separatist/nationalist parties in Catalonia have always won the majority of seats at the election and, for the first time, they may NOT do. So what rise is this?
Independentists parties may not get most of the seats, or may get them again. Most of voters don't use to switch between unionist and independentist parties. PSOE will rise? Probably, but Ciutadanos will probably disappear from the chamber.
they do in the Basque Autonomous Community of Euskadi, for its Basque Parliament, and for the first time in the seats allocated for Euskadi in the Spanish Parliament the Basque National parties have gotten the majority of the votes and seats.
This was one of the most poorly researched videos I’ve ever seen, as is most of the coverage from my country that comes from england suspiciously enough. Do they still see us as enemies today? That’s definitely how it feels like too often.
It's not only a matter of money. I'm Catalan. Spain promises some inversions in the national budget that aren't true. However, in Spain Catalan and Basque nationalist are often attacked by spanish nationalists, seeing Catalan and Basque language as something inferior and a problem to Spanish unity. Spanish police in Catalonia (luckily we have our own but they control airports, homeland security, borders, etc.) don't bother to learn our regional languages. They are different, they think different, we consider ourselves as different people, like French or Italians can be. In fact, in 1640 both Catalonia and Portugal seceded from Spain, but Spain preferred to control Catalonia and abandoned Portugal. What annoys catalans the most is a national lose, in 1714. Before we had more autonomy, more rights, but after the Succession War, Phillip V created a more united and centralized state and catalans Lost many privileges that they had before. Catalan separatism rose again after 1850-1870, when the consciousness of nation states and liberalism rose, just like German or Italian so did Catalan nationalism, not separatism, but a strong regional Catalan identity, with Catalan as its only language. In fact the Spanish language presence in Catalonia is nowadays big due to migrations from other parts of Spain.
@@arnauplanas7169 Catalonia is just Andalucía but talking even weirder: beaches, tourists, flamenco and even toros. They banned the toros to look different, and everyone got mad about it. Galicia, Asturias and the Basques are different cultures. No toros, no flamenco, no underage relationships. Meanwhile Catalonia is just a slight variation of standard Spain. Deal with it.
@@DudeWatIsThis You're a total ignorant about Catalonia or just a troll. Catalonia has even its own language. Catalonia is as different as Euskadi can be from Spain. I have already said why in my previous answer. Of course we have beaches... since we have the Mediterranean sea next to us... Flamenco is not part of Catalan culture, sardanes are.. But given your comment on underage relations I will assume you're a troll
@@arnauplanas7169 Pero si la sardana es igual que los bailes esos del Sur, hombre. Vente para Galicia o Asturias y verás lo que es DISTINTO, pero de verdad. Lo que más me molesta de vuestro separatismo (aparte de que os inventáis la mitad de la historia), es que tratáis al resto de España como si fuera homogénea, y hay áreas que son mucho más distintas de la Meseta/Madrid de lo que lo es Cataluña. Vais de únicos e inimitables y sólo sois unos Andaluces que trabajan y hablan raro.
Poco tendrá de España una España sin Cataluña o el Pais Vasco, son parte integra de la nación, y su riqueza cultural nos enriqueze a todos. No habrá España sin Catalunya o Euskadi, más nos valdría llamarnos Castilla.
@@somethinganything9170 lo dices como si no os importase a vosotros Si os independizais vuestra economía muere y ya está decayendo Sin contar el no tener reconocimiento internacional, libertad de movimiento, UE, etc
Failed to mention that Sanchez repeatedly claimed he would never ever form a coalition with separatists. For over 10 years he said the same thing, all the way to months before elections. Then when he needed the extra votes. He said he “changed his mind” he didn’t lie, he just changed his mind aparently lol
The interesting thing is that the separatist movements in Spain are very leftwing, at least the Basque and Catalonian one - a thing that is almost unknown anywhere else in Europe. Usually ethno-nationalism and seperatism is considered rightwing. Usually also the more richer regions tend to be more conservative and capitalist, while poorer regions tend to be more attracted to socialism. In Spain these things are completely inverse.
its also like this in Scotland and wales but its quite strange these days with how these guys want to start their own country but are also very politically correct and against patriotism. maybe this made more sense pre 2010 when there was more room for unique ideologies. but now they just act like American or Dutch leftists
There are several inaccuracies here. The Spanish government never jailed any Catalan separatist, but the judiciary as the separatists committed several criminal offences, including embezzlement. Many of them were pardoned by the left led Spanish government during the last parliament on exchange of political support from separatists parties. Furthermore, Pedro Sanchez made some public commitments as red lines: 1. Never pardoning jailed Catalan leaders, 2 never change the law to decriminalise secession and embezzlement, 3 never approved an amnesty law for those separatist leader who left the country and have never been tried in courts. Pedro Sanchez has broken every promise or red lines on exchange of political support.He lacks credibility when he committed there will be no referendum of independence...
You can call it what you want but the world knows what Spain does to other cultures within its borders. Spain wants a unitary state while a federal state would be so much better for everyone, especially Basque, Catalonia, Baleares, Navarra, Canaries and more regions with their own culture and languages. Why would a country want a territory within its borders while those living there don’t want to be part of that country? The Spanish government acted as a colonizer instead of going to talk with other nations inside the Spanish state to look if a common ground can be found. Sanchez seems to be the first PM with a little sense of realism in his bones.
@@RealConstructor you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. Spain is an extremely decentralised state, its constitution doesn’t truly consider the idea of the central government taking back the competences once they’ve been given to the autonomies (only temporarily and in extreme situations) and there are limits that try to preserve its cultural diversity (such considering several languages co official and demanding only that at least a 25% of the teaching hours is in Spanish. A minimum that isn’t even accomplished). The fact that Spain has so many languages in such a relatively small territory isn’t a coincidence. Go ask the French what happened to all the languages that they had
Teniendo en cuenta que Llarena y Marchena fueron elegidos por el Gobierno del PP, para renovar el Poder Judicial y controlar así las sentencias del Procés, pues vale. Formalmente tendrás razón, pero la realidad no es esa.
@RealConstructor spain is not the result of any "colonization" but rather political and dynastic unions over hundreds of years l (same as other European nations). As pointed out by other commenters, the fact that spain still has different languages and culture is testament that the country itself has been extremely tolerant of its differences. How many people speak Gaelic? Or occitan? Or catalan and euskara in France?
The problem is that these regions of Spain like Catalunya have never been an independent country, not even an independent area, they were part of the kingdom of Aragon, where other regions of Spain were part. Then, a union of Kingdoms formed Spain. If any, Aragon could ask to be independent, because they were the centre of that crown, Castilla is another community that could be independent because they are the leading region where the Basque country belonged, but these parts don't want to be independent. In summary, Catalunya, the Basque country and other regions of Spain being independent is like a part of Texas wanting to be independent of the US, if any is the whole of Texas or nothing
One correction, in one picture you show the PNV regional coalition goverment. But Vox and Popular Party aren't in coalition with PNV in Vasque Country, Vox it's actually the oposite of PNV (they hate each other), PNV formed a Coalition Goverment with PSE ("Partido Socialista de Euskadi", PSOE) after 2020 regional election.
The worst thing is that they are not particularly in the rise; in Catalonia for example they have lost many votes and when asked in both the basque country in Catalonia they are way below 50% of the population. What is insane is that the president is choosing to get support from them making them the most important than ever when they are on historically low support.
Bro this video is so wrong, nobody in Spain wants to secede, but as the voting system benefits regionalist parties, these inflamatory speechs cause a lot of movement. Its just politics, Spain is not a formal democracy like other countries, but this seems to be overlooked by everyone.
More than 2 millions Catalans voted clearly for the independence holding massive rallies each 11th of September expressing this, a lot of Basque people also rally for the same reason. It simply can't be said that nobody in Spain wants to secede...😂
@@jordi6795 nobody who knows that is more benefitial to be leeching of the state, everyone knows its easier to have a better budget for the autonomous region than getting independence and suffering a lot in the process. Also, do you know that there are more than 7.5 million Spaniards living in catalonia? 2 million isnt even a majority, most of them speak spanish. Do you know you cant take test in spanish in cataluña? Do you know that if you want to do some administrative work related to the state in cataluña, you have to it in catalan, besides only 30% of the population there speaks catalan as their primary languague? Learn things before you speak 😂
Another black legend production , lies , half-truths and manipulations are always ready to attack the very same idea of Spain. Why is all this eagerness?
1:20 wow, that’s pretty manipulative A ridiculously small part of the statute of autonomy was considered inconstitutional (such as not guaranteeing that a citizen con could communicate with the Catalan institutions in Spanish) and even after that small percentage of changes were removed, it still gave more autonomy than Catalonia had before It’s like starting with 50, being given another 60, then saying that you could only be given an additional 55, and crying oppression on the streets because you were only given 105 instead of 110
Galicia could also become a part of Portugal. This would make the western sausage complete. Galician eve is in the same language sub-family as Portuguese. The region south of Catalonia also is basically ethnically Catalan. Catolonia is bigger than its official borders. The little state in the pyrenees north of it, Andorra, is also ethnically Catalan.
Just a few notes: first the basque country has had a majority of nationalist parties since the dictaitorship ended (even before, but lets not delve into history), just that there are different "levels" of nationalism, some wanting to just finally get the rights that were signed with the Spanish goverment (Gernika), others wanting some sort of federal status to be at the same level as the central goverment, and last there is straight independence. There is a hole debate about that so I won't be getting into all the details. Second, calling EH Bildu ETA is just propaganda. The party does represent the same political niche ETA represented in the turmoil of the end of the dictatorship, but the people in the party that are called out for being related to ETA are specifically the people that took part in its disolution. Calling EH Bildu ETA is just a tactic to dismis anything they may say or anyone that may do politics with them (specially when the opposition has nothing worth saying). It seems as though they wanted the basque left to leave diplomatic politics and return to take arms
Legacy of the Bourbons. They exported their French-style centralisation and authoritarianism once ascended power in Spain. You see France's monarchist ideology of the Bourbons, it wasn't changed despite the 1789 Revolution, so hard to feel surprise with what's going on to Spain.
I mean, Galician elections took place barely two months ago and the main pro-independent party got 30% of the votes, but let's just skip that and focus on Catalonia and the Basque Country, as always.
