91Èȱ¬

Summary

  • Separatists on course to win snap election called by Spain

  • Madrid called vote after Catalonia declared independence

  • Some saw election as proxy referendum on secession

  • Record turnout of above 80%

  • Final results expected around 2300 GMT

  1. 85% of the votes countedpublished at 21:52 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    Unionist Citizens are still on course to be the biggest party - but the separatist parties might have the numbers to be able to form a coalition.

    Here are the :

    • Citizens - 36
    • Together for Catalonia - 34
    • Republican Left of Catalonia - 32
    • Socialists - 17
    • In Common We Can - 8
    • Popular Unity - 4
    • Popular Party - 4

    There's a total of 135 seats in the Catalan parliament - 68 seats are needed for a majority.

  2. 'Time for dialogue'published at 21:51 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    A spokesman for Mr Rajoy's Popular Party, José Ramón García Hernández, says the message of the election is that it's time to talk.

    "When a society is divided you cannot be the element of division, you have to be the element of union," he told the 91Èȱ¬ World Service's Newshour programme.

    "And I think we open a new era of dialogue, a real dialogue."

  3. Bad night for Rajoypublished at 21:44 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    If you're just joining us, it appears the voters of Catalonia have returned separatist parties to power by a narrow margin, in a snub to Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.

    With more than 80% of votes counted, parties that favour independence are ahead. Interim turnout figures show a record number of people voted.

    The election was called by Mr Rajoy's government, which deployed hitherto unused constitutional powers to assert control over the region.

  4. An unassailable lead?published at 21:25 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

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  5. Puigdemont's promisepublished at 21:23 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

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  6. Citizens still confidentpublished at 21:20 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

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  7. Puigdemont pulls aheadpublished at 21:15 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    Carles Puigdemont in Brussels, 21 DecemberImage source, AFP

    One surprise in the partial official results is that Carles Puigdemont's list has overtaken its rival for the separatist crown, the ERC. The exit poll had put the ERC well ahead.

    But there are still a lot of ballots to count.

  8. Half way there...published at 21:07 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    , the provisional results - in terms of seats - are the following:

    • Citizens - 35
    • Together for Catalonia - 34
    • Republican Left of Catalonia - 32
    • Socialists - 18
    • In Common We Can - 8
    • Popular Unity - 4
    • Popular Party - 4

    There's a total of 135 seats in the Catalan parliament - 68 seats are needed for a majority.

  9. Separatists on track to winpublished at 21:01 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017
    Breaking

    With 30% of votes counted, separatist parties are on course to win an absolute majority in the new Catalan parliament.

    Ballot papersImage source, Reuters
  10. The less popular party?published at 20:54 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    If the exit poll proves anywhere accurate, then Spain's governing conservative Popular Party (PP) has fallen to a new low of 3-5 seats.

    This could be a really bad night for the PP but it may turn out that many of their voters switched tactically to Citizens in order to ensure a strong showing for unionist parties.

  11. Cava on ice?published at 20:49 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

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  12. The magnitude sinks inpublished at 20:43 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    Kevin Connolly, 91Èȱ¬ Europe Correspondent

    Voters queue to cast their ballots outside a polling station in Parets del Valles, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, 21 December 2017Image source, EPA

    Counting is under way in an election that will shape the immediate political future here in Catalonia and have a huge impact in wider Spanish society.

    The poll was called by the Spanish government to resolve a constitutional crisis triggered by the region's unlawful independence referendum in October.

    Turnout figures suggest that supporters and opponents of independence alike recognise the magnitude of what's at stake.

    For both sides in Catalonia, the problem is that there's no guarantee this election will resolve the region's constitutional crisis.

    If the new parliament is evenly balanced between unionists and separatists, the search for a solution will continue.

  13. Bad news for Puigdemont?published at 20:20 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    ERC activists gather in Barcelona, 21 DecemberImage source, AFP
    Image caption,

    ERC politicians await the results in Barcelona

    If the Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) ends up as the largest separatist party, it raises questions about whether Carles Puigdemont, who leads a rival party, can return as the region's leader, even if he were free to do so.

    The ERC's own leader, Oriol Junqueras, is on remand, facing Spanish charges over the independence declaration in October.

  14. Official turnout figures are in...published at 20:16 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

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  15. Bustle in Brusselspublished at 20:12 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    News crews are waiting to hear reaction from Catalonia's sacked leader, Carles Puigdemont.

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  16. Anticipation buildspublished at 19:58 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

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  17. What happened last time?published at 19:51 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    Graphic showing results from the September 2015 Catalan elections.

    At the September 2015 election, the separatist parties managed to secure a majority to govern the region but it was complicated.

    The mainstream separatist parties ran as a united list – Together for Yes - but failed to win an overall majority and, once in government, had to rely on a confidence-and-supply agreement with the anti-EU CUP.

  18. Biggest party questionpublished at 19:46 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    If the exit poll from La Vanguardia is anything like the final result in Catalonia, it could pose an interesting question as to who has the right to form the region's next government.

    Normally, the largest party has the right to have the first stab at forming a government - according to the exit poll, this would probably be the unionist party Citizens.

    However, the separatist parties may insist they have the right to try first, if they have the largest number of seats overall.

  19. Exit poll in detailpublished at 19:33 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

    Catalonia's El Nacional news site, which is strongly pro-independence, has a handy breakdown in English of the findings in La Vanguardia's poll.

    The poll was based on 3,200 telephone surveys carried out up until 19:00 (18:00 GMT) today.

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  20. A bit more detail about that exit poll...published at 19:23 Greenwich Mean Time 21 December 2017

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