Reaction against Fuster Blaverism is usually seen as a reaction against the ideas expressed by
Joan Fuster in his 1962 essay
Nosaltres els valencians ("We the Valencians"), which was very influential among Catalan nationalists during the 1960s and early 1970s. Fuster's thesis was that the Valencians and the
Catalans form part of the same nationality. In his words, ::"
No és que la bandera valenciana siga igual que la catalana. És la mateixa. Igual que amb la llengua i tantes altres coses." ::"It isn't that the Valencian flag
is identical to the Catalan. It
is the same one. Same as with the language, and so many other things." Blaverism not only rejects the thesis of a common nationality (flag, language, culture, etc.) but also promotes symbols of a distinct Valencian nationality: in this sense it can be described as a
nationalist movement, although many of its early proponents were in fact latter-
Francoists. On 11 September 1981, two bombs exploded in Fuster's house, seriously damaging his library and archive. Nobody was prosecuted, but it is widely believed that it was the blaverist response to Fuster's political and cultural position.
Democratic transition Some observers warned as early as in 1976 that the
transition to democracy, and particularly the economic problems of the time, could radicalize the conservative positions of a part of the right. The first public backlash against the perceived pan-Catalanism of the left-wing parties occurred in the runup to the first democratic elections, in June 1977. There were a number of violent attacks on left-wing activists and bookshops from this time on. In terms of democratic politics, the party which most closely espoused the blaverist cause was the centre-right
Unión de Centro Democrático (UCD), which was in power nationally (under
Adolfo Suárez) but which trailed the socialists in
Valencia and
Alicante. The first speech attacking pancatalanism came in December 1977 from
Emilio Attard, its leader in the
province of Valencia.
Manuel Broseta, another leading member of the UCD, published an influential essay "
Paella and the Catalan Countries" a few months later, the first in a substantial series of anti-Catalanist articles to appear in the newspaper
Las Provincias. The UCD would defend, with some success, a staunchly Valencianist position throughout the negotiations leading up to the first Statute of Autonomy.
Valencian autonomy The
Consell del País Valencià was established by Royal Decree on 17 March 1978 and held its first meeting at the
Monastery of El Puig on 10 April. All four main parties—the UCD, the postfrancoists of the
Alianza Popular, the socialists of the
PSOE and the communists (
PCE)—were represented, and all signed a call for Valencian autonomy on 8 October, the eve of the Valencian national day. After the approval of the Spanish Constitution in December 1978, the
Consell approved the first draft of a Statute of Autonomy at its meeting in Morella on 9 January 1979: this draft has become known as the "Statute of Morella". The political climate degraded significantly after the elections of March and April 1979—with some hyperbole, the period has become known as the "
Battle of Valencia". The elections gave the left another majority in the parliamentary deputation (PCE, 3; PSOE, 19; UCD, 19) but gave the UCD the majority of seats on the
Consell del País Valencià (PCE, 1; PSOE, 7; UCD, 10), which were attributed under a different voting system. It was initially agreed that socialist
Josep-Lluís Albinyana should rest as President of the
Consell but the tensions between left and right were such that Albinyana was ousted after a vote of censure on 22 December 1979. The UCD accused Albinyana of using his position as President of the
Consell to bounce through a Statute of Autonomy without consensus, while the socialists accused the UCD of wanting to reopen the consensus reached at Morella. There were elements of truth in both positions, and the close balance of electoral strength made the arguments particularly virulent. As a result of the tensions in regional politics and of a certain number of developments at the national level, the Statute of Autonomy remained deadlocked throughout 1980, despite petitions in favour of Valencian autonomy from 529 of the 542
municipalities. The Valencian parliamentarians took the matter in hand after the failed
military coup of 23 February 1981 (during which the city of Valencia suffered several hours of military occupation), producing a compromise draft Statute known as the "Statute of Benicàssim". It is this draft, along with a set of amendments proposed by the UCD and the communists, which was submitted for approval to the
Cortes Generales in Madrid. The Statute of Benicàssim was modified in favour of blaverist held positions by the Constitutional Committee of the Congress of Deputies, where the UCD held a majority. However Article 1 of the modified text, which named the autonomous community as the "Kingdom of Valencia", was rejected by the full Chamber (for, 151; against, 161; absentions, 9) on 9 March 1982 and the text returned to the Constitutional Committee. A final compromise resulted in the name "Valencian Community": the Statute of Autonomy entered into force on 1 July 1982. == Blaverist positions ==