7 out of 10 women in Catalonia fear sexual assault when walking home at night
19% of men fear sexual violence, more afraid of robbery
19% of men fear sexual violence, more afraid of robbery
9% of residents prefer a unilateral decision but 33% are in favor of a deal with Spain
Ruling party would come in second followed by opposition Junts
Pro-independence bloc would get 64 to 77 seats with 68 needed for a majority, while junior government partner Junts could lose MPs
Study estimates that half of Spanish-speakers also approve current model, amid judicial efforts to impose Spanish in classrooms
Latest Catalan government survey also says 47% are against an independent Catalonia compared to 43% in favor
Survey shows 75% of support for a republic and 78% back a referendum; 48.4% would vote for Yes to independence, while 44.1% for No
Pro-independence majority in the parliament would be maintained with ERC winning 36-38 seats, if new elections were to be called
Left-wing pro-independence ERC would win an election, surpassing its coalition partner JxCat and unionist Cs
New routes and incorporation of new plane will bring total of travellers flying between both countries to 646,000
Atlantia announced its decision on Monday to launch a tender offer on the entire share capital of Catalan company Abertis. A deal between both companies would create the largest toll road operator in Europe and one of the leading ones in the world. Italy’s Atlantia offer would pay €16.50 a share and also includes another option in case shareholders decide to own stakes in the combined group: in that case, the exchange ratio would be set at 0.697 shares of Atlantia for each Abertis share tendered up to a maximum of 23.2% of the total offer. “We have worked to design an offer that is friendly and attractive for all shareholders, stakeholders, and the management of both companies,” said the Atlantia’s CEO, Giovanni Castellucci.
Latest polls say 50.3% of Catalans want to call a referendum on independence regardless of whether the Spanish Government agrees. Indeed, if both parts fail to reach an agreement and the consultation takes place anyway, 43.3% would vote ‘yes’ to Catalonia’s independence. Another 22.2% would vote ‘no’ and 20.7% would abstain, according to the latest poll by the Center for Opinion Studies (CEO). In response to whether they would like to simply like referendum to be held in Catalonia, 73.3% of the surveyed answered ‘yes’. The CEO also noted that governing coalition Junts Pel Sí would win the Catalan elections again if they were held today. However, their influence in the parliament would decline from the 62 current MPs to 58 or 60. The other main pro-independence party in the chamber, the radical-left CUP, would also lose 2 MPS.
If new elections were to be called in Catalonia today, the winner would be governing cross-party pro-independence ‘Junts Pel Sí’, which would still have between 60 and 62 seats in the 135-seat Parliament. Spanish Unionist ‘Ciutadans’, which is currently the main party in the opposition with 25 MPs would get between 15 and 21 seats. The highest increase according to a poll released this Friday would be for alternative left alliance ‘Catalunya Sí que es Pot’ (CSQP) which would get 19-20 MPs compared to the 11 seats it currently has in the Chamber. On the other hand, radical left pro-independence CUP would drop from 10 seats to 6-8. Regarding pro-independence support amongst Catalans, the poll shows a return to the tie situation which has been the most common result of the polls. Thus, 44.9% of Catalans would support independence, while 45.1% would vote against it.