
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez under attack from all sides after graft shock
Santos Cerdán was a powerful figure in Sánchez's Socialist Party. As organizational secretary, he was in charge of the day-to-day running of the party - a role he took on after his predecessor, José Luis Ábalos, another former Sánchez aide, was charged with organized crime, bribery and influence peddling last year.
When Cerdán was implicated in the same case in a police report released on June 12, Sánchez was in a state of shock, the people said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal party matters. On Monday, Cerdán was arrested.
The shock has reverberated throughout the Socialist Party and the fragile coalition government that Sánchez heads. Senior Socialist Party officials told Bloomberg News that there is a sense of betrayal and anger within the party's ranks.
With Sánchez facing the biggest challenge to his position since becoming prime minister in 2018, the leadership needs to take decisive action to restore trust with members and the electorate, the officials said.
"We are disappointed, it's a widespread feeling in the party," Cristina Narbona, president of the Socialist Party and a former minister, told Bloomberg News. "Not only our secretary-general trusted them," she said, referring to Sánchez. "We all did."
Cerdán, who has resigned from his roles in the Socialist Party and in parliament, denied the charges in a statement, saying that he has "never committed any illegal act nor have I been an accomplice of any."
Sánchez has denied any knowledge of the alleged crimes, and said that he acted swiftly to expel his senior advisers as soon as he was made aware of police reports. A spokesperson for the prime minister told Bloomberg News that Sánchez "found it hard to stop believing in Cerdan's innocence. He believed him up until the last minute. He had to personally read the police report to realize the disappointment and terrible reality."
The corruption investigation began in 2022 when the opposition People's Party filed a series of reports with prosecutors over the issuance of public contracts during the Covid pandemic. Most were dismissed, but one, alleging that staff at the transport ministry had taken payments from private companies in exchange for public contracts for masks, caught the attention of the anti-corruption prosecutor's office.
The investigation initially focused on a senior advisor at the department, Koldo Garcia, who was arrested in February 2024, but has since expanded. In November, the supreme court opened a case against Ábalos, who was transport minister from 2018 until 2021.
The allegations are particularly damaging for Sánchez, who came to power in 2018 on a platform of integrity in public life. He became prime minister after a no-confidence motion in parliament - sparked by another corruption case - ousted the conservative People's Party leader Mariano Rajoy. It was Ábalos who proposed the no-confidence motion on behalf of the Socialist Party.
Alongside the police reports, audio recordings have circulated in the Spanish media that appear to show Garcia and Ábalos using sexist language and referring to sex workers as merchandise. Sánchez's party calls itself feminist, and has been vocal about equal rights and pay, access to abortion, and the need to tackle violence against women.
The apparent hypocrisy has angered some in the Socialist Party. "There is a growing uncertainty among thousands and thousands of socialists who want to know where this will end up," Emiliano Garcia Page, a Socialist Party politician, president of the region of Castile-La Mancha - and a regular critic of Sánchez, said. "The problem is what to stand for. We've defended all those we now call shameless."
Opposition parties have demanded new elections, but they do not have enough votes for a motion of no-confidence.
The coalition government that Sánchez leads is fractious, and has struggled to pass any legislation. No budget has been approved since late 2022. The corruption allegations have increased tensions. "We're angry," Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Diaz, from Sumar, a junior coalition member, said in a press conference on Tuesday.
"We've asked them to rise to the occasion but it doesn't seem that the Socialist Party has become aware of the seriousness and urgency of the moment," Culture Minister Ernest Urtasun, from Sumar, told reporters after meeting with Socialist cabinet members on Wednesday.
Rebecca Torró, a junior minister has been named as Cerdán's replacement. Sánchez is due to address a meeting of the party's federal committee, a key decision-making body, on Saturday, where he is expected to announce further changes to Socialist Party's executive leadership, as well as new internal anti-corruption controls.
Sánchez has said he intends to lead the Socialist Party into general elections, due to be held in 2027. Despite the sense of crisis in the party, it is unlikely that there will be a meaningful challenge to the prime minister's leadership, according to party figures, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal party matters.
The reluctance is partly because bringing down the government would open the door to a government led by the People's Party, in coalition with the far-right Vox.
