Antoni Bassas's analysis

Feijóo and Gaudí's Spanishness

It was sung: a great, universal, cosmopolitan Catalonia can only be Spanish. Up to here reaches the PP's concept of turning the page in Catalonia: pay, shut up, and make Spain look good when visitors come.

29/06/2026

This weekend, the PP of Catalonia held its congress, and the party leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, came and said: “Like most Catalans, we also want to turn the page”. The phrase has been interpreted as an offer to Junts so that one day it may be possible for the PP candidate for the presidency of the Spanish government to receive their votes. Junts must already know what they want to do, but it would seem that Feijóo is playing at an interested confusion: Junts voted with the PP and Vox that Sánchez had to resign, but has said in every way that he does not intend to invest Feijóo, meaning that for now Feijóo will have to wait.But it is interesting to delve into Feijóo's phrase to see what the popular candidate understands by wanting to turn the page.And the answer could not be more predictable: that Catalonia should return to the common regime autonomous path, that it should pay, that it should be silent, and if it has to do something exceptional, it should do so to offer new glories to Spain. And that's when Feijóo pulls the rabbit of the Sagrada Família out of his hat. Look at this tweet on social media:“The image of the Sagrada Família. The one the PP wants to represent”. It reminded me of what happened a few years ago, when TVE premiered Operación Triunfo and the PP said that the contest embodied their values of effort and meritocracy to achieve success. Does something work and is liked? They make it their own. Theirs, in their own way. Listen to this minute and a half of Feijóo, very revealing of the thinking he has about Catalonia:“I want to mention something that has surprised again, finally, and that we haven't seen in Catalonia for decades. It is a moment that moved millions of people, and it is none other than the extraordinary inauguration of the tower of Jesus of the Sagrada Familia with Pope Leo XIV. It was the symbol of a capable Catalonia, of a Catalonia that was thinking big again. Capable of doing extraordinary things and capable of building a collective ambition”. Look, Mr. Feijóo, I'm very glad you liked the blessing ceremony of the tallest tower of the Sagrada Família, but hire a speechwriter who doesn't mix apples and oranges. You say he's "surprised again, finally"? Finally what? "That we haven't seen Catalonia for decades"? Do you really think that Catalonia hasn't done anything good in 34 years, between the '92 Games and the inauguration the other day? Has representing 25% of Spanish exports and 20% of GDP happened on its own? Has the player that the followers of la roja pray to and who has half the world in love come up like a mushroom? Does it seem to you that wanting independence is not thinking big, that organizing a referendum to discuss it as the most democratic countries do is not characteristic of a country "capable of doing extraordinary things and capable of building a collective ambition?" Here, the one that is not capable of doing things is the State. And I'm not referring to doing extraordinary things, but ordinary ones, like getting trains to run. What is commendable, Mr. Feijóo, is that with the fiscal deficit – extraordinary, this one – that has been dragging on for decades, the Catalans, as your predecessor Rajoy used to say, do things. But please, continue. "That day we did not see one part of Catalonia impose itself on another; we did not see one part of Spain against the rest of Spain. No, what we saw was a part of Spain offering the best it has, and we want to see it again more".

No, certainly, on the day of the Sagrada Família we did not see one part of Spain imposing itself against another, because unlike October 1st we did not see the police hitting anyone (well, we saw them evacuating hundreds of singers who were to participate in the light procession outside, but without batons or rubber bullets). And Catalonia always offers the best it has. Its language, for example, or its literature. But you persecute it, at school and in the European Union. And there is not much desire to turn the page. And now comes the grand finale.

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"We want to see this great Catalonia again, this universal Catalonia, this cosmopolitan Catalonia, this Spanish and European Catalonia".

Of course. It was to be expected: a great, universal, cosmopolitan Catalonia can only be Spanish. As if Gaudí had anything Spanish about him. As if Catalonia, with an international capital like Barcelona, needed Spain to be even more international. This is where the PP's concept of turning the page in Catalonia comes in: pay, shut up, and make Spain look good when visitors come. Franco called it "exaltar la rica multiplicidad de las regiones".

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Good morning.