@@9_9876 because said party, BNG, isn't ideologically pro-independence, but more on the pragmatic "we can push for independence if Spain stops beneffiting us". Actually, it is more a regionalist party than an independentist party. Also the center-right party PP got an absolute majority so... What is noteworthy of those elections was the fact the center-left party PSOE, who current MP Sánchez leads, got its worst historical result, ever. Which might point towards PSOE leaking voters towards regionalist parties.
This video is honestly shockingly bad. They’re talking about a “resurgence” of separatism, meanwhile Catalan separatist parties are polling worse than the results they got in the 2021 election and are poised to not win a majority in the Catalan parliament for the first time in *decades*
I'm from Madrid and in the European elections I plan to vote PNV for one very simple reason. All the other parties are bonkers. My main concerns in Europe are energy independence, reigning in overregulation and putting a stop to anti-nuclear hysteria. I'm also concerned about defending freedom of expression and enlightenment values from encroaching authoritarianism. I don't give a crap about any of these raging identity wars people are obsessed over these days, or who speaks what language, who sleeps with who or who has what between their legs and not a single damned party speaks to any of these issues. They just drone on about endlessly about utterly meaningless nonsense.
Power-hungry president who is willing to sell everything to keep himself on the seat even for a single day more. That's what happened. Separatism was going down until these last years where they started to get everything they wanted.
@@NAYRUthunder99 exactly, and that is what happened for tons of years during the dictatorship of Franco. Did the Catalans receive any kind of compensation? Not at all. Can they choose their path now and make their own laws that suit their people and situation? Not at all
Funny how in the cover map for the video number 3 falls on Cartagena, which also had its own independence movement (Cantonalism) in the 19th century - and there's still a few grognards who'd love to raise the red flag and secede from Murcia and the rest of Spain!
There's people "from" Catalonia living integrated all over the territory as well as people from all regions living in Catalonia. My question is: Where exactly do the separatists expect to cut?
There's still people who make videos about Franco's dictatorship too, like 50 years. I mean, it's something that happened, something terrible that happened in a supposed democratic country in the 21st century, in Europe. It is and it will be something to speak about.
@EnekoUrrutiaElorza pero desde hace años el independentismo está en decadencia. Al menos comparado con 2017. Entonces no entiendo por qué se sigue hablando de España como si estuviera apunto de disolverse.
Hey, they got it close. The native language of Mallorca is Catalan :) Catalonia is fighting for its independence. What about the other Catalan speaking regions, Balearic Islands (Armengol's home region), and the Valencian Community?
@@KnightOfTheSadFigure Madrid sending black shirted thugs to beat old ladies in Barcelona for the "crime of voting for independence"...isn't a good look. Let the people of Catalonia choose. Do they desire to be a sovereign country, or remain part of Spain, ruled by Madrid. Like Canada let Quebec, and the UK/English, let Scotland.
@@MarcPagannobody in balerics or valencia wants independence. In Valencia it looks like the more independentist catalans get the more patriotic valencians get
This video was full of wrong information and plain falsities, support for independence has decreased a lot in recent years since conservatives have been out of office.
Nuance is difficult in 10 minutes. They could talk for hours about this subject. If you want nuance go elsewhere and be prepared to spend several hours watching and listening. For short duration videos, they do better than most, though not always great. But they are not a multi billion dollar news company with offices everywhere, they are an internet outfit with a limited number of staff.
@@bzuidgeest the fact they get the motivation and in some cases who even wants sepratism wrong it's probably a topic they should avoid. Belgium, Scotland and now Spain, they simply don't understand the topics well enough.
@@jono_cc2258 they give the perspective of an outsider which isn't surprising. That perspective is quite different then how an insider would view it. I remember the Belgium one too. It wasn't that bad. I was exactly how I expected that kind of thing to be reported in foreign media. It can be very useful to know how the outside world views something, especially without the emotions attached. Also don't think just because you see the nuance that others do too. Brexit is a prime example. There was no benefit, just the emotion of getting out and now they are paying for that. Brexitteers would claim nuance, but the outside world thinks differently and is a lot more factual.
You offer them a hand and they take your arm, they want more and more and more in exchange for very little. A lot of spaniards are tired of this, not a single party can offer a serious solution and all of them take us for fools.
It's an interesting paradox in Spain and the UK. Socialists in Madrid need support from separatists so they give them more autonomy. But they could never support independence because that would reduce their chances of forming a national coalition. We have similar with Labour and Scotland. OK, it's unlikely they will need SNP support soon, but of course they would never risk Scottish independence because it would lose them potentially 50 seats at Westminster! The Tories would be better off without Scotland, but part of their raison d'etre is unionism. Oh, and it appears Nadja has been watching old footage of Selina Scott c.1980 for grooming tips :)
Not only that, they are falling for the EXACT same type of lies that brought Brexit. Catalan separatist have the same weird "we'll be better on our own"/"they need us more than we need them" rhetoric. As a Spaniard who lived in the UK from 2014 to 2020, it's driving me nuts.
Catalan citizen here. I've never felt interested in catalan independence, but I'm in constant contact with those who are. Like Brexit, it's something mostly emotional, something that most people is happy to casually support but not many want to pursue to the chaotic end.
Comparing the two is an oversimplification, to put it mildly. We too often try to compare movements we don't understand with those that we know and do at our own peril.
This decision should be up to the people of Catalonia/Basque country and no one else. Same goes for Scotland. Central governments in Madrid and London should not be able to decide the fate of everything.
The decision should lie with ALL citizens of Spain on what happens to their country, or do you classify people according to their residence in People A (the deciders: those living in BC and Cat) and People B (the takers: the rest). No, no, no...we are no longer in Middle Ages where noblemen decided the fate of ALL. Thankfully, International Law and the Spanish Constitution recognise this simple but relevant advancement: ALL citizens of a State should be equal to decide their common future. What Cameron did with Scotland was bollocks and Labour is fully in the wrong in this issue (PSOE should not travel down that path, or else...PSOE is posed to disappear and be replaced by another party). To turn your argument around: the Scottish Government (or Catalan for that matter) should not be able to impose the breaking up of a State in which a vast majority of people living in it are against a break-up. Same rights for ALL!!!!!!
Regardless on how you feel about Catalonia, we can all agree that Sanchez is an idiot. He played himself and now he is surprised at the direction Catalan politics are taking
When conservatives where in power separatism was at its highest, and independentist parties had the most seats and even held an anticonstitutional vote for independence. The conservative approach of oppression only made them stronger, meanwhile Sanchez managed to win the most seats for the socialist party in the region, independentist parties lost seats in the last elections and support has decreased a lot. It seems to me you don’t know much about my country, and if this channel is where you get information about it I can see why that is.
@@juancarlosalonso5664 no te preocupes, yo SÍ se mucho de España, y lo que dice el comentario de arriba es cierto. Sánchez está haciendo perder votos al PSOE debido a su política de pactos, subiendo solo en Cataluña. Véase Galicia, con el peor resultado histórico del PSdeG. Qué genio es Sánchez ¿eh? Perdiendo votos, cediendo en todo, y sin presupuestos.
Why would you even want it. It's a line on a map. It means nothing. Your trade is likely mostly with EU countries. That means that when independence comes you are out of the EU and just became unattractive to business. And no, you cannot have independence and stay in the EU. Even for Scotland the EU made it clear they would have to reapply as all other new members. It might go faster, but would still take a few years. Have you learned nothing from Brexit?
@DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt When I read these colonialist comments talking about an "annoying language", I can understand why catalans and basques want their own state
This happens to me sometimes in Civ 6 for not having enough amenities for my population, the neighboring civ might also be using the Amani governor which makes you lose 2 loyalty per turn, I would recommend sending a spy to incapacitate the governor and build more entertainment complexes
As an Arizonan, I stand with my brothers and sisters in Basque and Catalonia. Arizona's name comes from a Basque term meaning "the oak tree," and our flag was chosen specifically to resemble that of Catalonia to remember where our original settlers came from. Basque shepherd communities still wander from Fredonia AZ to Casper WY.
The House Speaker, Armengol, it's no "ally" of the president propped up by separatism and she is not "native catalan"... She was the PSOE president of Balearic Islands, literally from the same party as Sanchez, and she lost the regional elections in the conservative wave that gave many regions of Spain to PP and propped the general elections. As many ex-regional presidents, she got a new high profile position, in part to calm the people in the party angry at the consecuences of the strategy of last Sanchez goverment. By the way, the Balearic Islands are not even coloured on the map. I expect better from you guys. This part seems kinda porly researched, and more focused on proving a narrative... Also, you have to understand the regional administration of Spain to understand the increase on separatist parties. Spain is closer to a federation than a centralized goverment, and regions have a lot of autonomy. In the regions with historical strong nationalistic parties like Catalonia or the basques they have obtained lots of concesions from the central goverment, mostly beneficial for their population. Learning from this, other regions with less strong nationalistic movements have started to emulate them, signaling that you need more political weight on national politics and investments. This is the case of Galicia (BNG) and Valencia (Compromís). They use the "national identity" to scrap votes yes, but they are nor crazy nor stupid and know that being independent is not viable nowadays. They grow because they are seen by the population of the regions as someone that wants to protect the regions interests at regional level and at the capital. Hell, even "proper" spanish regions like Soria or Teruel are making regionalistic parties in order tto protect their interest on a national level because they have very low populations and representation and they dont want to be forgotten while they slowly die. The debate for reforming the regional administration it's an open one in the country, altough it is not as important as economical ones like healthcare quality, depopulation, housing, etc...
Exactly. They are mostly on decline (except EHB), it just seems like they are on the rise because 1) Sánchez completely depends on them and thus has to cater to them *a lot* and 2) reason 1 makes these parties more appealing on the subnational level for "being useful" (i.e. people like their vote to go towards "politicians that achieve things").
