logo

Spain weighs Catalonia's fiscal autonomy amid separatist pressure

Euractiv14-07-2025
A joint commission between the Spanish government and Catalonia's regional government is set to present a new 'unique' financing scheme on Monday, granting Barcelona full control over collecting, managing, and spending its taxes.
The proposal, pushed by the pro-independence left-wing ERC party, would reform Spain's Organic Law on regional financing and remove Catalonia from the current centralised funding system that redistributes tax revenues collected by the central government to the autonomous regions.
Catalonia's fiscal autonomy was a key condition for ERC's support of Socialist leader Salvador Illa (PSC), who became regional president in 2024. However, negotiations have stalled amid corruption scandals involving Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez's PSOE, delaying the June 30 deadline.
Facing criticism that Sánchez is trading political concessions for parliamentary support, Finance Minister María Jesús Montero rejected the claim that Catalonia is receiving preferential treatment on Friday.
Nevertheless ERC president Oriol Junqueras insisted at the party's headquarters on Saturday that Catalonia 'cannot be subordinated to the State's Tax Agency' and warned that Sánchez's stance on financing 'will condition ERC's position on many issues.'
Catalan separatists, including ERC, want Barcelona to gain a special tax status similar to that of the Basque Country and Navarre, which enjoy special fiscal arrangements based on historical rights.
The opposition, and several socialist lawmakers, see Catalonia's potential fiscal autonomy as a political trade-off for Sánchez's corruption-plagued government to hold to power until the 2027 elections.
In February, Madrid agreed to write off €17 billion of Catalan debt - part of a broader €83 billion package to ease regional debt burdens.
Main opposition Popular Party labelled as a 'political payoff' to Sánchez's pro-independence partners in government.
( Inés Fernández/ Euractiv.es)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Spanish prosecutors call for resignation of indicted attorney general
Spanish prosecutors call for resignation of indicted attorney general

Euractiv

time10 hours ago

  • Euractiv

Spanish prosecutors call for resignation of indicted attorney general

Spain's main prosecutors' associations are calling for the resignation of Attorney General Alvaro García Ortíz, who was officially indicted on Tuesday for allegedly leaking confidential information from an investigation involving the partner of a prominent opposition leader. García Ortíz, who has served as Spain's top prosecutor since August 2022, has been under investigation since early June for disclosing to the press an email containing personal data relating to a judicial probe into Alberto González Amador, the businessman and partner of Isabel Díaz Ayuso, leader of Madrid's Popular Party. González Amador is under investigation for alleged tax fraud and forgery. "García Ortiz should resign in order to defend himself as a private citizen – independent of the institution – rather than as attorney general," Cristina Dexeus, president of the Prosecutors' Association (AF), told Euractiv, describing his continued presence as causing "significant reputational damage" to the Spanish prosecution service. The Spanish Association of Independent Prosecutors (APIF) has formally requested that the judge overseeing García Ortiz's case at the Supreme Court suspend him temporarily. The judge has asked the Public Prosecutor's Office to respond within three days, Euractiv's partner Servimedia reports. The progressive prosecutors' association (UPF), to which García Ortiz belonged before becoming attorney general, said in a statement it "strongly disagrees" with Tuesday's indictment. When in Madrid... Despite mounting pressure, Spain's government has closed ranks around the attorney general. 'We support the actions of the state's attorney general. We believe in his innocence. He has the endorsement and support of the government,' Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told journalists following the announcement. 'He has done and continues to do a magnificent job," said First Vice-President and Finance Minister María Jesús Montero. Defence Minister Margarita Robles took a more cautious line, stating that the decision to resign is ultimately "his personal choice." Under Spanish law, attorneys general are appointed by the government, a practice that has raised concerns in Brussels. The European Commission's 2025 Rule of Law Report recommended that Spain strengthen the 'independence and autonomy of the prosecution' from the government. Further doubts about the prosecution's independence have been fuelled by mounting corruption scandals surrounding Sánchez's inner circle, which have already forced several key figures to resign. A hearing of the attorney general is expected to take place this Autumn, reported El País. (cs, de)

