Investigators have raided the headquarters of Spain’s governing Socialist party as part of a probe into the alleged misuse of party funds, in the latest in a “blizzard of corruption scandals” to hit the leadership of Pedro Sánchez, said Politico. “Scandal after scandal” involving the prime minister’s political allies and relatives have left him “on the ropes”.
What are the allegations? An investigating judge has accused Socialist former PM José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero of leading a criminal network that used his influence to arrange a €53 million Covid-era government bailout for the airline Spanish Plus Ultra. He is accused of receiving a total of €2.6 million from the network, and has been charged with criminal organisation, influence peddling and falsifying documents. Zapatero, a close ally of Sánchez (pictured above), denies the charges.
In a separate case last autumn, the attorney general, Álvaro García Ortiz, a government selection, was found guilty of revealing secrets. And a party operative, Leire Díez, has been accused of being paid to “carry out a campaign of misinformation” with the intention of “impeding” the legal cases connected to the party, said the BBC. She has also denied any wrongdoing.
What about Sánchez’s family? Last month, his wife, Begoña Gómez, was charged with embezzlement, influence peddling, corruption in business dealings and misappropriation of funds. She denies the charges, and Sánchez has described the case as an “obscene farce”.
In an unrelated case, the PM’s brother, David, is on trial along with 10 other defendants over his appointment to a musical director post in 2017. He denies charges of influence peddling and misuse of public office.
What does this mean for Spain? Sánchez came to power in 2018 on an anti-corruption ticket, after a corruption scandal brought down the conservative government of Mariano Rajoy. Although Sánchez has not been directly implicated in any of the investigations, questions over whether he knew about, tolerated, or benefited politically from the alleged actions of those around him are damaging his standing.
Crucially, it is “increasingly awkward” for Sánchez’s allies to “stick with him” as the “scale” of the alleged corruption “comes into focus”, said Politico. Although Spain does not have to hold elections until next August, he “may be forced to move earlier”.
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