This analysis is not too accurate for Catalonia. Separatist parties will likely lose majority in the Catalan parliament. Separatism is not in the rise, in fact it’s declining. It peaked in 2017 and it may have reached 50% back then, but it has always been very divided. Currently, many Catalan nationalists are disappointed and dissatisfied of how the failed referendum happened and do not trust Catalan nationalists parties. If you add Covid in the mix and the fact that the current government in Spain is more tolerant towards Catalan people and have a more plurinational view of the country, the result is that independence is no longer that popular. Especially among young people. The overall feeling is of being fed up with the situation. If Catalan separatists lose majority in the Catalan parliament, things will likely change and we will move on
Given the amount of factual inaccuracies in this video, it really makes me wonder how much of what I've learned about the rest of the world from this channel is actually true. I will think twice about coming back to your content.
I really loved your past work, but from a certain point, all I see is "will country X or Y break apart?" Sorry, but I will not be watching click-baity and doom-without-proper-evidence-predicting videos anymore.
Spain would be the first one to acept it, coz it will be interested the new countries to adquire a proportional portion of the sovereign debt of Spain.... if the countries get independent with no agreement, Spain debt would collapse the economy of Spain and of the EU. That's why the EU will be the first to be interested for any independence to be carried out peacefully.
Spain has 3 regions of wealth concentration: Madrid, Basque Country, Catalunia. Now imagine two chunks separating :) Spain would drop to the bottom of EU map.
If you think it a little bit more, you will understand that half the basque and catalan companies and money would leave for madrid or valencia inmediately, and with less competition other spanish companies would replace basque and catalan ones. It would hurt, but the main problem is not economic.
"Pedro Sánchez secured supoort from separatist parties […] and the deal garanteed their support for the next 4 years and the approval of the national budgets until 2027"? False! The good version is not always that of the strong part. The support was only to make Pedro Sánchez president again and to negociate farther support and budgets as it was told by ERC and by Junts per Catalunya.
@@christofferthorsson607 They would, allowing a new member state requires approval by all member states. Other countries could also veto it to prevent their own independance movements in their countries
Spain should’ve considered extending dual citizenship to Latin American people. Paint it as a form of reparation whilst in reality bringing in educated migrants and cheap labor. Spain would have been the U.S. of Europe with a population and manufacturing boom
@@arisplugis5197 most of "Catalonian history" is actually Valencian history, also Valencian was already a thing before Catalan was a thing, Catalonia didn't exist until very recently, it was the County of Barcelona INSIDE of the Aragon Crown, while Valencia was already a kingdom. But then lies and history re-writes by Catalonian nationalists did the rest. Read some history before saying non sense please... 💀
This comment section is disgusting(belstar in particular the rest I imagine is mainly ignorance, the knowing all kid that likes parading what it isn't there), denying our good Galician language so brazenly with its rich history and impact as a sister language to Portuguese(our common origin as Galician-Portuguese) and one of the most important tongues in medieval Europe, negationist arguments such as this have long been part of the agenda of the Spanish far right and PP's rotten core, VOX supporters roam free the lowest of the low. You just know how this people roll attacking our culture our identity and everything that makes us cause at the end of the day they have nothing only have ignorance and stupidity to fall back on, let them remember when Castilian was in diapers Galician-Portuguese was a tongue of renown matched by others such as Provenzal, only through the evil of conquest and occupation this prestige faded(creating a Linguistic conflict with Castilla as the prestige language after Galician nobility and priests were changed by those from Castile, what we know as the start of the dark centuries for Galician language) but we Galician kept nurturing and taking care of our language no matter the oppression threw at us from Castile, the Catholic Kings and Paca herself during his dictatorship. Our ancient language lives in and out of Galicia even if our Galician Government does little to protect variants such as Galego-Asturiano, Galego-verciano Among others, with speakers being unrecognised and left vulnerable in a way that reminds us of French linguist policy mainly from Castilla e León and Asturias itself but with PP and PSOE being the true architects of this. Indeed our Galician nationalist movement lead by the BNG(you could call it the heir to old Partido Galeguista and the Irmandades da Fala, Galicia nationalism is no imitation but a complex movement tired of exploitation of our rich homeland and general abuse carved from Madrid) is stronger than ever achieving their highest result in the last Galician elections 25 seats in the Galician parliament, this is the most support it has ever gotten-happened alongside the fall of PSOE's branch office PSDG to 9 seats-(with Ana Poton their candidate one of the most popular nationalist leaders, she brought the party back to form after their 2009 fall) overlooking its rise with such arrogance fellow commenters might be convenient to you all but it is a beacon of hope of a Galicia not exploited by the interests of the corrupt and Co from Albert's party and other such Spanish delegations. Specially now that all those contracts given to their cronies and family are popping out across the news, Feijoo's and Rueda's families clans of corrupt politicians similar to the old caciques Castelao denounced back on his day. A boa Galiza has been ruled by their ilk for far too long, people that cares not for our nation or for their people and are just goons that serve their self interest and their corrupt central parties. I am forever hopeful that Galicia awakens with our new generations before there is nothing left to defend, the way towards 2028 will be as key as the rest of this path. A maldade en cada esquina, carallo!
We certainly should as decades of rule from PPDG have left in an uncertain position many of our public services and no effort has been made to diversify our economy and overall revenue(with eucalyptus pulp-Galicia is the foremost European land with eucalyptus- and tourism being among their horrible ideas), that both key sectors agricultural and maritime have not been treated great by their governments particularly with our Rias more and more polluted each day, drastic policy change we need and yet as long as mainly old Galician voters turn to PPDG(that has a firm grip in our Galician TVG and the main newspapers in our country as they depend upon public founding) there are huge obstacles even for a popular BNG to overcome but certainly we cannot go on as we are.
@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn I don't think Galicia is a colony lmfao that's like saying the Algarves were gonna be like Brazil. Galicia would be a Portuguese province not a colony idk what you are on about.
@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn Why does this not make sense you are saying Portugal integrating Galicia would be like Portugal and Brazil. That makes no sense because Brazil was a colony ofcourse it would be bad for them. In the context of Galciia they would be integrated as a province like the Algarves the muslims in the south who were not treated like a colony like in Brazil. In fact if you wanted to use the different ethnicities to suggest exploitation it would have already been seen in the Algarves because the muslims were more different to the Portuguese than Galicians to Portuguese who are more similar. Yet the Algarves are fine right now so why would people who if theoretically there were was a racial factor in play would the people more closer to Portuguese(the Galicians) be treated worse than the people who are farther from being Portuguese (The Muslims)? Galicia would not be treated like a colony it would be a province that would be treated well.
@@quiquemarquez3211 Very interesting I hope it goes well for you guys is there a good video online to learn about Galician politics? It sounds interesting.
@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn Nah I just assumed you looked at my Portugal pfp and thought I was implying that so I went with it. Why else did you say Galicia would be worse then Brazil?
As a Spaniard I just want to add that in the separatist regions the Spaniards are a majority, just less willing to vote. This may (in a very cursed future) enable the separatists to declare independence, however, that will cause a Yugoslavia-like collapse with a war probably, which nobody wants.
CORRECTION: At 3:05, we describe Francina Armengol as a Catalan native. As commenters have pointed out, this isn't quite correct - she is in fact from the Balearic Islands, where Catalan is widely spoken. Apologies for this sloppy error, and we hope you nonetheless enjoyed the video.
All good!
All BAD!
If you cannot tell Languages from citizenship, I guess every English-speaking Irish is an Englishman.
Catalan native speaker whould be good enough.
In the Balearic Islands, four dialects of Catalan are spoken: Mallorquin, Menorquin, Ibicecenco and Formenterense, in fact. Can do better C+. 🤣
"Here lies half of Spain, it was killed by the other half."
- Mariano José de Larra (1836)
I thought that was Ireland.
Carlistbros stay winning
Told in the height of the first Carlist War: (1833-1840)
“I am firmly convinced that Spain is the strongest country of the world,
Century after century trying to destroy herself and still no success”
spain is not a country ,, its just like austrian hungary empire and yugoslavia
@@utkarshverma7 And the UK, they are imperial sovereign states, my country is Scotland not Britain.
@@thevis5465 I don't remember anyone forcing James Stuart to become king of England and I don't remember anyone forcing the Scottish parliament to sign the acts of union. Scotland even had a referendum and voted to stay. Scotland may well leave when the next referendum occurs but it's disingenuous at best to pretend Scotland was forced into the UK against its will and can't leave.
The fact you're comparing the UK to Austria-Hungary and Yugoslavia makes you a disgusting person considering the thousands of people who were genocided during the Balkan wars. The situations are incomparable.
@@utkarshverma7Or like France (occitan, breton, corsican, basque, catalan, flemish) or italy (sardinian, ladin, italian dialects that are as distinct as languages) or the UK (welsh, scottish, and you massacred every other language)
As a matter of fact, multiple languages are not a Spain-exclusive thing
@@Eltener123 I think Scotland _was_ forced to sign the Act of Union, but by their bankruptcy after the failure of the Nova Scotia colony, not by the English.
This episode is seriously behind the times. We got home 🇨🇵 from Girona in Catalonia yesterday and follow the Spanish and Catalan press. The wave of separatism surrounding the referendum (and its aftermath) has passed, and the flavour of the moment is "increased autonomy within Spain".
Exactly. Anyone that's been following Catalan opinion polls (not voter intention polla) knows this for years now.
As a catalan i i think you wrongly assumed that the fact that nobody talks about it with you means that no one is interested on the matter, as i said that statement is wrong, people doesn’t talk about it with foreginers because we know you wouldn’t understand a a thing about our fight, in the end you already have your own country and don’t know how precious it is to have a country for your culture.
@@llucsalaprat6508 I didn't talk to anyone about independence during my holiday, but the number of "star" flags on private balconies has dropped enormously.
I am only writing about what I saw.
Of course, you might move in circles where EVERYONE is pro-independence.
I don't "have a country" (other people own them both) but have 2 passports. 🇨🇵🇪🇺🇬🇧
Good luck 🤞🍀👍.
I do understand the history and the culture of Catalonia, so that overt implication was rather childish 🚸.
You sound like a Catalan Brexiteer. 🤔
@@andrewrobinson2565 I am not a brexiteer, i defend the existence of the EU and that catalonia must stay in the EU but i want to be out of spain, is that compatible, i hope it is…
@@andrewrobinson2565 And i don’t move in cercles that are radical in the independence matter, i think i have a really relaxed posture compared to other people i would even consider a federation of iberian states but at least for me Catalonia will be always more important than spain.
