Democratic Convergence of Catalonia

{{Infobox political party

| name = Democratic Convergence of Catalonia

| native_name = Convergència Democràtica de Catalunya

| logo = 150px

| colorcode = {{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}

| abbreviation = CDC

| president =

| secretary =

| founder = Jordi Pujol

| founded = {{Start date|df=yes|1974|11|17}}

| registered = {{Start date|df=yes|1977|02|23}}

| dissolved = {{End date|df=yes|2016|07|10}} (refoundation){{efn|CDC was "refounded" into the Catalan European Democratic Party (PDeCAT), which assumed CDC's political activity, but CDC was not legally dissolved nor its trademark removed from the electoral register and retains full legal personality.{{cite news |last1=García Pagán |first1=Isabel |last2=Gisbert |first2=Josep |date=11 July 2016 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20160711/403102052785/partit-democrata-catala-independentismo.html |title=Las nueve claves del Partir Demòcrata y su independentismo sin matices |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}}}}

| merger =

| predecessor =

| successor = Catalan European Democratic Party

| headquarters = Historical:
C/ Còrsega, 331-333
08037, Barcelona
Last:
C/ Consell de Cent, 113-115, bjs.
08015, Barcelona

| ideology = {{nowrap|Catalan independence{{efn|Since 2012.}}
Catalan nationalism{{citation |first=Andrew |last=Dowling |title=Convergència i Unió, Catalonia and the new Catalanism |work=The Politics of Contemporary Spain |publisher=Rotledge |year=2005 |page=106}}{{citation |first1=Luis |last1=Ramiro |first2=Laura |last2=Morales |title=European integration and Spanish parties: Elite empowerment amidst limited adaptation |work=The Europeanization of National Political Parties: Power and organizational adaptation |publisher=Routledge |year=2007 |page=145}}
Liberalism
Conservative liberalism{{cite book |last=Slomp |first=Hans |title=Europe, a Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=V1uzkNq8xfIC&pg=PA518 |year=2011 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-0-313-39181-1 |page=518}}}}
Social democracy (minority){{cite news |last=Sallés |first=Quico |date=7 March 2015 |url=https://www.naciodigital.cat/noticia/83630/sector/liberal/planta/batalla/socialdemocracia/nova/cdc |title=El sector liberal planta batalla a la socialdemocràcia de la nova CDC |language=Catalan |newspaper=Nació Digital |location=Barcelona |access-date=18 July 2020}}{{cite news |last=Lamelas |first=Marcos |date=22 June 2015 |url=https://www.elconfidencial.com/espana/cataluna/2015-06-22/nuevos-consejeros-del-govern-neus-munte-meritxell-borras-jordi-jane-y-jordi-ciuraneta_897531/ |title=Mas vira hacia la socialdemocracia a las puertas del 27-S con su nuevo Gobierno |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Confidencial |location=Barcelona |access-date=18 July 2020}}{{cite news |agency=EFE |date=9 January 2016 |url=https://www.diariodesevilla.es/espana/Perfil-Puigdemont-ala-independentista-CDC_0_988401337.html |title=Perfil: Puigdemont, el ala más independentista de CDC |language=Spanish |newspaper=Diario de Sevilla |location=Barcelona |access-date=18 July 2020}}