Both Vox and the PP have promised to take a tougher stance on migration, to reform or repeal laws targeting violence against women, and to take a hard line on regional separatist movements, which have supported Sánchez. At the last election, the two parties combined came four short seats of a majority.
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Upturn
10 hours ago
- Business Upturn
On Eve of Massive Spending Proposal, Resurfacing Presentation from Former Pentagon Advisor Suggests Untapped U.S. Asset Could Quietly Balance the Books
Washington, D.C., July 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — As President Trump prepares to introduce a sweeping legislative package—described by insiders as a 'Big Beautiful Bill' with trillion-dollar implications—a released presentation by former White House advisor Jim Rickards may offer a surprising counterbalance. According to Rickards, the U.S. already controls a little-known national asset capable of offsetting many of the bill's fiscal demands—without borrowing, taxing, or printing new dollars. 'The nature of this 'trust' as I call it, is such that politicians haven't been able to raid it… which has allowed it to grow untouched… for decades' . 'This is not some kind of government program like those COVID relief checks,' he adds. 'But it is a chance for the average American to become richer than they ever imagined' . A Resource Base Hidden in Plain Sight The presentation points to a vast store of natural resources—buried beneath federally owned land—stretching across the United States. These include copper, lithium, uranium, and other strategic minerals essential to infrastructure, defense, and energy systems. '$516 billion is here in the Salton Sea area of California… $3.1 trillion in Nome, Alaska. And $7.35 trillion in Midland, Texas…' . Rickards notes that these reserves have been known to government agencies for decades, but effectively off-limits due to environmental red tape and political inertia. 'For the past 50 years, fake-experts have strangled us from within the government,' he says. 'They tied us down with reams of regulation' . Trump's Pivot to Domestic Wealth With the introduction of this new bill—which some expect to prioritize military modernization, industrial revitalization, and energy security—Rickards believes the shift toward using domestic assets isn't just philosophical, it's practical. 'Trump is re-opening our mineral-rich Federal Lands. And fast-tracking companies that could recover trillions of dollars' worth of resources, right here in America'. 'There are certain areas where we have great, raw earth… and we're not allowed to use it because of the environment. I'm going to open them up,' Trump said . Decades of Delay. Days from Decision. The presentation references several high-value resource projects that have been stuck in limbo for years: 'Resolution Copper Mine… 29 years' 'Pebble Mine… since 1990' 'Thacker Pass Lithium Mine… since 1978' Now, Rickards says, the clock may finally be ticking in the other direction. 'We know exactly where these minerals are. We know they're worth trillions of dollars. And now—for the first time in half a century—we can go get them' . A New Path Forward? Rickards argues this isn't a question of what to create—but whether we'll finally use what's already ours. 'It's not earmarked for any specific individual,' he clarifies. 'I'm just trying to use terminology that will make the most sense to viewers' . 'We've had this rich endowment right under our feet… yet for years, we refused to touch it' . As Congress prepares for a new budget cycle, the presentation adds fuel to a growing conversation: Can America build the future… with what it already owns? About Jim Rickards Jim Rickards is a former advisor to the CIA, Pentagon, and U.S. Treasury. He played a key role in the Petrodollar Accord in the 1970s, has counseled the U.S. government through major financial and geopolitical events, and is the author of seven New York Times bestselling books. He now serves as a strategic analyst focused on national resilience, resource policy, and economic forecasting. Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with GlobeNewswire. Business Upturn takes no editorial responsibility for the same. Ahmedabad Plane Crash
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Spain ruling party bars members from hiring sex workers
