Leader of the pro-independents Junts per Catalunya (Together for Catalonia), Carles Puigdemont, has confirmed that the party leadership has endorsed his proposal to withdraw its backing from the federal gov't of PM Pedro Sanchez. The decision will need to be formally approved by Junts grassroots members later in the week, but this is viewed as a near-certainty.
- Citing the lack of publication of fiscal balances, legal obstacles to an amnesty for those involved in the illegal 2017 independence referendum, and delays to efforts to have Catalan recognised as an official EU language, Puigdemont argued links with Sanchez's centre-left Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) must be severed.
- Junts' withdrawal does not necessarily leave Sanchez open to removal. In Spain, only 'constructive' confidence votes are valid, with parties looking to remove a PM having to propose their own candidate who can secure a majority in the Congress of Deputies.
- With Junts' withdrawal, if Sanchez can muster all other support from parties included in the 2023 pact, he would hold 172 votes. This compares to a potential 171 votes for the main opposition conservative Popular Party (PP) and right-wing Vox. While Junts will not offer its backing to Sanchez, the Spanish right's opposition to regional independence or devolution means Junts will not vote alongside the PP or Vox either.
- Nevertheless, Junts' withdrawal denies the PSOE and its supporting parties a majority in the Congress, and as such will make the passage of legislation even more difficult, raising the pressure on Sanchez for early elections.