Catalonia goes to the polls in elections seen as boost for independence fight

Catalans have started voting in the most important election in Spain’s recent history, with opinion polls pointing to victory for those who want to declare the region independent. Polling stations opened early on Sunday in Spain’s richest region of 7.5 million people where separatist feeling has increased in the recent years of economic crisis. Artur Mas, Catalonia’s nationalist president, told a crowd of tens of thousands of supporters as he was wrapping up election campaign that the vote would “lead to freedom”.

Sunday is a special day for the future of Catalonia. It is a historic day.

Artur Mas

Opinion polls show the conservative Mas and his left-wing allies in the pro-independence list Together For Yes could win that majority and nearly half the votes overall. For his part, Mariano Rajoy, Spanish prime minister, urged voters to return Catalonia to “normality”. “There is a majority of Catalans who love their people and love their land, and do not want to see it amputated from Spain and from Europe,” he told supporters. Nationalists in Catalonia, which has its own language and cultural traditions, complain that they get less back from Madrid than they pay in taxes.