Ribera calls for EU to take decisive action over Gaza
Ribera calls for EU to take decisive action over Gaza

Euractiv

timea day ago

  • Euractiv

Ribera calls for EU to take decisive action over Gaza

European Commission executive vice-president Teresa Ribera has denounced the lack of action by the EU leadership over the "catastrophic humanitarian situation" in the Gaza Strip. 'It is difficult to mobilise Europe, but we are in a race against the clock. People are dying of hunger,' Ribera said in an interview this Wednesday with Spanish radio network Cadena Ser. Ribera criticised the bloc's failure to unite on a strong stance towards Israel, alluding to Monday's doomed proposal in the Commission to partially block Israel's access to Horizon Europe, the bloc's research funding programme . She lamented the 'insufficient measures" taken against Israel's 'disproportionate response' in Gaza, adding that Israel's actions are "not justified by any means under international, humanitarian or even war law.' The EU must "put into practice the coherence and values we preach," Ribera said. Ribera is a former vice-president and minister in the government of Pedro Sánchez, which has become one of Israel's most vocal critics in Europe, urging the EU to fully suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement. A series of disappointments Asked about the EU's new trade agreement with the United States, Ribera said she wished that "European governments had defended their interests rather than avoid conflict." The EU's former top diplomat Josep Borrell was more scathing: 'Bad strategy leads to bad outcomes," he posted on X. "The Commission chose to appease and flatter Trump by agreeing to buy more weapons and gas – on which it has no competence – and by tolerating unilateral tariffs. Europe emerges geopolitically weakened from a deal struck in just 1 hour on a golf course." Ribera added her disappointment that NATO did not stand up to the US President, committing to increase national defence spending targets to 5 % of GDP. She issued a call to improve the bloc's relations and seek new allies, noting that 'The US only accounts for 17% of global trade flows. There is 83% of the rest of the world with which Europe must engage.' (ow)

Spanish defence firm backs Belgium joining FCAS fighter project despite French qualms
Spanish defence firm backs Belgium joining FCAS fighter project despite French qualms

Euractiv

time2 days ago

  • Euractiv

Spanish defence firm backs Belgium joining FCAS fighter project despite French qualms

Spanish defence firm Indra would welcome Belgium as a new partner in the joint European Future Combat Air System (FCAS) project, despite vocal public opposition from French aerospace contractor Dassault Aviation. Belgium's participation in the multi-billion-euro next-generation fighter project would be "a positive step in the current geopolitical context", Jorge San José, Indra's director of the FCAS project, told Euractiv. Adding another country to the joint French-German-Spanish programme "strengthens the collaborative nature" of the programme, one of Europe's largest and most ambitious defence projects, San José said. Indra 'will work on identifying potential synergies with Belgian industries and see how they can contribute to and support the execution of the programme,' San José said. Dassault Aviation CEO Éric Trappier last week sharply criticised Belgium's proposal to fully join the programme, saying that Belgium can't expect to join the FCAS project if the Belgian armed forces also buy American-made F-35 fighter jets. Belgian Defence Minister Theo Francken quickly fired back, saying the country had no use for lessons 'from arrogant industrialists' and that Brussels would need to re-evaluate joining FCAS. Decisions on adding further partners to the programme are ultimately up to the French, German, and Spanish governments, not key industrial contractors. Belgium has been an official observer in the FCAS project for several years in order to evaluate its potential contribution. San José declined to elaborate on potential synergies with Belgian firms. Alain de Neve, a defence aviation expert at Belgium's Royal Higher Institute for Defence, told Euractiv that local expertise in electronics could help with avionics, secure communications, and advanced simulation. The German defence ministry and Germany's lead contractor on the FCAS programme, Airbus Defence, both declined to comment on Belgium's potential membership. The French and Spanish defence ministries did not respond to requests for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store