| position = Centre-right

| regional = Democratic Pact for Catalonia (1977–78)
Democracy and Catalonia (1977–78)
Convergence and Union (1978–2015)
Catalonia in the Senate (1982–83)
Junts pel Sí (2015–16)
Democracy and Freedom (2015–16)
Together for Catalonia (2017–19){{efn|name="CDC"|CDC's trademark was registered as part of the Together of Catalonia alliance ahead of the 2017 Catalan regional election, in order to allow its successor party, PDeCAT, to be guaranteed the public funding and electoral rights corresponding to CDC for the campaign.{{cite web |url=http://www.juntaelectoralcentral.es/cs/jec/documentos/C3-JuntsPerCatalunya |title=C3. Coalición electoral "Junts per Catalunya" |language=Spanish |website=www.juntaelectoralcentral.es |publisher=Central Electoral Commission |access-date=9 July 2020}}{{cite news |last=Lamelas |first=Marcos |date=24 November 2017 |url=https://www.elconfidencial.com/espana/cataluna/2017-11-24/elecciones-cataluna-pdecat-concurre-coalicion-cdc-subvenciones_1482750/ |title=El PDeCAT va el 21-D en coalición consigo mismo para cobrar las subvenciones de CDC |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Confidencial |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}} This practice was discontinued ahead of the general election repetition in November 2019.{{cite news |date=3 October 2019 |url=https://www.europapress.es/nacional/noticia-pdecat-quedara-todas-subvenciones-electorales-obtenga-coalicion-junts-20191003191502.html |title=El PDeCAT se quedará todas las subvenciones electorales que obtenga la coalición Junts |language=Spanish |publisher=Europa Press |location=Madrid |access-date=9 July 2020}}}}

| youth_wing = Nationalist Youth of Catalonia (1980–2016)

| european = Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe

| europarl = Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (2004–2016)
ELDR (1987–2004)

| colors = {{Color box|{{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}|border=darkgray}} Blue
{{Color box|#F68B1F|border=darkgray}} Orange

| website = [https://web.archive.org/web/20160614225752/http://www.convergencia.cat/ www.convergencia.cat]

| country = Spain

| state = Catalonia

}}

The Democratic Convergence of Catalonia ({{langx|ca|Convergència Democràtica de Catalunya}}; {{IPA|ca|kumbəɾˈʒɛnsi.ə ðəmuˈkɾatikə ðə kətəˈluɲə|IPA}}, CDC), frequently shortened as Convergence ({{langx|ca|Convergència}}; {{IPA|ca|kumbəɾˈʒɛnsi.ə}}) was a Catalan nationalist, liberal political party in Catalonia (Spain), currently still existing without any political activity.{{efn|name="CDC"}}

The party was originally created around the figure of Jordi Pujol in 1974, but it was not legally registered until February 1977.{{cite web |url=https://sede.mir.gob.es/nfrontal/webpartido_politico.html |title=Registro de Partidos Políticos |language=Spanish |website=sede.mir.gob.es |publisher=Ministry of the Interior |access-date=15 July 2020}} Between 1978 and 2015, the party was a member of the Convergence and Union (CiU) alliance that dominated Catalan politics for almost the entirety of its existence; first as an electoral alliance with the christian democratic Democratic Union of Catalonia (UDC), then as a party federation on 2 December 2001.{{cite news |last=Quadrado |first=Susana |date=3 December 2001 |url=http://hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com/preview/2001/12/03/pagina-19/34199257/pdf.html |title=CDC y Unió firman la federación que sella la paz para ganar las próximas elecciones |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=14 July 2020}} For 37 years, both parties contested all elections under the CiU umbrella, being the first political group in the Parliament of Catalonia for its entire history and forming the regional government for nearly three decades (1980–2003 and 2010–2015). In June 2015, the CiU federation split over the issue of Catalan independence.

On 8–10 July 2016, the party was refounded into the Catalan European Democratic Party (PDeCAT),{{cite news |last=Casals |first=David |date=8 July 2016 |url=https://www.expansion.com/catalunya/2016/07/08/577ff79f268e3e4e498b45fa.html |title=Fuerte malestar contra Artur Mas en el congreso de la nueva CDC |language=Spanish |newspaper=Expansión |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}}{{cite news |last=García Sastre |first=Daniel |date=10 July 2016 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/cataluna/2016/07/10/578219cee5fdeae36a8b4644.html |title=Convergència ya se llama Partit Demòcrata Català |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Mundo |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}} with CDC's political activity being passed to the new party, though CDC has remained active as a way to preserve its public funding and electoral rights in favour of the PDeCAT and the Together for Catalonia alliance. At the time of the party's refoundation in July 2016, it had 15,019 members.{{cite news |last=Masreal |first=Fidel |date=20 May 2016 |url=https://www.elperiodico.com/es/politica/20160520/los-15000-militantes-de-cdc-deciden-este-sabado-si-impulsan-un-nuevo-partido-5146601 |title=Las bases de CDC deciden este sábado entre haraquiri o refundación |language=Spanish |publisher=El Periódico de Catalunya |access-date=17 July 2020}}

