Nope, I've said the EU should not get involved. If Brussels didn't have the moral courage to stand up to Spain after the police were filmed assaulting civilians en masse (an infringement of the fundamental rights of EU citizens as set out in Lisbon if ever there was one, and yet another example of the EU ignoring its own rules for political ease)
The use of violence is not an infringement of any fundamental rights. The police can slam you in your face in full accordance with national and international law. I don't understand why this concept is so hard for people to understand. The referendum was illegal=the police can actually shut down voting stations=the police can actually use proportional violence if people physically resist. No laws or fundamental rights are broken by doing this. If people think that the violence was unproportional, they can sue the state.
Whether the use of violence something you want is something else entirely, but hey, this very same Catalan regional government had no problem with sending the police to shut down voting stations a few years ago when some local referendum was held in Barcelona. Of course, the entire point of filming the police using their legal rights is just to frame them as a bunch of baddies while you're actually breaking the law yourself. "BUT GUYS, VOTING IS NEVER ILLEGAL!11". It can be. And it was. There is rule of law, not rule of majority.
And you know what's the stupidest thing? All these people screaming bloody murder about the EU not doing anything in Spain yet doing the exact same thing when the EU does something about actual roll-backs on the rule of law in Poland. Whatever the EU does, it's the baddie. Somehow, just somehow, I'm a 100% sure those people would be waving Spanish flags and screaming how the EU should not interfer with internal Spanish affairs if it had gotten involved. The stupidity and hypocriscy is nauseating.
Explain to me how constitutional law has been broken by Lisbon or bailout packages. I'm curious.