Just one thing, Francina Armengol is not Catalan she is from the Balearic Islands. Another’s key issue, the support to make Sanchez prime minister does not include support for budgets
And a third one: at 6:50 it's shown as if the coalition consist of 4 parties, while it's only made up of 2, PNV and PSOE/PSE
Isn't balearic islands and coastal valencia ethnically catalan?
@@Kmlcvlk999NO. We speak different dialects of Catalan but we are NOT Catalan
@@Kmlcvlk999 they are culturally very close, but different enough to not "feel" as the same people. Obviously some part of the population "feels" part of a greater catalan speaking country, but hell, there is even people that want independency without the catalans, and also people thaat HATE the idea of being compared to them. Wild thing, but I guess it happens everywhere in the world
@@JOKERATMI've known nobody who can distinguish between western catalan and valencian.
On both sides of the Sènia river people speak the same dialect but some people say these people speak different languages. No! False!
From Hospitalet de l'Infant to near Castelló de la Plana Alta people speak only one dialect of one language that can be call català or valencià.
From Pallars (French border) to Guardamar (in the Alacant province) we all speak western dialects (with small differences, especially inside the Pallars).
So…
València CAE is not Catalunya CAE (Comunitat autònoma espanyola) but there are other meanings of Catalunya.
As much it is not the same València CAE, València Spanish province or València city, there many meanings of Catalunya and one is the country of the people who speak valencian or catalan (Països Catalans).
Worry about tldr's increasing reliance on clickbait title images
Last year has seen a shift in their coverage.
@@NewDealDem2187 from what? sorry i have not been keeping up with this channel
The video titles function more like sub headlines with the text in image being the headline. Clickbait implies misleading or sensationalising. “Could spain break apart?” Is snappier and - admittedly - more urgent than “why separatists are on the rise in Spain”, but not unreasonably or misleadingly so. Separatist parties winning pluralities in regional elections does make the prospect of succession referendums, and these regions breaking from Spain, more credible. There is nuance, and such referendums are hardly a done deal, which is explained in the video, but I don’t think that in itself makes the headline clickbait.
@@yixiuss eh, maybe just vibes, but a lot more of ‘what if the worst case scenario’/more clickbaity then before. Ive enjoyed the channel for awhile, but I think they’ve kinda fallen into a rhythm.
@@answers_to_penguin personally I think ‘Spain falling apart’ is pretty baity compared to ‘big issues leads to rise in local/regional parties’.
Catalan separatists being called "junts" or together is very ironic 😂
As ironic as military dictatorships being called "junta"s, which a Spanish-speaking country must have invented.
@@OPVSNOVVMjunta in spanish might be translated as council, not much to do with togetherness
The irony is that spain is a fascist country, and the royal family is the biggest example of that. Without the fascism spain would have been a free and democratic republic today.
@@nadie516 That's enlightening, thank you!
Technically the official name is “Junts per Catalunya” which would be translated as “Together for Catalonia”. “Junts” is just the abbreviation.
Guys, what happened here? Usually your analysis might not be ultra-depth, but are right. In this case, though, there are quite a lot of failures. From Catalonia part: Armengol is from Mallorca, not Catalonia. The referendum thing is usual election talk, but no formal initiative had been taken (nor will be, because support for separation in Catalonia is in historical minimum and separatist know they will lose it. Maybe when the right wing is in government they have a chance), and Puigdemont have as much a chance of being president of the Generalitat as Richard Tice to be PM. BTW: the only party bringing the immigration to the forefront is Junts, being very right wing as they are. The government will be of Socialist party with support of ERC, and that is already well known unless something really big happens. About the Basques: EHBildu is not an "offshot of ETA". Some parties in the coalition (particularly EH) were. Look, politics in Spain is not chaotic, is just complicated. There are more axis than just left-right, like the unitarian-plurinational. And autonomic parties move also in a gradient between autonomism and separatism. So, when an analysis this in depth is done, you need a bit more expertais, and also consult a lot of sources, because many things are heavily polarized. Some of this polarization have filtered in your analysis and it shows.
Yeah, I was really baffled at this analysis. There are so many things wrong with it, it's hard to even know where to start.
I think the problem here is the political situation in Spain can not be explain in a 10 minutes video, you need at least 1 hour only for Catalonia and explain ERC, Junts, Omnium, CUP, ANC and what not 😅
As always, TLDR sucks at anything related to Spanish politics.
@@EclipseZer0 I mean, tbf Spanish journalism isn't that good either...
Not to mention what they say at 1:20 about the statute of autonomy. They say it as if they somehow devastated Catalonia’s self government, when in fact, they gained way more autonomy that they previously had (Spain’s constitution doesn’t really consider taking back permanently competences that have been given and once the decision is final and accepted by the courts) and only a few articles were deemed unconstitutional
As a Portuguese citizen I wish everything goes well for Spain although I'm not exactly certain what going well would be.
We both have a rise in far right parties
@@gonzalotorneralonso417 No. There are no far right parties with any substantial support in either country. Both countries' politics are entirely dominated by far-left and socialist political parties. Chega isn't remotely far right, and nor is Vox. They're mainstream conservatives. Perhaps Ergue-te in Portugal could be described as far right, but they have little to no support, and less than 0.1% of the vote.
If something bad happened to Spain, yoink Galicia so Portugal can finally be a line on a map
Don’t trust coverage of Spain or Portugal that comes from England, it’s bs.
@@VVGRestoration Stop. Do not define Portuguese politics by a warped American Overton window. Chega's regressive "conservatism" is well removed from our national consensus and well deserving of the far-right label. There is nothing "mainstream" about it. And doubly ridiculous when you label parties like BE that are barely left of typical social democracy as "far-left".
Short answer: No
Long Answer:
omg sejozwak can you gyatt my sigma
Separatism is on the rise? Really? Catalan separatist parties are polling lower today than the results they got in the 2021 regional elections. For the first time in decades the nationalists might not get a majority in the Catalan parliament. How on Earth is that a rise?
You can not determinate how much independentists there are if you dont make a referendum directly asking it, many CUP or Comuns-Sumar voters are going to vote for ERC this election and many ERC voters will vote for Junts or PSC, but thats because ERC did it pretty bad, nothing related with independentism
Depending on what polls you look. Some say they will keep the majority, others don't. That won't take than between 2010-2024 there has been a separatist government and even if they lose and the socialist form a government in 4 years there could be a separatist government again. And many polls don't count Catalan Alliance (right wing populist separatist party).
Psoe PP and Vox are nacionalist too. Just Spanish nationalists, not region nationalists.
The real deal is not actually independence, but having a fiscal superiority compared to the rest of Spain, since these regions have always benefited from less fiscal pressure in order to attract foreign investment and industry, thus creating a feedback loop in which they have been the only ones to get richer, in detriment of the rest of Spain. Now that that reversed due to the instability brought upon by the referendum and the displacement of investment to Madrid and other regions (that have a more liberal tax code than Cataluña), they are complaining even more, and demanding special treatment. Last year Cataluña got 70.000 million € in debt pardoned as part of basically blackmail to keep Sanchez in power.
About the Basque Country, it is well known that the roots of the Basque movement for independence lie in a supremacist and racist idea of the rest of Spain (look up Sabino Arana), which was later followed by the terrorists from ETA, many of whom have a voice in parliament now. It is disgusting. The real question is how long it will take for the rest of Spain to be fed up, not them.
Obviously it is far more complex, with the oppression of languages during the dictatorship and all. But it is undeniable that they have received more care and attention than the rest of Spain. In the end, it all comes down to the education and ideals passed down through the extremely manipulated educational system, that each community controls, with 0 centralization.
The real beneficiaries of these movements are the politicians, the rest of us (all of us) would only see downsides. It is also ridiculous since Spain is one of the most lenient and tolerant countries when it comes to the regional identities within. Imagine if the centralist iron fist of France was brought upon them. It is all a bunch on nonsense and hypocrisy in order to distract from the real problems haunting the country.
“I am firmly convinced that Spain is the strongest country of the world. Century after century trying to destroy herself and still no success.”
- Otto von Bismarck, addressing Spain's secessionist problem.
For the last time Bismarck never said that, that quote connot be found in German
Fake quote.
Centuries after centuries? Spain as a nation was invented an created just roughly 2 centuries ago, since its first constitution, which defines itself as a nation , was manuscripted in 1812. Before it, Spain was just a kind of "Iberian Economic Community" rulled by a king that kicked out the rest of the Iberian kings, though he let each Basque territory be self ruled (independent , keeping their own parliaments and taxes), that's why the 4 Basque territories within Spain still collect their own taxes, have their own parliaments and goverments and are called "historical territories" in the current Spanish constitution of Spain (since their institutions precede to the "nation state" of Spain). French revolution invented the concept of "Nation" and homogonization, and then the brother of "King Charles of Spain" tries to copy-paste it if the spanish servants would kill his brother (then King Charles) and place him as a new king of a new invented "nation-state of Spain"....Charles lost it and only then Basques were forced to become "Spanish nationals". Which by action-reaction created the Basque National movement and other national movements .... and thus the Spanish non-national Empire gets keeps gettind fractured by the nationalism concept .... In the independence processes of the colonies of Spain in the Americas was started by people with strong Basque heritage and influence, like Simon Bolivar amongst others.... In my opinion the invention and implememtation of Spain as the current "nation-state" made it be as weak as ever for the last 2 centuries... It's first national or nationalist consutition of spain is proposed in 1812, and the current "nation-state" constitution of Spain is of 1978. As a nation Spain is "new" and even the US has a far longer and stronger "nation-state" history (simce 1788).
@@SabinJBB Are you nuts?🤣
@citrosoda5370 The US is not a nation state.
Spaniard here. Contrary what it might look actually the current situation is very stable. In Catalonia the independent movement is very much in declined. There are going to be elections for the catalonian party on May 12th and everything points that the nationalist parties are not going to get the majority in the parliament (first time in a decade). Plus, the 2 main catalonian parties (ERC and Junts) just can't stop fighting with each other and there is no way they will do a coalition. They rather join the PSE (catalonian PSOE).
In the Basque country, both nationalist parties (Bildu and PNV) have made clear that they don't pursue independence but rather gaining more auto government.
Great. Nationalist party in Germany is on the decline too. - We gonna come over there and defend Spain if necessary. Puigdemon had the audacitiy to say, they wanna join EU after being independant. Not going to happen.