History

=Origin=

The party was founded on 17 November 1974 in Santa Maria de Montserrat Abbey as a "political movement" centered around the figure of Jordi Pujol.{{cite book |last=Riera |first=Ignasi |date=2002 |title=Jordi Pujol, luces y sombras |publisher=Reverso |page=31 |isbn=978-84-88811-83-7}}{{cite book |last1=Molinero |first1=Carme |last2=Ysàs |first2=Pere |date=2014 |title=La cuestión catalana. Cataluña en la transición española |location=Barcelona |publisher=Crítica |page=38 |isbn=9788498927283}} After the death of dictator Francisco Franco and in the wake of the Spanish transition to democracy, CDC was constituted as a political party in February 1976, being officially registered as such one year later in 1977. Convergence's aim would be to articulate itself as a transversal big tent political platform, able of bringing together various social sectors—from left to right in the political spectrum—of public life in Catalonia.

Ahead of the first democratic election on 15 June 1977, CDC formed the Democratic Pact for Catalonia electoral alliance for the Congress of Deputies, together with the Socialist Party of Catalonia–Regrouping (PSC–R), Democratic Left of Catalonia (EDC) and the National Front of Catalonia (FNC);{{cite news |last=Sáenz-Díez |first=Margarita |date=4 May 1977 |title=Con la formación de siete coaliciones se clarifica el panorama catalán |url=http://hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com/preview/1977/05/04/pagina-24/33741995/pdf.html |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |access-date=27 December 2019}}{{cite news |date=25 May 1977 |title=Cataluña: domina la autonomía |url=http://hemeroteca.abc.es/nav/Navigate.exe/hemeroteca/madrid/blanco.y.negro/1977/05/25/034.html |language=Spanish |newspaper=ABC |access-date=27 December 2019}} for the Spanish Senate it formed the Democracy and Catalonia coalition with the PSC–R, EDC and Democratic Union of Catalonia (UDC). In the spring of 1978, a sector of the party unsuccessfully proposed its renaming as "Nationalist Party of Catalonia", a name which would be used by several party members 42 years later for another political force.{{cite news |last=Pardo Torregrosa |first=Iñaki |date=12 May 2020 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20200512/481127142015/grupo-poblet-partido-partit-nacionalista-catalunya.html |title=El partido del grupo de Poblet se llamará Partit Nacionalista de Catalunya |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=9 July 2020}}{{cite news |date=13 May 2020 |url=https://www.europapress.es/catalunya/noticia-jnc-acusa-partit-nacionalista-catalunya-intentar-apropiarse-legado-20200513152431.html |title=La JNC acusa al Partit Nacionalista de Catalunya de "intentar apropiarse" de su legado |language=Spanish |publisher=Europa Press |location=Barcelona |access-date=9 July 2020}}

On 19 September 1978, CDC and UDC established the Convergence and Union (CiU) alliance,{{cite news |date=19 September 1978 |url=http://hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com/preview/1978/09/19/pagina-11/33746576/pdf.html |title=Hoy, Convergència y Unió firman el acuerdo electoral |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |access-date=17 July 2020}}{{cite news |date=20 September 1978 |url=http://hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com/preview/1978/09/20/pagina-3/33748962/pdf.html |title=Convergencia y Unió quieren vertebrar el centro-izquierda catalán |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |access-date=17 July 2020}} under which both parties would contest together all elections held in Catalonia throughout the next 37 years together.{{cite news |agency=EFE |date=17 June 2015 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20150617/54432887642/unio-ciu.html |title=Las fechas clave de CiU |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}} From the 1979 Spanish general election onwards, CDC and UDC would maintain the CiU alliance for all elections at all levels of administration: local, regional and general.

