Republican Left of Catalonia

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Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya
Leader Josep-Lluís Carod-Rovira
Founded March of 1931
Headquarters C/Calàbria, 166
08015 Barcelona
Official ideology/
political position
Social democracy
Catalan independentism, Left,
Republicanism
International affiliation None
European Parliament Group European Free Alliance
Official colour(s) Orange
Website www.esquerra.cat

The Republican Left of Catalonia (Catalan: Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya, ERC) is a left-wing political party that campaigns for independence for Catalonia and Catalan Countries from France and Spain.

Contents

Its basic political principles are defined in the Statement of Ideology approved at the 19th National Congress in 1993. This is organised into the three areas that give the organisation its name: Esquerra (commitment to the Left agenda in the political debate), República (commitment to the Republican form of government vs. Spain's current constitutional monarchy) and Catalunya (commitment to the territory which, as understood by ERC, comprises the Catalan Countries of Northern Catalonia, the Principality, including the Franja de Ponent, the Balearic Islands, Land of Valencia, and Andorra).

Despite having been one of the main forces behind the movement for amendment, the party eventually opposed the 2006 changes to the Catalan Statute of Autonomy to increase Catalonia's autonomy. It did so on the grounds that it did not do enough to increase Catalan independence. This caused a government crisis with its partners (specially with the PSC) which led to an early election in 2006.

Led by Francesc Macià in 1931, the party declared an independent Catalan Republic that was curtailed by the new Constitution of the Second Spanish Republic.

In 1934, led by Lluís Companys, the elected Catalan President, the party declared an independent Catalan Republic within the Spanish Federation proposed by Companys, following the entry of Right Wing ministers into the Government of the Spanish Republic, however the party leaders (including Companys) and all the Catalan Government (called Generalitat) were arrested and jailed for this, and special autonomy laws for Catalonia were suspended until 1936 .

In 1936 the party decided to become part of the Spanish Popular Front to contest that year's election, which it won. Esquerra became the leading force of the Popular Front in Catalonia and tried to maintain the unity of the Front in the face of growing tensions between the POUM and Communists.

The party was declared illegal (along with all other participants in the Popular Front) by Francisco Franco after he came to power in 1939 . The former president of the Catalan Generalitat, Lluis Companys, was arrested by German agents in collaboration with Vichy France, returned to Spain and executed in 1940.

Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya has (2003) 23 seats (3rd group by seats) in the Catalan Parliament in Barcelona, and it was one of the three coalition members of the Catalan Government until May 2006, when it was expelled from the government by Catalan President Maragall because of the many tensions the PSC-PSOE (Socialists' Party of Catalonia) and ERC had accumulated during this coalition government, being the turning point ERC's opposition in the last instance to the project of a new Statute of Autonomy in which redaction ERC has had partial lead. It has 8 seats (4th group by seats) in the Spanish Parliament in Madrid (since 2004) and 1 seat in the European Parliament.

Its current president is Josep-Lluís Carod-Rovira and its secretary-general is Joan Puigcercós i Boixassa.

The party is also federated with parties in the Balearic Islands and Northern Catalonia, and maintains close ties with its sister party Republican Left of the Valencian Country in Land of Valencia. Except for their Balearic counterpart, none of the latter currently have any parliamentary representation in their respective territories, though they do hold some municipal governments.

  1. Francesc Macià i Llussà (1931-1933)
  2. Lluís Companys i Jover (1933-1935)
  3. Carles Pi i Sunyer (1933-1935)
  4. Lluís Companys i Jover (1936-1940)
  5. Heribert Barrera (1993-1995)
  6. Jaume Campabadal (1995-1996)
  7. Jordi Carbonell i de Ballester (1996-2004)
  8. Josep-Lluís Carod-Rovira (2004-...)

  1. Joan Lluís Pujol i Font (March of 1931 - April of 1931)
  2. Josep Tarradellas i Joan (April of 1931 - March of 1932)
  3. Joan Tauler (March of 1932 - 1938)
  4. Josep Tarradellas i Joan (1938 - 1957)
  5. Joan Sauret (1957 - 1976)
  6. Heribert Barrera (1976-1987)
  7. Joan Hortalà (1987-1989)
  8. Àngel Colom Colom (1989-1996)
  9. Josep-Lluís Carod-Rovira (1996-2004)
  10. Joan Puigcercós i Boixassa (2004-...)


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