@@gunwu9084 you sound American
That's good to know!
Some polls say separatism will keep the majority, others don't. They have been in power between 2010-2024. In May 12 we will know if we have 4 more years. There is also Catalan Alliance that they will likely enter in Parliament.
@@arnauplanas7169 even if they get a majority there is no way they would come to an agreement (ERC and Junts).
The islands (canary and balearic islands) we are not considered as part of Spain in the video 😢
I live in Spain. Support for separatism in both Catalonia and the Basque Country ebbs and flows, and neither is likely to vote in the majority for independence. Basques actually already have a sweet fiscal deal, expect Catalonia to seek the same.
ETA was not a armed separatist group, it was a terrorist group
Indeed, they are terrorists
PP is not a nationalist right-wing party, it is a neofascist party.
Could not be both? Separatist and terrorist?
As the GAL was both terrorist and unionist.
Actually it was both, among other things
@@RUclipsMarc722 yes, and a lemon is a fruit, but you dont handle someone a lemon and say "taste this fruit"
As a spanish, the idea that separatists are on the rise is completey false. In fact, they're in their utter downfall. The problem is Pedro Sanchez and his amnesty law, which puts the separatists more on top than the whole spanish population regardless where a normal spanish person is from. Separatists "are on the rise" only in paper. The only thing that puts them "in rise" is Pedro Sanchez's political ageda on dealling with catalan, basque and galician separatists, as well as russian influence.
Spain has this problem, because it has always been tolerant of other cultures.
You just have to look at France, it not only had Catalans and Basques, but also Corsican Bretons, etc.
All eliminated from the roots, everything that was not like Paris eliminated. The problem is over.
Well, Switzerland also has 4 different languages and very diverse culture. To manage this, the country is organised very federal, with a lot of regional independence, and a lot of tolerance towards other cultures.
And still, Switzerland is probably the most stable country in the world.
I would say it is BECAUSE of the tolerance in politics, not despite of it.
What makes Switzerland unique, is the way politics work. All executives are councils of 3-9 people. And they always include all major parties.
This means, Switzerland never has an "opposition". And it also means, that when the voting outcome changes after a next election, the is not a drastic left-to-right swing, but only a slight shift. Like this, parties are much more incentivised to shift to the middle and compromise than polarise.
In case of Spain, this would mean an executive counsil, that includes one catalan (since they are significantly populous) and more regional independence.
@@aurelspecker6740 yeah but you definitively cannot take Switzerland as an example that can be followed, the country truly is a unique case in the world, wether it's politically, culturally or economically speaking.
Well I guess Spain needs to do the same with Catalans and basques
I don't think that our mediterranean Brothers (italian here) Will be so stupid to risk leaving the EU. If catalonia, basque, canary, whatever ever leave Spain, they Will be blocked forever from joining the EU. What for? It seems to me that it's Just posturing
The EU is already falling apart being led by incompetent people
Thing is eu wants to remove vetoe, also you understimate how bad spanish economy would after those looses, also, due to pyrenees spain would loose land conections with teh hole eu
Catalan here. We are very aware of the current situation that would form if we left Spain as of right now. It is very undesirable and extremely infuriating that Spain's last backup to force us into staying in it is to threaten to isolate us economically if we did succeed. Aldough, while this is far from an ideal situation, there's no reason to believe that Spain would be able or even want to keep Catalonia and the Basque Country out of the EU forever.
Firstly, the right to veto is as of right now being reevaluated by the entire EU, to the point that it's quite likely that it gets scrapped and substituted by qualified majority. Is such case, the accession of the newly independent countries in the EU would be very smooth and quick, since they would have already been part of the EU in the past.
Secondly, even if the right to veto stays in place and Spain decides to use it to stop the Basque Country and Catalonia, that wouldn't be something that would last forever. Denying the entry of Catalonia and the Basque Country to the EU would deteriorate Spain's image internationally, since the independent countries would be a perfect fit for the EU, but Spain just decides not to let them in because of past issues. There would be a lot of pressure from the EU to let them in, and eventually, Spain would have to step back.
Finally, we've been assuming that Spain would veto Catalonia and the Basque Country from rejoining the EU, but, why would they even do that? It isn't like they would be able to convince them to rejoin Spain by actively deteriorating their economies. Spain would gain nothing from doing something as stupid as this, so why the fuck even bother. The best course of action from Spain in a situation like this would be to try to improve its relation with their new neighbors. This would help the three countries to keep their financial relations, and it would lower the impact that Spain would suffer from such regions leaving.
All in all, I have no doubt that the situation would be dire politically, but eventually, the Basque Country and Catalonia would be able to rejoin the EU in no more than a few years.
I understand your points. The scrapping of unanimity Is more geared towards other issues in my opinion (i.e. preventing minnows like Hungary from paralyzing the whole block). Don't forget though that very few member states Will want to foster independent movements. Spain Is not the only country currently facing such issues. Just saying. Of course I don't have a crystal ball, but that's what Logic says, at least in the short term
It's not as simple as that. It's not just Spain that will decide whether Catalonia can join the EU. Many regions in Europe seek independence, but if Catalonia were to achieve it, it might face opposition from countries like Romania, Germany, Italy, and Belgium. This sets a precedent against EU stability and unity.
Spain could consider a federated state model like Germany's, but outright independence isn't beneficial for anyone in the EU. Addressing social and economic issues should take precedence over nationalist agendas without clear plans for succession. We shouldn't be swayed by populist ideas, as seen in the UK.
Furthermore, Barcelona would suffer economically. Many companies would relocate, prioritizing stability and EU market access over nationalist movements. Assuming Catalonia could seamlessly remain in the EU post-secession is overly optimistic.
Catalonia the vast part of people is no imdependentist accord Catalan independentist goverment enquiries.
If the politically active people are like that, who cares about the rest?
@@Omer1996E.Cthe rest are going to mobilize when it's too late, like Brexit opposers in UK.
Not according electoral results.
14% or 40%of the Basque people voted for separation? She speaks so fast.
As other have commented, this video contains so many inaccuracies that you would do well in deleting it and either making a new one or focusing on topics you know better about. Something that has not been so pointed out is that separatist/nationalist parties in Catalonia have always won the majority of seats at the election and, for the first time, they may NOT do. So what rise is this?
Are you expect credibility and professionalism from a self declared marxist "news" site?
Independentists parties may not get most of the seats, or may get them again.
Most of voters don't use to switch between unionist and independentist parties.
PSOE will rise? Probably, but Ciutadanos will probably disappear from the chamber.
they do in the Basque Autonomous Community of Euskadi, for its Basque Parliament, and for the first time in the seats allocated for Euskadi in the Spanish Parliament the Basque National parties have gotten the majority of the votes and seats.
@@SabinJBBNot even Bildu has openly talked about independency or referendum during their campaign.
This was one of the most poorly researched videos I’ve ever seen, as is most of the coverage from my country that comes from england suspiciously enough. Do they still see us as enemies today? That’s definitely how it feels like too often.
Don't you worry, all of Europe will defend Spain eventually.
Black Legend moment
Give it a rest, are you Spanish really that pathetic? we don't even think of you as the main enemy anyway, that's always been France.
English media loves to paint Spain in darker light than it actually is. Makes them feel better about their declining nation I guess.
Care to explain instead of just throwing ad hominem fallacies around?
A shorter analysis: Rich regions want to ensure they will still be rich by political leverage
It's not only a matter of money. I'm Catalan. Spain promises some inversions in the national budget that aren't true. However, in Spain Catalan and Basque nationalist are often attacked by spanish nationalists, seeing Catalan and Basque language as something inferior and a problem to Spanish unity. Spanish police in Catalonia (luckily we have our own but they control airports, homeland security, borders, etc.) don't bother to learn our regional languages. They are different, they think different, we consider ourselves as different people, like French or Italians can be. In fact, in 1640 both Catalonia and Portugal seceded from Spain, but Spain preferred to control Catalonia and abandoned Portugal. What annoys catalans the most is a national lose, in 1714. Before we had more autonomy, more rights, but after the Succession War, Phillip V created a more united and centralized state and catalans Lost many privileges that they had before. Catalan separatism rose again after 1850-1870, when the consciousness of nation states and liberalism rose, just like German or Italian so did Catalan nationalism, not separatism, but a strong regional Catalan identity, with Catalan as its only language. In fact the Spanish language presence in Catalonia is nowadays big due to migrations from other parts of Spain.
@@arnauplanas7169 Una clase magistral de verdades a medias
@@arnauplanas7169 Catalonia is just Andalucía but talking even weirder: beaches, tourists, flamenco and even toros. They banned the toros to look different, and everyone got mad about it.
Galicia, Asturias and the Basques are different cultures. No toros, no flamenco, no underage relationships. Meanwhile Catalonia is just a slight variation of standard Spain. Deal with it.
@@DudeWatIsThis You're a total ignorant about Catalonia or just a troll. Catalonia has even its own language. Catalonia is as different as Euskadi can be from Spain. I have already said why in my previous answer. Of course we have beaches... since we have the Mediterranean sea next to us... Flamenco is not part of Catalan culture, sardanes are.. But given your comment on underage relations I will assume you're a troll
@@arnauplanas7169 Pero si la sardana es igual que los bailes esos del Sur, hombre. Vente para Galicia o Asturias y verás lo que es DISTINTO, pero de verdad.
Lo que más me molesta de vuestro separatismo (aparte de que os inventáis la mitad de la historia), es que tratáis al resto de España como si fuera homogénea, y hay áreas que son mucho más distintas de la Meseta/Madrid de lo que lo es Cataluña. Vais de únicos e inimitables y sólo sois unos Andaluces que trabajan y hablan raro.
Poco tendrá de España una España sin Cataluña o el Pais Vasco, son parte integra de la nación, y su riqueza cultural nos enriqueze a todos. No habrá España sin Catalunya o Euskadi, más nos valdría llamarnos Castilla.
catalunya y el pais vasco son tan españoles como madrid
ok got it, Castilla
Eso es problema vuestro
Catalonia is an important part of Spain, but it’s naive to think that Catalonia would survive by itself if it’s separated from Spain and EU
@@somethinganything9170 lo dices como si no os importase a vosotros
Si os independizais vuestra economía muere y ya está decayendo
Sin contar el no tener reconocimiento internacional, libertad de movimiento, UE, etc
Failed to mention that Sanchez repeatedly claimed he would never ever form a coalition with separatists.