=Political hegemony=

Until their split in June 2015, the CiU alliance would dominate Catalan regional politics from the 1980s to the early 2000s, providing for Jordi Pujol's long stay in the regional government for 23 consecutive years,{{cite news |agency=EFE |date=17 June 2015 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20150617/54432887375/udc-sale-del-govern-y-pone-en-jaque-una-alianza-de-37-anos-de-ciu.html |title=UDC sale del Govern y pone en jaque una alianza de 37 años de CiU |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}} until a left-wing alliance comprising the Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC), Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) and Initiative for Catalonia Greens (ICV) was able to oust CiU from government and into opposition. It would not be until the 2010 Catalan regional election held seven years later that CiU, under Artur Mas's leadership, was returned to government.

Beyond its dominance of Catalan politics, CDC sought to have influence in the Spanish parliament, collaborated with governments both under the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) (and more critically, in the 1993–1996 period when the PSOE was forced into a minority government) as well as under the People's Party (PP) (1996–2004), giving their support to both parties's attempts to form government, then maintaining confidence and supply agreements with them. CiU's support to Felipe González's government provided for the development of the "state of autonomies" the foundations for the financing of the autonomous communities. Under the PP governments of José María Aznar, CDC supported the liberalizing and budgetary control measures that allowed Spain to eventually adopt the euro as the country's currency. In the so-called "Majestic Pacts" signed between CiU and the PP after the latter's victory in the 1996 Spanish general election, both parties had also agreed to further expand on the development of regional financing started during González's tenure, the abolition of compulsory military service and the devolution of powers to the autonomous communities.

Pujol's retirement ahead of the 2003 Catalan regional election prompted Artur Mas—who served as chief minister ({{langx|ca|Conseller en cap}}) and Pujol's protégée during the late stages of his government{{cite news |agency=EFE |date=14 January 2001 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2001/01/12/espana/979333275.html |title=Pujol anuncia que Mas será el consejero jefe de la Generalitat |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Mundo |location=L'Hospitalet (Barcelona) |access-date=14 July 2020}}—as his successor as CDC leader and CiU leading candidate.{{cite news |last=Garriga |first=Josep |date=30 March 2001 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/2001/03/30/catalunya/985914448_850215.html |title=Duran reclama la secretaría general de CiU para aceptar a Mas como sucesor de Pujol |language=Spanish |newspaper=El País |location=Barcelona |access-date=14 July 2020}}{{cite news |date=1 April 2001 |url=https://elpais.com/diario/2001/04/01/espana/986076001_850215.html |title=Jordi Pujol anuncia que no volverá a concurrir a las elecciones |language=Spanish |newspaper=El País |location=Barcelona |access-date=14 July 2020}} After CiU's victory in the 2010 regional election, Mas would become the new president of the Government of Catalonia, introducing previously unseen variable geometry in the region's politics: first by partnering with the opposition's main party the PSC,{{cite news |date=23 December 2010 |url=https://elpais.com/elpais/2010/12/23/actualidad/1293095817_850215.html |title=Mas, investido presidente con la abstención del PSC |language=Spanish |newspaper=El País |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}} then seeking collaboration with the local PP branch for approving the regional budget.{{cite news |last=B. García |first=Luis |date=15 February 2012 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20120215/54254551682/la-abstencion-del-ppc-permite-la-aprobacion-de-los-presupuestos-de-catalunya-de-2012.html |title=La abstención del PPC permite la aprobación de los presupuestos de Catalunya de 2012 |language=Spanish |newspaper=El País |access-date=15 July 2020}} As a result of the 11 September 2012 demonstration, Mas sought to capitalize on the social momentum of independence by triggering a snap election for 25 November, hoping to expand his parliamentary majority and attain an absolute majority; instead, his party suffered a severe setback by falling from 62 to 50 seats, having to rely on the support of the pro-independence Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) to keep himself in power. Frictions with CDC's alliance partner UDC over the issue of independence ended up in the termination of CiU as a political project in June 2015.{{cite news |last=Oms |first=Javier |date=18 June 2015 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/cataluna/2015/06/18/55829b7a22601d1a5c8b457f.html |title=CiU se desintegra: 'El proyecto político de la federación se ha acabado' |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Mundo |location=Barcelona |access-date=11 July 2020}}

