Regional President Carles Puigdemont fueled the confusion by arranging, cancelling and then rearranging an official address for Thursday afternoon, before the region's lawmakers were set to debate their response to Spanish government plans to take direct control of Catalonia.
Later today afternoon, the Catalan government announced Puigdemont would make an address after all before the parliamentary debate.
Local media had reported earlier in the day that the regional president was expected to use the address to call a snap election. The move would defuse, at least for the time being, the monthlong standoff with central authorities but that could open wounds among Catalan separatists.
Catalonia's independence bid has led to Spain's deepest political crisis in the four decades since the country restored democratic rule after Gen Francisco Franco's dictatorship.
Also Read
The northeastern region of 7.5 million people has in a heated political battle with the Spanish government since a disputed October 1 referendum on independence. Those who voted were overwhelmingly in favor, but less than half of eligible voters went to the polls in a vote that had been outlawed by Spain's Constitutional Court.
Madrid, for its part, insists it cannot negotiate secession. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is seeking to activate constitutional powers that will allow the government to take over control of much of the autonomous region's affairs. The Spanish Senate is scheduled to approve the plan to trigger Article 155 of the Constitution tomorrow.
In Barcelona, a spokesman for the Catalan Republic Left party, or ERC, a separatist party that is part of the ruling coalition said the coalition was at risk of breaking apart if Puigdemont calls a snap election.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content