For over 10 years he said the same thing, all the way to months before elections. Then when he needed the extra votes. He said he “changed his mind” he didn’t lie, he just changed his mind aparently lol
She has a very soothing voice. British people in media do have a particular vibe.
Yeaaahh!! Nice British voice, Rubbish British content!!
The interesting thing is that the separatist movements in Spain are very leftwing, at least the Basque and Catalonian one - a thing that is almost unknown anywhere else in Europe. Usually ethno-nationalism and seperatism is considered rightwing. Usually also the more richer regions tend to be more conservative and capitalist, while poorer regions tend to be more attracted to socialism. In Spain these things are completely inverse.
Junts is NOT left wing lol
its also like this in Scotland and wales but its quite strange these days with how these guys want to start their own country but are also very politically correct and against patriotism. maybe this made more sense pre 2010 when there was more room for unique ideologies. but now they just act like American or Dutch leftists
There are several inaccuracies here. The Spanish government never jailed any Catalan separatist, but the judiciary as the separatists committed several criminal offences, including embezzlement. Many of them were pardoned by the left led Spanish government during the last parliament on exchange of political support from separatists parties. Furthermore, Pedro Sanchez made some public commitments as red lines: 1. Never pardoning jailed Catalan leaders, 2 never change the law to decriminalise secession and embezzlement, 3 never approved an amnesty law for those separatist leader who left the country and have never been tried in courts. Pedro Sanchez has broken every promise or red lines on exchange of political support.He lacks credibility when he committed there will be no referendum of independence...
You can call it what you want but the world knows what Spain does to other cultures within its borders. Spain wants a unitary state while a federal state would be so much better for everyone, especially Basque, Catalonia, Baleares, Navarra, Canaries and more regions with their own culture and languages. Why would a country want a territory within its borders while those living there don’t want to be part of that country? The Spanish government acted as a colonizer instead of going to talk with other nations inside the Spanish state to look if a common ground can be found. Sanchez seems to be the first PM with a little sense of realism in his bones.
@@RealConstructor you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. Spain is an extremely decentralised state, its constitution doesn’t truly consider the idea of the central government taking back the competences once they’ve been given to the autonomies (only temporarily and in extreme situations) and there are limits that try to preserve its cultural diversity (such considering several languages co official and demanding only that at least a 25% of the teaching hours is in Spanish. A minimum that isn’t even accomplished).
The fact that Spain has so many languages in such a relatively small territory isn’t a coincidence. Go ask the French what happened to all the languages that they had
@@RealConstructorThis is a very accurate comment, for the 1960s, that is
Teniendo en cuenta que Llarena y Marchena fueron elegidos por el Gobierno del PP, para renovar el Poder Judicial y controlar así las sentencias del Procés, pues vale. Formalmente tendrás razón, pero la realidad no es esa.
@RealConstructor spain is not the result of any "colonization" but rather political and dynastic unions over hundreds of years l (same as other European nations). As pointed out by other commenters, the fact that spain still has different languages and culture is testament that the country itself has been extremely tolerant of its differences. How many people speak Gaelic? Or occitan? Or catalan and euskara in France?
The problem is that these regions of Spain like Catalunya have never been an independent country, not even an independent area, they were part of the kingdom of Aragon, where other regions of Spain were part. Then, a union of Kingdoms formed Spain. If any, Aragon could ask to be independent, because they were the centre of that crown, Castilla is another community that could be independent because they are the leading region where the Basque country belonged, but these parts don't want to be independent. In summary, Catalunya, the Basque country and other regions of Spain being independent is like a part of Texas wanting to be independent of the US, if any is the whole of Texas or nothing
I am surprised Tldr haven't made a single video on georgia
They have made a short video about georgia new bill and parliament brawl
@@patlotpotlot6154 where is it
@@ayushranjan9204 check it on their short youtube video page
One correction, in one picture you show the PNV regional coalition goverment. But Vox and Popular Party aren't in coalition with PNV in Vasque Country, Vox it's actually the oposite of PNV (they hate each other), PNV formed a Coalition Goverment with PSE ("Partido Socialista de Euskadi", PSOE) after 2020 regional election.
The worst thing is that they are not particularly in the rise; in Catalonia for example they have lost many votes and when asked in both the basque country in Catalonia they are way below 50% of the population. What is insane is that the president is choosing to get support from them making them the most important than ever when they are on historically low support.
This is wrong. Separatism in Spain is in decadence, separatists parties are lower than ever. Cataluña and País Vasco will never be inedependent.
Never say never...
Bro this video is so wrong, nobody in Spain wants to secede, but as the voting system benefits regionalist parties, these inflamatory speechs cause a lot of movement. Its just politics, Spain is not a formal democracy like other countries, but this seems to be overlooked by everyone.
More than 2 millions Catalans voted clearly for the independence holding massive rallies each 11th of September expressing this, a lot of Basque people also rally for the same reason. It simply can't be said that nobody in Spain wants to secede...😂
@@jordi6795 nobody who knows that is more benefitial to be leeching of the state, everyone knows its easier to have a better budget for the autonomous region than getting independence and suffering a lot in the process.
Also, do you know that there are more than 7.5 million Spaniards living in catalonia? 2 million isnt even a majority, most of them speak spanish.
Do you know you cant take test in spanish in cataluña? Do you know that if you want to do some administrative work related to the state in cataluña, you have to it in catalan, besides only 30% of the population there speaks catalan as their primary languague? Learn things before you speak 😂
Spain is not a formal democracy? What is it then?
@@jordi6795did you watch the video? Migration is a bigger topic in Catalonia than independence.
Another black legend production , lies , half-truths and manipulations are always ready to attack the very same idea of Spain. Why is all this eagerness?
I love the voice , tone and pace of this female reporter, pretty much alined with the main male counterparts! Please keep her in the loop :)
1:20 wow, that’s pretty manipulative
A ridiculously small part of the statute of autonomy was considered inconstitutional (such as not guaranteeing that a citizen con could communicate with the Catalan institutions in Spanish) and even after that small percentage of changes were removed, it still gave more autonomy than Catalonia had before
It’s like starting with 50, being given another 60, then saying that you could only be given an additional 55, and crying oppression on the streets because you were only given 105 instead of 110
Galicia could also become a part of Portugal. This would make the western sausage complete. Galician eve is in the same language sub-family as Portuguese.
The region south of Catalonia also is basically ethnically Catalan. Catolonia is bigger than its official borders. The little state in the pyrenees north of it, Andorra, is also ethnically Catalan.
Just a few notes: first the basque country has had a majority of nationalist parties since the dictaitorship ended (even before, but lets not delve into history), just that there are different "levels" of nationalism, some wanting to just finally get the rights that were signed with the Spanish goverment (Gernika), others wanting some sort of federal status to be at the same level as the central goverment, and last there is straight independence. There is a hole debate about that so I won't be getting into all the details.
Second, calling EH Bildu ETA is just propaganda. The party does represent the same political niche ETA represented in the turmoil of the end of the dictatorship, but the people in the party that are called out for being related to ETA are specifically the people that took part in its disolution. Calling EH Bildu ETA is just a tactic to dismis anything they may say or anyone that may do politics with them (specially when the opposition has nothing worth saying). It seems as though they wanted the basque left to leave diplomatic politics and return to take arms
Legacy of the Bourbons. They exported their French-style centralisation and authoritarianism once ascended power in Spain. You see France's monarchist ideology of the Bourbons, it wasn't changed despite the 1789 Revolution, so hard to feel surprise with what's going on to Spain.
I mean, Galician elections took place barely two months ago and the main pro-independent party got 30% of the votes, but let's just skip that and focus on Catalonia and the Basque Country, as always.
That's surprising I thought independence there was at 10%
@@9_9876 because said party, BNG, isn't ideologically pro-independence, but more on the pragmatic "we can push for independence if Spain stops beneffiting us". Actually, it is more a regionalist party than an independentist party.
Also the center-right party PP got an absolute majority so... What is noteworthy of those elections was the fact the center-left party PSOE, who current MP Sánchez leads, got its worst historical result, ever. Which might point towards PSOE leaking voters towards regionalist parties.
This video is honestly shockingly bad. They’re talking about a “resurgence” of separatism, meanwhile Catalan separatist parties are polling worse than the results they got in the 2021 election and are poised to not win a majority in the Catalan parliament for the first time in *decades*
I'm from Madrid and in the European elections I plan to vote PNV for one very simple reason. All the other parties are bonkers. My main concerns in Europe are energy independence, reigning in overregulation and putting a stop to anti-nuclear hysteria. I'm also concerned about defending freedom of expression and enlightenment values from encroaching authoritarianism. I don't give a crap about any of these raging identity wars people are obsessed over these days, or who speaks what language, who sleeps with who or who has what between their legs and not a single damned party speaks to any of these issues. They just drone on about endlessly about utterly meaningless nonsense.
Power-hungry president who is willing to sell everything to keep himself on the seat even for a single day more. That's what happened. Separatism was going down until these last years where they started to get everything they wanted.
And in Galicia: BNG (independentist left and sovereigntist left) 31,34% in 2024 regional elections.
I hope Spain remains intact, love from the UK🇬🇧❤🇪🇸
Free scotland from barry.
Self determination is a human right!!
@@Ladinia_unidaa human right which applies collectively to groups that are persecuted or victim of apartheid.
@@NAYRUthunder99 exactly, and that is what happened for tons of years during the dictatorship of Franco.
Did the Catalans receive any kind of compensation? Not at all.
Can they choose their path now and make their own laws that suit their people and situation?
Not at all
@@Ladinia_unida let me rephrase it.
A human right which applies collectively to groups that ARE persecuted or victim of apartheid.
Funny how in the cover map for the video number 3 falls on Cartagena, which also had its own independence movement (Cantonalism) in the 19th century - and there's still a few grognards who'd love to raise the red flag and secede from Murcia and the rest of Spain!
“From the River to the Sea, (Mediterranean), Catalonia will be Free.”