Concurrently, the party had been shaken by CDC founder Jordi Pujol's confession on 25 July 2014 that he had hidden "money located abroad" from the Public Treasury for 34 years, allegedly attributed to his father's, Florenci Pujol, heritage.{{cite news |date=25 July 2014 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/cataluna/2014/07/25/53d29132e2704eba1e8b459c.html |title=Comunicado del señor Jordi Pujol y Soley |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Mundo |access-date=15 July 2020}} In his statement, Pujol regretted never having found the "right time" for the regularization of these amounts of money and asked the public for forgiveness.{{cite news |last=García |first=Jesús |date=25 July 2016 |url=https://elpais.com/ccaa/2014/07/25/catalunya/1406306705_109805.html |title=Pujol reconoce que su familia tuvo en el extranjero una fortuna sin declarar |language=Spanish |newspaper=El País |location=Barcelona |access-date=9 July 2020}} Various media outlets pointed out that this money was located in secret bank accounts abroad and could have benefitted from the fiscal amnesty promoted by the Spanish government of Mariano Rajoy in 2012.{{cite news |last=Pérez |first=Manel |date=25 July 2014 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20140725/54412224462/pujol-regularizacion-fiscal-cuentas-familia-exterior.html |title=Jordi Pujol anuncia la regularización fiscal de las cuentas de su familia en el exterior |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |access-date=15 July 2020}}{{cite news |date=25 July 2014 |url=https://www.ara.cat/politica/PUJOL-PERDO-COMPTES-ESTRANGER-FAMILIA_0_1181282147.html |title=Pujol demana perdó per haver tingut fins ara diners sense regularitzar a l'estranger |language=Catalan |newspaper=Ara |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}} Coupled with the ongoing judicial investigations on an alleged CDC corruption scandal involving the payment of illegal commissions in exchange for the award of public works—in what would be known as the "3% case" because of that amount being the percentage of the public works' budgets that was to be illegally paid—Pujol's confession caused a profound commotion in Catalan society, which had the former president as a revered public figure with a large amount of influence.{{cite news |agency=Agencias |date=26 July 2014 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20140726/54412502367/confesion-jordi-pujol-sacude-politica-catalana.html |title=La confesión de Jordi Pujol sacude la política catalana |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}}

Following CiU's breakup, CDC contested the 2015 Catalan regional election within the Junts pel Sí coalition,{{cite news |date=18 June 2015 |url=http://www.elperiodico.com/es/noticias/politica/cumbre-partidos-entidades-soberanistas-lista-unica-elecciones-catalanas-4352735 |title=Rull y Junqueras anuncian un principio de acuerdo Convergència-ERC sobre la lista unitaria |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Periódico de Catalunya |access-date=3 February 2020}}{{cite news |agency=Agencias |date=20 July 2015 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20150720/54433506156/junts-pel-si.html |title=La lista unitaria soberanista se presentará como Junts pel Sí |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=11 July 2020}} and the 2015 Spanish general election within the Democracy and Freedom alliance.{{cite news |last=Masreal |first=Fidel |date=6 November 2015 |url=https://www.elperiodico.com/es/politica/20151106/cdc-concurre-generales-nombre-democracia-i-llibertat-4649829 |title=CDC concurrirá a las generales bajo el nombre de Democràcia i Llibertat |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Periódico de Catalunya |location=Barcelona |access-date=9 July 2020}} The 2016 Spanish general election would be the only one in CDC's long electoral history which the party would contest entirely on its own.{{cite news |agency=EFE |date=6 May 2016 |url=https://www.elmundo.es/cataluna/2016/05/09/57308f6fca4741030a8b45b4.html |title=CDC rechaza la lista junto con Demòcrates y concurrirá sola con sus siglas |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Mundo |location=Barcelona |access-date=9 July 2020}}

