The response of the Madrid government was \is very short sighted. What they should have said and done was to delegitimise the process by stating that 1. It was not a fair process, 2. did not have any standing and they would totally ignore it. 3. And then making slowly and consistently the case for retaining the status quo. By giving it the oxygen of publicity and martyrs with broken limbs they are increasing the problem and resentment.Government-authorised thuggery and brutality seems to be the Spanish government's only answer to people wishing to express their wishes in a ballot.
The film footage which has emerged of police officers using weapons against fire officers trying to protect their fellow citizens so they can cast a vote is chilling. This represents exactly the resort to fascism Mike Killay drew to attention in the opening post of this thread.
Some see this as a necessary element of the maintenance of the rule of law but they are wrong. This is simply another manifestation of the rule of the most powerful over the weak and serves to demonstrate that Spain is not the democracy it would like the outside world to believe. I could easily go into a rant about this great democratic lie but I won't. Suffice to say that the rich Spanish powerbrokers' notion that they may continue to do as they please and get away with it just because they restored the monarchy in a purely puppet capacity has not worked. Fascism and corruption ruined Spain and those fascists have never really gone away.
Tom
Your point about the fascists still residing in the body politic, should give Brexit supporters cause to reconsider. The accomodations made in northern Ireland have had 20 years less to bed in and it takes little to inflame and fan old resentments