19th April 2024
Spanish Health Minister Salvador Illa
Basque Country Catalonia News Madrid News Main News

Spanish health minister quits role to run for presidency of Catalonia

Latest: Coronavirus in Spain figures (9 Feb)

Spanish Health Minister Salvador Illa is to quit his role on Tuesday to run in the elections scheduled in Catalonia on 14 February, as head of the Catalan Socialists (PSC) party, and in an effort to try and win the presidency and government away from the current pro-independence parties.

‘Salvador Illa starts today his last 24 hours at the helm of the ministry,’ the office of the PSOE socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said in a statement. ‘Tomorrow Tuesday will be his last cabinet meeting and his replacement will be disclosed.’

Illa is leaving the health ministry at the height of Spain’s worst statistics for Covid-19 since the start of the pandemic. Latest figures released by ministry on Friday 22 January showed the number of people who have tested positive for Coronavirus since the start of the pandemic is now at 2.5 million. The overall incidence rate is also 828 per 100,000 inhabitants over 14 days – the highest figure it has been throughout the pandemic.

It has been reported that Carolina Darias, the current Minister for Territorial Policy and Civil Service, will become Illa’s successor. Darias has been working very closely with Illa and been overseeing the weekly summits of Spain’s regional health authorities to coordinate the Coronavirus response.

Spanish Health Minister Salvador Illa
Spanish Health Minister Salvador Illa at a press briefing on 12 January 2021. (Pool Moncloa / Ricardo Galán)

The elections in Catalonia, set for 14 February, had recently been postponed until 30 May due to the worsening situation of Covid-19 across the country. However, the Catalan High Court (TSJC) has decided to maintain the 14 February date until it rules definitively on whether it can be postponed. Magistrates will consider arguments and challenges to make a final decision on the election date before 8 February, potentially with the campaign already having started.

An overwhelming majority of parties had agreed to postpone the vote until 30 May, but the Catalan Socialists (PSC) – who soared in the polls after recently changing their presidential candidate and picking Illa – were initially reluctant to a vote delay. Some critics of the postponement also claimed that the Catalan pro-independence parties currently forming the regional coalition government believe that a postponement will weaken the impact of the PSC’s new candidate, who is highly regarded.

Health Minister Salvador Illa
Spanish Health Minister Salvador Illa (left) with Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez on 25 January 2021. (Pool Moncloa / Fernando Calvo)

Opinion polls have recently been split on the outcome of the Catalan elections. Some, however, including one by the Centre for Sociological Studies (CIS), have shown the PSC, currently the fourth-largest party in the regional parliament, would be on track to win the biggest share of the vote with Salvador Illa at the head.

There are 135 seats in the Catalan Parliament – with 68 required for an overall majority. The presidential candidates for each party in the Catalan elections are now as follows:

  • Pere Aragonès for the Esquerra Republicana (ERC) party. The head of the ERC party, Oriol Junqueras, is still in prison for his role in the 2017 Catalan independence referendum. Aragonès is also the current ‘interim president’ of the Catalan government, following the banning from office of Quim Torra in September. The ERC currently hold 32 seats in the Catalan Parliament.
  • Carlos Carrizosa for the Ciudadanos (Cs) party, currently with 36 seats.
  • Laura Borràs for the Junts per Catalunya (JxCat) party (still led by Carles Puigdemont, who is in exile in Belgium and now an MEP) – currently with 29 seats.
  • Salvador Illa for the Catalan Socialists (PSC) party. The PSC currently have 17 seats.
  • Jéssica Albiach for Catalunya en Comú-Podem (CatECP), with 8 seats.
  • Àngels Chacon for the PDeCAT party, currently with 5 seats.
  • Dolors Sabater for Candidatura d’Unitat Popular & Guanyem (CUP), currently with just 4 seats.
  • Alejandro Fernández for the People’s Party (PP). The PP currently hold just 4 seats in Catalonia.
  • Ignacio Garriga for the Vox party – currently not holding any seats in the Catalan Parliament.

Click here for all our reports on: Catalan Independence, the Catalan Trial, verdicts and sentencing

Recent Posts

Barcelona to install floating desalination plant to help fight drought

News Desk

Two people smugglers sentenced to 9 years each in Spain over migrant deaths

News Desk

Real Madrid star Bellingham is ‘used to horrible, serious problem’ of racist abuse in Spain

News Desk

Yet another racist incident as Mallorca fan makes monkey gestures at Real Madrid game

News Desk

As temperatures rise in Spain, the first wildfire of the year burns over 500 hectares

News Desk

Spain and the UK make ‘significant progress’ in Gibraltar talks

News Desk

Leave a Comment