=Refoundation and legacy=

In a party ballot held on 21 May 2016 to determine the party's future, CDC members were asked whether they backed a "renovation" of the party as it was, or instead supported a full "refoundation" with the establishment of a new, different party,{{cite news |date=4 April 2016 |url=https://www.europapress.es/catalunya/noticia-cdc-convoca-consulta-militancia-si-funda-nuevo-partido-renueva-20160404134537.html |title=CDC convoca una consulta a la militancia sobre si funda un nuevo partido o se renueva |language=Spanish |publisher=Europa Press |location=Barcelona |access-date=17 July 2020}} leading to a 67–32% result in favour of refoundation.{{cite news |last=Lasalas |first=Marta |date=21 May 2016 |url=https://www.elnacional.cat/es/politica/cdc-nuevo-partit-homs_103502_102.html |title=Los militantes de CDC votan a favor de crear un nuevo partido y por Homs como candidato |language=Spanish |newspaper=El Nacional |access-date=17 July 2020}} As a result, during its congress held from 8 to 10 July 2016, the new Catalan European Democratic Party (PDeCAT) was established, out of a desire for presenting a renewed trademark disassociated from CDC's corruption scandals, occurring during its long-term dominance of Catalan regional politics.{{cite news |date=2 February 2017 |url=https://www.eldiario.es/catalunya/politica/fantasmas-corrupcion-ciu-irrumpen-pdecat_1_3603292.html |title=Los fantasmas de la corrupción de CiU irrumpen en la era del PDECat |language=Spanish |newspaper=eldiario.es |access-date=9 July 2020}}{{cite news |date=4 May 2017 |url=https://www.eldiario.es/catalunya/politica/fracaso-refundacion-convergencia_1_3420026.html |title=Siete síntomas que muestran que la refundación de Convergència en el PDECat no ha funcionado |language=Spanish |newspaper=eldiario.es |access-date=9 July 2020}} The refoundation, intended as a pre-ordained scheme which the party's grassroots ultimately took away from its leadership, would only hasten the blurring of the post-convergent political space, after seeing the loss of the historical CDC label, the dilution of the PDeCAT within the Junts pel Sí parliamentary group with a number of various parties and independents, the increasing influence of Catalan president Carles Puigdemont in regional politics even after his ousting and subsequent self-exile in late October 2017 and the eventual coalescing of former pro-independence CDC members around the Together for Catalonia umbrella, dominated by Puigdemont's own party, the National Call for the Republic.{{cite news |last=Sorolla |first=José Antonio |date=28 June 2020 |url=https://cronicaglobal.elespanol.com/pensamiento/muerte-resurreccion-posconvergencia_362061_102.html |title=Muerte y resurrección de la posconvergencia |language=Spanish |newspaper=Crónica Global |access-date=15 July 2020}}{{cite news |last=Gisbert |first=Josep |date=9 July 2020 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20200709/482195533515/requiem-por-el-pdecat.html |title=Réquiem por el PDECat |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=9 July 2020}}

Several parties would be formed from splinter CDC/PDeCAT elements weary of Puigdemont's growing influence and seeking to occupy the vacuum left by CiU's dissolution and appeal to Convergence's "orphan" voters. These included the Free (Lliures) party founded by former regional minister Antoni Fernández Teixidó, Convergents (CNV) of former regional minister of justice Germà Gordó, the Democratic League (LD) of political scientist Astrid Barrio and the Nationalist Party of Catalonia (PNC) led by former PDeCAT coordinator-general between 2016 and 2018 Marta Pascal.{{cite news |last=Espada |first=Ferran |date=11 July 2020 |url=https://www.publico.es/politica/cinco-anos-big-bang-ciu-provocado-constelacion-siglas.html |title=Cinco años del Big Bang de CiU que ha provocado una constelación de siglas |language=Spanish |newspaper=Público |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}}

