Barcelona

By some estimates, more than 1 million people came out across Catalonia on September 11 for Catalonia鈥檚 national day (the Diada) to show their support for Catalan sovereignty and 鈥 for most present 鈥 for Catalan independence from the Spanish state.

People gather against government austerity policies at Lisbon's main square.

A month ago, on August 8, it became official 鈥 the high school governors agreed that the headmaster had acted correctly in not caning the two miscreant schoolboys.

The schoolboys are Spain and Portugal; their misdemeanour was to keep missing their public sector deficit reduction targets set under the European Union鈥檚 鈥渆xcessive deficit procedure鈥. The headmaster is the European Commission, headed by President Jean-Claude Juncker, and the school governors are the finance and economy ministers of the EU鈥檚 27 member states 鈥 who meet as the Ecofin committee.

Comparing 26-J (2016) with 20-D (2015) election results.

The key question about the result of the June 26 Spanish general election is also the most difficult to answer: why did 1.09 million people 鈥 who in the December 20 elections voted for the anti-austerity party Podemos, the United Left (IU) and the three broader progressive tickets Together We Can (Catalonia), Podemos-Commitment (Valencian Country) and In Tide (Galicia) 鈥 not vote for the combined Podemos-IU ticket (United We Can) and these broader tickets at this poll?

The Spanish and European establishments have just days to stop the advance of the progressive electoral alliance United We Can in the June 26 general elections in the Spanish state. How are they doing? As matters stand, not well. United We Can, formed in early May, brings together new anti-austerity party Podemos and the longer-standing United Left (IU), as well as broader coalitions in Catalonia (Together We Can), Galicia (In Tide) and Valencia (A La Valenciana).
United We Can. United We Can 鈥 the united ticket made up of Podemos, the United Left, the green party Equo and three broader alliances in Catalonia, Galicia and the Valencian Country 鈥 is campaigning in the June 26 Spanish general elections on a plan to reverse economic austerity.
Alberto Garzon and Pablo Iglesias

Five months after the December 20 election in Spain failed to produce a government, the country is returning to the polls in the most polarised contest since the end of the Franco dictatorship in 1977.

The Spanish parliament was the scene of a sharp clash on April 6 over the March 18 European Union-Turkey 鈥減act of shame鈥 that will return up to 50,000 asylum seekers from Greece to Turkey. The asylum seekers 鈥 most fleeing from the Syrian civil war 鈥 will then be placed in an archipelago of detention centres. Acting Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy, of the conservative People's Party (PP), defended the agreement, saying 鈥渢hings are getting better, we have a procedure鈥.
It is very hard to find words that can even begin to describe how progressive people all over Europe are viewing the 鈥減act of shame鈥 over refugees reached between the European Union and Turkey on March 18. For 鈧6 billion, the promise of accelerated EU access and a conditional end to Turkish citizens requiring visas to enter the EU, the agreement makes the repressive Turkish government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan the main cop controlling the flow of refugees towards Europe.
In the face of the brutal and immoral reaction of the European Union to the tens of thousands of refugees fleeing into Europe from wars and poverty in the Middle East and North Africa, Barcelona council has taken the initiative to set up a network of Mediterranean city councils prepared to welcome and house asylum seekers. Barcelona is already part of a broader network of European cities welcoming refugees.
All media outlets in the Spanish state were dominated by the images of two men on March 1: one was leaving jail near the northern city of Logrono to the cheers of inmates he was leaving behind; the other was trying to convince the Spanish parliament in Madrid to vote him in as prime minister.
Since Spain's December 20 elections produced no clear majority, debate has raged over what sort of government should be formed. The governing conservative People's Party (PP) won 123 seats in the 250-seat Congress and the right-populist Citizens won 40. On the left, the main opposition Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) won 90 seats, while radical anti-austerity party Podemos and the three alliances in which it took part together with nationalist forces won 69.
What was the central message of the December 20 Spanish general elections, which was 鈥渨on鈥 by the governing conservative People's Party (PP) of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy with only 28.72% of the vote, 3.6 million votes less than the last national poll in 2011? Why did the opposition Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) greet its worst ever result 鈥22.01%, 1.4 million votes less than 2011 鈥 with a sigh of relief?