Catalan President officially proposes political Referendum to Spanish PM.
Artur Mas, the President of Catalonia, sent a letter to Spain's 
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy on July 26, 2013, officially proposing 
negotiations to hold a referendum on  Catalonia decide its political 
future.
Dear President:
 The
 Catalan people's desire for self government is well known, and has been
 both demanded and exercised over the centuries. In the current 
democratic period, begun at the end of the last century, said desire was
 initially channeled through the Statute of Autonomy of 1979.
The
 Catalan Parliament passed a new proposal for a Statute of Autonomy in 
2005 which was approved first by the Spanish Congress in 2006 and 
finally via referendum by the People of Catalonia. My personal 
involvement, although I did not act in an official capacity of the 
Government at that time, was, as is well known, during the entire 
negotation, to facilitate Catalonia's place within Spain.
The
 later ruling from the Spanish Constitutional Court diluted and to a 
large degree annulled the democratic will of the Catalan people 
expressed at the ballot booths, and gave firm evidence that it was 
impossible to continue developing Catalonia's self-government in the way
 it had up to that moment.
More recently, during 
the previous legislative session, the negative answer to any kind of 
negotiation with respect to a proposal of a Fiscal Pact, promoted by the
 Government of the Generalitat and approved by a wide margin of the 
Parliament of Catalonia, proved, once more, the Spanish State's 
inability to answer the proposals presented by Catalonia.
This
 blockage along with the most widely attended demonstration in the 
history of Catalonia last September 11 brought me to the conclusion that
 I must call snap elections so that Catalonia could freely and 
democratically decide its political future.
These 
last elections to the Parliament of Catalonia resulted in wide popular 
support, with a very high turnout—indeed the highest turnout in the 
history of this kind of elections—to various political powers which 
presented in their electoral platforms the need to exercise the right to
 decide.
The Parliament of Catalonia has 
demonstrated on various occasions during the present legislature, and 
with super majorities, the Catalan People's support for the right to 
decide and has established a mandate for dialogue and negotiation with 
the Government of Spain and with the objective of holding a democratic 
referendum. The recent constitution of the National Assembly on the 
Right to Decide demonstrated, concurrently, the wide support that this 
movement has among institutions, commercial and social organizations, 
and the civil society all throughout Catalonia.
The
 Advisory Council for National Transition, an organism created by the 
Government of the Generalitat and which is formed by distinguished 
members of our community, argues in its first report that there are 
legal methods that would allow such a referendum to be held. Because it 
is a high quality report whose content is of certain interest, I will 
take the liberty of making a copy available to you within a few days.
It
 is for all of the above that I believe there are favorable conditions 
for celebrating a referendum in Catalonia: widespread citizen and 
parliamentary support, the will to dialogue and negotiate, and the 
existence of legal frameworks in which it may be held.
I
 understand that when these circumstances occur, most certainly a 
product of a long historical trajectory that I described at the 
beginning of this letter, it is the duty of the public governmental 
representatives to forge the political will that would allow for a 
response to the legitimate, peaceful, democratic, and majority-held 
aspirations of a people, in our case, the Catalan people.
In
 our last meeting, I suggested that a political response to the Catalan 
people's democratic demands would be necessary. Today, I reiterate that 
to you in writing, with the same spirit of dialogue and negotiation as 
was present in our last meeting.
I am aware of 
your position against the celebration of a referendum, as you told me at
 our last meeting. Nevertheless, I understand at the same time that 
other countries—also in the European Union—have found ways of solving 
these kinds of challenges and realities democratically and legally. 
Spain should not be the exception to the rule.
Therefore,
 I express once again the need to open a dialogue and negotiation that 
would allow a celebration of to exercise the right to decide. a 
referendum of the People of Catalonia, in the shortest timeframe 
possible, within the legal framework that we establish.
Cordially,
Artur Mas Barcelona, July 26, 2013
ESTA CARTA APARECERÁ EN LOS LIBROS DE HISTORIA DE LA CATALUNYA LIBRE...
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