There's people "from" Catalonia living integrated all over the territory as well as people from all regions living in Catalonia.
My question is: Where exactly do the separatists expect to cut?
How are people still making these videos 7 years after the refrendum
There's still people who make videos about Franco's dictatorship too, like 50 years. I mean, it's something that happened, something terrible that happened in a supposed democratic country in the 21st century, in Europe. It is and it will be something to speak about.
@EnekoUrrutiaElorza pero desde hace años el independentismo está en decadencia. Al menos comparado con 2017. Entonces no entiendo por qué se sigue hablando de España como si estuviera apunto de disolverse.
just looked up for a Spain GDP per capita map, i'm not surprised, kinda similar situation like South and North Italy
Armengol is not Catalan, is from Mallorca guys
Hey, they got it close.
The native language of Mallorca is Catalan :)
Catalonia is fighting for its independence.
What about the other Catalan speaking regions,
Balearic Islands (Armengol's home region), and the Valencian Community?
@@KnightOfTheSadFigure
Madrid sending black shirted thugs to beat old ladies in Barcelona for the "crime of voting for independence"...isn't a good look.
Let the people of Catalonia choose.
Do they desire to be a sovereign country, or remain part of Spain, ruled by Madrid.
Like Canada let Quebec, and the UK/English, let Scotland.
@@MarcPagannobody in balerics or valencia wants independence. In Valencia it looks like the more independentist catalans get the more patriotic valencians get
Why is the mic so large and up so high? It's in front of her face
This can be only described as:
*"Ah sh!t, here we go again"*
Tbh most of Spanish history can be described like that
This video was full of wrong information and plain falsities, support for independence has decreased a lot in recent years since conservatives have been out of office.
With so many repetitions, spanish history ihas become basically chinese history on a smaller scale
2:11 , Why is the circle covering less than 40% if it's supposed to indicate that?
She says 14, not 40
Well , well , welll .....who could've thought being into government with separatist won't bring this exact same problem
That’s so shocking
It's not a problem, Separitism is desirable.
@@thevis5465 let's partition the UK
@@Gooigi384 If they vote to separate, go ahead.
@@Gooigi384 I vote SNP for this reason.
Hopefully, they will find a good solution that ensures everyone stays united, of their own volition.
As a Turk, I support Spanish unity. Separatists can be really annoying for sure. Those who are not suffering from it are very lucky.
As a portuguese, I hope the kurds manage to separate from you guys 😄
So why then Turkey recognized Kosovo??
So why then Turkey recognized Kosovo??
@@dzonikg28cuz it is a very muslim country and our ally
@@dzonikg28and we do like albanians ln history but not serbs and its still countuny
Something seems off about the basque country's size, but that may just be me
Another TLDR video on sepratism that fails to show any understanding of nuanced topics.
Nuance is difficult in 10 minutes. They could talk for hours about this subject. If you want nuance go elsewhere and be prepared to spend several hours watching and listening. For short duration videos, they do better than most, though not always great.
But they are not a multi billion dollar news company with offices everywhere, they are an internet outfit with a limited number of staff.
@@bzuidgeest the fact they get the motivation and in some cases who even wants sepratism wrong it's probably a topic they should avoid. Belgium, Scotland and now Spain, they simply don't understand the topics well enough.
@@jono_cc2258 they give the perspective of an outsider which isn't surprising. That perspective is quite different then how an insider would view it. I remember the Belgium one too. It wasn't that bad. I was exactly how I expected that kind of thing to be reported in foreign media. It can be very useful to know how the outside world views something, especially without the emotions attached.
Also don't think just because you see the nuance that others do too. Brexit is a prime example. There was no benefit, just the emotion of getting out and now they are paying for that. Brexitteers would claim nuance, but the outside world thinks differently and is a lot more factual.
You offer them a hand and they take your arm, they want more and more and more in exchange for very little. A lot of spaniards are tired of this, not a single party can offer a serious solution and all of them take us for fools.
You're lying
*Btw am I right to hear 3 different voices at **0:00**, **0:02** & **0:38**? 😂*
It's an interesting paradox in Spain and the UK. Socialists in Madrid need support from separatists so they give them more autonomy. But they could never support independence because that would reduce their chances of forming a national coalition.
We have similar with Labour and Scotland. OK, it's unlikely they will need SNP support soon, but of course they would never risk Scottish independence because it would lose them potentially 50 seats at Westminster! The Tories would be better off without Scotland, but part of their raison d'etre is unionism.
Oh, and it appears Nadja has been watching old footage of Selina Scott c.1980 for grooming tips :)
In Spain, socialists, separatists and immigrants from Arab/African countries all try to use each other as useful idiots.
Have these seperatist movements not learned anything from Brexit? Seperating for the sake of seperating is pretty dumb.
Truth.
Not only that, they are falling for the EXACT same type of lies that brought Brexit. Catalan separatist have the same weird "we'll be better on our own"/"they need us more than we need them" rhetoric. As a Spaniard who lived in the UK from 2014 to 2020, it's driving me nuts.
Well said.
Catalan citizen here. I've never felt interested in catalan independence, but I'm in constant contact with those who are. Like Brexit, it's something mostly emotional, something that most people is happy to casually support but not many want to pursue to the chaotic end.
Comparing the two is an oversimplification, to put it mildly. We too often try to compare movements we don't understand with those that we know and do at our own peril.
Who could've guessed that an incompetent people pleasing government typically leads to instability
This decision should be up to the people of Catalonia/Basque country and no one else. Same goes for Scotland. Central governments in Madrid and London should not be able to decide the fate of everything.
The decision should lie with ALL citizens of Spain on what happens to their country, or do you classify people according to their residence in People A (the deciders: those living in BC and Cat) and People B (the takers: the rest). No, no, no...we are no longer in Middle Ages where noblemen decided the fate of ALL. Thankfully, International Law and the Spanish Constitution recognise this simple but relevant advancement: ALL citizens of a State should be equal to decide their common future. What Cameron did with Scotland was bollocks and Labour is fully in the wrong in this issue (PSOE should not travel down that path, or else...PSOE is posed to disappear and be replaced by another party). To turn your argument around: the Scottish Government (or Catalan for that matter) should not be able to impose the breaking up of a State in which a vast majority of people living in it are against a break-up. Same rights for ALL!!!!!!
the thing is that separating from Spain might be 50/50 either they succeed on own or it will just be worse
Regardless on how you feel about Catalonia, we can all agree that Sanchez is an idiot. He played himself and now he is surprised at the direction Catalan politics are taking
When conservatives where in power separatism was at its highest, and independentist parties had the most seats and even held an anticonstitutional vote for independence. The conservative approach of oppression only made them stronger, meanwhile Sanchez managed to win the most seats for the socialist party in the region, independentist parties lost seats in the last elections and support has decreased a lot. It seems to me you don’t know much about my country, and if this channel is where you get information about it I can see why that is.
@@juancarlosalonso5664 no te preocupes, yo SÍ se mucho de España, y lo que dice el comentario de arriba es cierto. Sánchez está haciendo perder votos al PSOE debido a su política de pactos, subiendo solo en Cataluña. Véase Galicia, con el peor resultado histórico del PSdeG. Qué genio es Sánchez ¿eh? Perdiendo votos, cediendo en todo, y sin presupuestos.
Drinking game: Take a gulp every time she says "however" and you'll be on the floor.
Nah I'd win.
Hell ye boys, we bout to see Aragon, Castille and Navarra again!
@DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt it's a joke...
I’m outside and I live in the best country and it’s really really great to hear information about this
Catalan here. On the last weeks Ive seen How the optimism about independence has been on the rise 😊
Why would you even want it. It's a line on a map. It means nothing. Your trade is likely mostly with EU countries. That means that when independence comes you are out of the EU and just became unattractive to business.
And no, you cannot have independence and stay in the EU. Even for Scotland the EU made it clear they would have to reapply as all other new members. It might go faster, but would still take a few years.
Have you learned nothing from Brexit?
Support from portugal 💪
Support from Galiza too of course
@@quiquemarquez3211 O independentismo aí na galiza também é forte?
@DiotimaMantinea-qm5yt When I read these colonialist comments talking about an "annoying language", I can understand why catalans and basques want their own state
This happens to me sometimes in Civ 6 for not having enough amenities for my population, the neighboring civ might also be using the Amani governor which makes you lose 2 loyalty per turn, I would recommend sending a spy to incapacitate the governor and build more entertainment complexes
As an Arizonan, I stand with my brothers and sisters in Basque and Catalonia. Arizona's name comes from a Basque term meaning "the oak tree," and our flag was chosen specifically to resemble that of Catalonia to remember where our original settlers came from. Basque shepherd communities still wander from Fredonia AZ to Casper WY.
Catalan? You mean Spanish
Uh... No, the flag of Arizona is based on the flag of Spain, like New Mexico's.
As a Spaniard, I support the independence of California and Texas from the US! Those cities were founded by Spain and you stole that territory!!
@@pitrris ...and where do you think you got them from dummy?
The House Speaker, Armengol, it's no "ally" of the president propped up by separatism and she is not "native catalan"...
She was the PSOE president of Balearic Islands, literally from the same party as Sanchez, and she lost the regional elections in the conservative wave that gave many regions of Spain to PP and propped the general elections.
As many ex-regional presidents, she got a new high profile position, in part to calm the people in the party angry at the consecuences of the strategy of last Sanchez goverment.
By the way, the Balearic Islands are not even coloured on the map.
I expect better from you guys. This part seems kinda porly researched, and more focused on proving a narrative...
Also, you have to understand the regional administration of Spain to understand the increase on separatist parties. Spain is closer to a federation than a centralized goverment, and regions have a lot of autonomy.
In the regions with historical strong nationalistic parties like Catalonia or the basques they have obtained lots of concesions from the central goverment, mostly beneficial for their population. Learning from this, other regions with less strong nationalistic movements have started to emulate them, signaling that you need more political weight on national politics and investments. This is the case of Galicia (BNG) and Valencia (Compromís).
They use the "national identity" to scrap votes yes, but they are nor crazy nor stupid and know that being independent is not viable nowadays. They grow because they are seen by the population of the regions as someone that wants to protect the regions interests at regional level and at the capital.