=Corruption convictions=

On 15 January 2018, a court in Barcelona ruled that CDC had received €6.6 million in illegal commissions from building firm Ferrovial between 1999 and 2009, in exchange for public works contracts. The scheme used the Palau de la Música Catalana concert venue as a front for false invoicing.{{cite news |last=Hedgecoe |first=Guy |date=15 January 2018 |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/europe/corruption-sentence-hits-catalonia-s-dominant-nationalist-party-1.3356372 |title=Corruption sentence hits Catalonia's dominant nationalist party |newspaper=The Irish Times |location=Madrid |access-date=17 January 2018}} Twelve people were jailed and fined millions. The former CDC treasurer Daniel Osàcar was sentenced to four years and five months in prison and fined €3.7 million for influence peddling and money laundering.{{cite news |last=Jones |first=Sam |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jan/15/catalonia-palau-case-cdc-ferrovial-court-barcelona |title=Catalonia corruption scandal: court orders party to repay €6.6m |newspaper=The Guardian |location=Madrid |access-date=17 January 2018}} Fèlix Millet, the former director of the Palau, was jailed for just under 10 years and fined €4.1 million and his deputy, Jordi Montull, received a 7 years and six months sentence and was fined €2.9 million. Millet and Montull were the individuals who benefited most from the scam, controlling the Palau's funds. The Turkey Telegraph noted the "final impunity of the CDC leaders", and also the impunity for the company that paid illegal commissions. Earlier in January, Artur Mas, who was a close ally of Osàcar, had stepped down as party president.{{cite news |date=16 January 2018 |url=http://www.turkeytelegraph.com/business/guilty-h15034.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180118181046/http://www.turkeytelegraph.com/business/guilty-h15034.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=18 January 2018 |title=Guilty (editorial) |newspaper=Turkey Telegraph |access-date=17 January 2018}}

Electoral performance

=Parliament of Catalonia=

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%; text-align:left;"
colspan="8" align="center"| Parliament of Catalonia
width="75"| Election

! width="70"| Votes

! width="35"| %

! width="25"| #

! Seats

! width="40"| +/–

! Leading candidate

! Status in legislature

1980

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|35|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| —

| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#cfc;"| Minority

rowspan="2"| 1984

| rowspan="2" colspan="3"| Within CiU

| rowspan="2"| {{Composition bar|56|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| rowspan="2"| 10px21

| rowspan="2"| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#cfc;"| Coalition {{small|(CiU–ERC)}}

style="background:#cfc;"| Majority {{small|(from February 1987)}}
1988

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|54|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#cfc;"| Majority

1992

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|54|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#cfc;"| Majority

1995

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|46|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px8

| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#cfc;"| Minority

1999

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|43|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#cfc;"| Minority

2003

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|33|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px10

| Artur Mas

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

2006

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|34|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| Artur Mas

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

2010

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|45|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px11

| Artur Mas

| style="background:#cfc;"| Minority

rowspan="2"| 2012

| rowspan="2" colspan="3"| Within CiU

| rowspan="2"| {{Composition bar|37|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| rowspan="2"| 10px8

| rowspan="2"| Artur Mas

| style="background:#cfc;"| Minority {{small|(CDC–UDC)}}

style="background:#cfc;"| Minority {{small|(CDC; from June 2015)}}
2015

| colspan="3"| Within JxSí

| {{Composition bar|30|135|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px7{{cite news |agency=EFE |date=27 September 2015 |url=https://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20150928/54437688995/composicion-interna-de-jxsi-30-escanos-de-cdc-21-de-erc-11-independientes.html |title=Composición interna de JxSí: 30 escaños de CDC, 21 de ERC, 11 independientes |language=Spanish |newspaper=La Vanguardia |location=Barcelona |access-date=15 July 2020}}

| Artur Mas

| style="background:#cfc;"| Coalition {{small|(CDC–ERC)}}

=Cortes Generales=

==Nationwide==

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%; text-align:left;"
colspan="10" align="center"| Cortes Generales
rowspan="2" width="75"| Election