Hell, even "proper" spanish regions like Soria or Teruel are making regionalistic parties in order tto protect their interest on a national level because they have very low populations and representation and they dont want to be forgotten while they slowly die.
The debate for reforming the regional administration it's an open one in the country, altough it is not as important as economical ones like healthcare quality, depopulation, housing, etc...
Separatists are actually not on the rise.
Exactly. They are mostly on decline (except EHB), it just seems like they are on the rise because 1) Sánchez completely depends on them and thus has to cater to them *a lot* and 2) reason 1 makes these parties more appealing on the subnational level for "being useful" (i.e. people like their vote to go towards "politicians that achieve things").
The money/tourist regions would probably wish for more self governance.
0:00 voice 1️⃣
0:02 voice 2️⃣
0:38 voice 3️⃣
😂
This analysis is not too accurate for Catalonia. Separatist parties will likely lose majority in the Catalan parliament. Separatism is not in the rise, in fact it’s declining. It peaked in 2017 and it may have reached 50% back then, but it has always been very divided. Currently, many Catalan nationalists are disappointed and dissatisfied of how the failed referendum happened and do not trust Catalan nationalists parties. If you add Covid in the mix and the fact that the current government in Spain is more tolerant towards Catalan people and have a more plurinational view of the country, the result is that independence is no longer that popular. Especially among young people. The overall feeling is of being fed up with the situation. If Catalan separatists lose majority in the Catalan parliament, things will likely change and we will move on
3:27 Galician language is already recognized. It's called Portuguese
Wrong
@@9_9876it is an Portuguese dialect or the same language
Given the amount of factual inaccuracies in this video, it really makes me wonder how much of what I've learned about the rest of the world from this channel is actually true. I will think twice about coming back to your content.
Give examples if you gonna make such claims
Spanish Civil War 2 : Electric Boogaloo
Good video.
I really loved your past work, but from a certain point, all I see is "will country X or Y break apart?" Sorry, but I will not be watching click-baity and doom-without-proper-evidence-predicting videos anymore.
If any of these regions get independence, would they apply for membership in the EU?
Spain would veto it, so no
for sure looking at their politics but they will not get in for a very long time
Spain would be the first one to acept it, coz it will be interested the new countries to adquire a proportional portion of the sovereign debt of Spain.... if the countries get independent with no agreement, Spain debt would collapse the economy of Spain and of the EU. That's why the EU will be the first to be interested for any independence to be carried out peacefully.
a brawl is surely brewing
Visca Catalunya independent!
Independençia d'Andaluçia del imperialîmo katalan y bâko!
Hey, remember the Galician elections. With only one separatist party, separatism got 31% of the votes.
Many parties pose as nationalists but not really independentists
Spain has 3 regions of wealth concentration: Madrid, Basque Country, Catalunia. Now imagine two chunks separating :) Spain would drop to the bottom of EU map.
It would only fall by 25-30% actually
Technically Spain is already at the bottom of the map.. :)
@@TolstoyPlastic It’s, in fact, not at the bottom of the map
If you think it a little bit more, you will understand that half the basque and catalan companies and money would leave for madrid or valencia inmediately, and with less competition other spanish companies would replace basque and catalan ones. It would hurt, but the main problem is not economic.
@@juann1492 also geography, because with the puñyrenees in the midle spain is defacto cut from the eu and the shengen and everything
"Pedro Sánchez secured supoort from separatist parties […] and the deal garanteed their support for the next 4 years and the approval of the national budgets until 2027"?
False!
The good version is not always that of the strong part.
The support was only to make Pedro Sánchez president again and to negociate farther support and budgets as it was told by ERC and by Junts per Catalunya.
In fact, the 2024 Spanish state budget has been rejected.
In fact, the 2024 Spanish state budget has been rejected.
And Aznar in the past to get to power😂 PP history..
Catalonia being separated from spain would be extremely idiotic
not if they stay in the eu
ever heard of European Union
@@EmmaWithoutOrgans doesn't spain get a veto?
@@christofferthorsson607 They would, allowing a new member state requires approval by all member states. Other countries could also veto it to prevent their own independance movements in their countries
@@EmmaWithoutOrgansWhich they won’t, cause spain would veto
THAT IS WHAT YOU WOULD LIKE TO SEE a break up
Every region should be allowed a referendum once every decade whether it is Scotland, Catalonia or somewhere else in Europe
Spain should’ve considered extending dual citizenship to Latin American people. Paint it as a form of reparation whilst in reality bringing in educated migrants and cheap labor. Spain would have been the U.S. of Europe with a population and manufacturing boom
This is what happened when you recognise "Palestine"
This is a nothing burger. Spain will never be divided
Catalonia is not Spain. these people have their own language and history.
Parla per tu feixista de ERC
@@arisplugis5197 Catalonia is Spain. They never had their own history in the first place. Submit to the metanarrative.
@@arisplugis5197keep dreaming. More than half of Cataluna don’t care and are happy to be Spanish.
@@arisplugis5197 most of "Catalonian history" is actually Valencian history, also Valencian was already a thing before Catalan was a thing, Catalonia didn't exist until very recently, it was the County of Barcelona INSIDE of the Aragon Crown, while Valencia was already a kingdom. But then lies and history re-writes by Catalonian nationalists did the rest. Read some history before saying non sense please... 💀
0:22 *just wondering, doesn’t the 3rd Linguistic region - Galicia also have an independence movement?*
Also there are more linguistic regions with even weaker movements than galicia
Galician is not a real language just an intermediate between Spanish and Portuguese Catalan is more unique .
This comment section is disgusting(belstar in particular the rest I imagine is mainly ignorance, the knowing all kid that likes parading what it isn't there), denying our good Galician language so brazenly with its rich history and impact as a sister language to Portuguese(our common origin as Galician-Portuguese) and one of the most important tongues in medieval Europe, negationist arguments such as this have long been part of the agenda of the Spanish far right and PP's rotten core, VOX supporters roam free the lowest of the low. You just know how this people roll attacking our culture our identity and everything that makes us cause at the end of the day they have nothing only have ignorance and stupidity to fall back on, let them remember when Castilian was in diapers Galician-Portuguese was a tongue of renown matched by others such as Provenzal, only through the evil of conquest and occupation this prestige faded(creating a Linguistic conflict with Castilla as the prestige language after Galician nobility and priests were changed by those from Castile, what we know as the start of the dark centuries for Galician language) but we Galician kept nurturing and taking care of our language no matter the oppression threw at us from Castile, the Catholic Kings and Paca herself during his dictatorship. Our ancient language lives in and out of Galicia even if our Galician Government does little to protect variants such as Galego-Asturiano, Galego-verciano Among others, with speakers being unrecognised and left vulnerable in a way that reminds us of French linguist policy mainly from Castilla e León and Asturias itself but with PP and PSOE being the true architects of this.
Indeed our Galician nationalist movement lead by the BNG(you could call it the heir to old Partido Galeguista and the Irmandades da Fala, Galicia nationalism is no imitation but a complex movement tired of exploitation of our rich homeland and general abuse carved from Madrid) is stronger than ever achieving their highest result in the last Galician elections 25 seats in the Galician parliament, this is the most support it has ever gotten-happened alongside the fall of PSOE's branch office PSDG to 9 seats-(with Ana Poton their candidate one of the most popular nationalist leaders, she brought the party back to form after their 2009 fall) overlooking its rise with such arrogance fellow commenters might be convenient to you all but it is a beacon of hope of a Galicia not exploited by the interests of the corrupt and Co from Albert's party and other such Spanish delegations. Specially now that all those contracts given to their cronies and family are popping out across the news, Feijoo's and Rueda's families clans of corrupt politicians similar to the old caciques Castelao denounced back on his day.
A boa Galiza has been ruled by their ilk for far too long, people that cares not for our nation or for their people and are just goons that serve their self interest and their corrupt central parties. I am forever hopeful that Galicia awakens with our new generations before there is nothing left to defend, the way towards 2028 will be as key as the rest of this path.
A maldade en cada esquina, carallo!
@@belstar1128 Using your logic, Catalan is an Intermediate language between Spanish and Occitan.
I think Galicians should free themselves of the Castilians and their assimilation/colonization of Galicia.
We certainly should as decades of rule from PPDG have left in an uncertain position many of our public services and no effort has been made to diversify our economy and overall revenue(with eucalyptus pulp-Galicia is the foremost European land with eucalyptus- and tourism being among their horrible ideas), that both key sectors agricultural and maritime have not been treated great by their governments particularly with our Rias more and more polluted each day, drastic policy change we need and yet as long as mainly old Galician voters turn to PPDG(that has a firm grip in our Galician TVG and the main newspapers in our country as they depend upon public founding) there are huge obstacles even for a popular BNG to overcome but certainly we cannot go on as we are.
@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn I don't think Galicia is a colony lmfao
that's like saying the Algarves were gonna be like Brazil. Galicia would be a Portuguese province not a colony idk what you are on about.
@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn Why does this not make sense
you are saying Portugal integrating Galicia would be like Portugal and Brazil. That makes no sense because Brazil was a colony ofcourse it would be bad for them.
In the context of Galciia they would be integrated as a province like the Algarves the muslims in the south who were not treated like a colony like in Brazil.
In fact if you wanted to use the different ethnicities to suggest exploitation it would have already been seen in the Algarves because the muslims were more different to the Portuguese than Galicians to Portuguese who are more similar.
Yet the Algarves are fine right now so why would people who if theoretically there were was a racial factor in play would the people more closer to Portuguese(the Galicians) be treated worse than the people who are farther from being Portuguese (The Muslims)?
Galicia would not be treated like a colony it would be a province that would be treated well.
@@quiquemarquez3211 Very interesting I hope it goes well for you guys is there a good video online to learn about Galician politics? It sounds interesting.
@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn Nah I just assumed you looked at my Portugal pfp and thought I was implying that so I went with it.
Why else did you say Galicia would be worse then Brazil?
As a Spaniard I just want to add that in the separatist regions the Spaniards are a majority, just less willing to vote. This may (in a very cursed future) enable the separatists to declare independence, however, that will cause a Yugoslavia-like collapse with a war probably, which nobody wants.
Loving the hair do. Taking me back to the 1980s - especially combined with the cut glass accent. In a good way. Interesting content too.
yeah I thought wow looks so good !!