! colspan="5"| Congress

! colspan="2"| Senate

! rowspan="2"| Leading candidate

! rowspan="2"| Status in legislature

width="70"| Votes

! width="35"| %

! width="25"| #

! Seats

! width="35"| +/–

! Seats

! width="35"| +/–

1977

| colspan="3"| Within PDC/DiC

| {{Composition bar|5|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| —

| {{Composition bar|2|207|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| —

| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

1979

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|7|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

| {{Composition bar|1|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| Jordi Pujol

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

1982

| colspan="3"| Within CiU/CatSen

| {{Composition bar|9|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

| {{Composition bar|4|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

| Miquel Roca

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

1986

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|13|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px4

| {{Composition bar|7|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

| Miquel Roca

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

1989

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|13|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| {{Composition bar|8|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| Miquel Roca

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

1993

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|12|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| {{Composition bar|7|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| Miquel Roca

| style="background:#efb;"| Confidence and supply

1996

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|11|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| {{Composition bar|6|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| Joaquim Molins

| style="background:#efb;"| Confidence and supply

2000

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|11|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| {{Composition bar|6|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| Xavier Trias

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

2004

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|6|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px5

| {{Composition bar|4|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

| Josep Antoni Duran i Lleida

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

2008

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|6|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| {{Composition bar|4|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| Josep Antoni Duran i Lleida

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

2011

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|10|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px4

| {{Composition bar|7|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

| Josep Antoni Duran i Lleida

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

2015

| colspan="3"| Within DiL

| {{Composition bar|7|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

| {{Composition bar|5|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

| Francesc Homs

| style="background:#ffc;"| New election

2016

| 483,488

| 2.01%

| 6th

| {{Composition bar|8|350|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| {{Composition bar|2|208|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

| Francesc Homs

| style="background:#fcc;"| Opposition

==Regional breakdown==

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%; text-align:left;"
rowspan="3" width="75"| Election

! colspan="7"| Catalonia

colspan="5"| Congress

! colspan="2"| Senate

width="70"| Votes

! width="35"| %

! width="25"| #

! Seats

! width="35"| +/–

! Seats

! width="35"| +/–

1977

| colspan="3"| Within PDC/DiC

| {{Composition bar|5|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| —

| {{Composition bar|2|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| —

1979

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|7|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

| {{Composition bar|1|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

1982

| colspan="3"| Within CiU/CatSen

| {{Composition bar|9|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

| {{Composition bar|4|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

1986

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|13|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px4

| {{Composition bar|7|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

1989

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|13|46|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| {{Composition bar|8|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

1993

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|12|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| {{Composition bar|7|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

1996

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|11|46|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| {{Composition bar|6|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

2000

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|11|46|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| {{Composition bar|6|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

2004

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|6|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px5

| {{Composition bar|4|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

2008

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|6|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

| {{Composition bar|4|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

2011

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|10|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px4

| {{Composition bar|7|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

2015

| colspan="3"| Within DiL

| {{Composition bar|7|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

| {{Composition bar|5|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px2

2016

| 483,488

| 13.90%

| 6th

| {{Composition bar|8|47|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

| {{Composition bar|2|16|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px3

=European Parliament=

class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%; text-align:left;"
colspan="6" align="center"| European Parliament
rowspan="2" width="75"| Election

! colspan="5"| Total

width="70"| Votes

! width="35"| %

! width="25"| #

! Seats

! width="35"| +/–

1987

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|2|60|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| —

1989

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|1|60|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

1994

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|2|64|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

1999

| colspan="3"| Within CiU

| {{Composition bar|2|64|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

2004

| colspan="3"| Within CiU (Galeusca)

| {{Composition bar|1|54|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px1

2009

| colspan="3"| Within CiU (CEU)

| {{Composition bar|1|54|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

2014

| colspan="3"| Within CiU (CEU)

| {{Composition bar|1|54|hex={{party color|Democratic Convergence of Catalonia}}}}

| 10px0

See also

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book|first=Hans|last=Slomp|title=Europe, a Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LmfAPmwE6YYC|year=2011|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-0-313-39182-8}}