Hit by a corruption scandal involving alleged kickbacks and sex workers, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's party shook up its top leadership Saturday and banned members from paying for sex. Sanchez, 53, is facing the biggest crisis of his seven years in power. That was heightened on Monday by the detention of a former top official in his Socialist party, Santos Cerdan, in an investigation involving allegations of corruption and hiring sex workers. In a bid to right the ship, the Socialist party announced that "soliciting, accepting or obtaining sexual acts in exchange for money" was now banned for party members, punishable by "the maximum sanction, expulsion from the party". "If we believe a woman's body is not for sale, our party cannot allow behaviour contrary to that," Sanchez said. "These are difficult times for everyone, without a doubt," he told party leaders at a meeting in Madrid, once again apologising for trusting those caught up in the growing scandal. But he also reiterated his refusal to step down. "The captain doesn't look the other way when seas get rough. He stays to steer the ship through the storm," he said. The party also announced a leadership shake-up, replacing Cerdan as its number three official with 44-year-old lawyer Rebeca Torro. The meeting started behind schedule after another close Sanchez ally, Francisco Salazar, who had been due to take a top leadership post, resigned. Online news site said Salazar had been accused of "inappropriate behaviour" by several women who had formerly reported to him in the party. Former transport minister Jose Luis Abalos has also been implicated in the investigation into kickbacks for public contracts. The conservative opposition People's Party (PP) held a meeting of its own, looking to capitalise on the Socialists' stumbles. "We're the only alternative to this state of decline," said PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo, calling his party the answer to Spain's divisions and "political fatigue". "Spaniards deserve a government that doesn't lie to them, that doesn't rob them but serves them," he said. al/jhb/jj


Axios
12 hours ago
- Axios
CIA admits shadowy officer monitored Oswald before JFK assassination, new records reveal
For the first time since President Kennedy's assassination nearly 62 years ago, the CIA has tacitly admitted that an officer specializing in psychological warfare ran an operation that came into contact with Lee Harvey Oswald before the Dallas killing. Why it matters: The disclosure Thursday — nestled in a batch of 40 documents concerning officer George Joannides — indicates the CIA lied for decades about his role in the Kennedy case before and after the assassination, according to experts on JFK's slaying. The linchpin document: A Jan. 17, 1963, CIA memo showing Joannides was directed to have an alias and fake driver's license bearing the name "Howard Gebler." Until Thursday, the agency had denied that Joannides was known as "Howard," the case officer name for the CIA contact who worked with activists from an anti-communist group opposed to Cuban dictator Fidel Castro called the Cuban Student Directorate. For decades, the agency also falsely said it had nothing to do with the student group, which was instrumental in having Oswald's pro-Castro stances published soon after the shooting. The bottom line: "The cover story for Joannides is officially dead," said Jefferson Morley, an author and expert on the assassination. "This is a big deal. The CIA is changing its tune on Lee Harvey Oswald." The information comes to light as part of President Trump's order that the government meet its obligations to disclose all documents under the JFK Records Act of 1992. Little was known of Joannides' involvement in the case until disclosures in 1998 under the records act. New disclosures of previously hidden records keep adding slices of information to the story. Zoom in: Joannides was the deputy chief of the CIA's Miami branch, overseeing "all aspects of political action and psychological warfare." That included covertly funding and directing the Cuban student group, commonly referred to as DRE for its Spanish-language initials. On Aug. 9, 1963, more than three months before Nov. 22 assassination, four DRE operatives got into a scuffle with Oswald in New Orleans when he was passing out pro-Castro "Fair Play for Cuba Committee" pamphlets. The subsequent court hearing was covered by local news media. On Aug. 21 , 1963, Oswald debated DRE activists on local TV, providing more media attention to him as a communist. After the assassination, DRE's newsletter identified Oswald as a pro-Castro communist, and the Miami Herald and Washington Post covered the story. A year before Oswald became known as pro-Castro, the Pentagon formulated a plan called Operation Northwoods to stage a false-flag attack in the United States, blame Cuba and then attack it. Zoom out: The new documents don't shed any additional light on Kennedy's shooting or settle the controversy over whether Oswald acted alone. Nor is there any evidence showing why the CIA covered up Joannides' ties to DRE. All the records disclosed so far show how the CIA lied about financing or being involved with DRE. That includes the agency's interactions with the Warren Commission (1964), the Church Committee (1975), the House Select Committee on Assassinations (1977-78) and the Assassination Review Board (until 1998). The intrigue: Joannides didn't just have knowledge of Oswald before the assassination — afterward he played a central role in deceiving the House Select Committee on Assassinations. At the time, the CIA appointed Joannides to be its liaison with the committee. But he and the agency hid the fact that he was involved with DRE and therefore the Kennedy case, slow-walked the CIA's production of records, and lied. The committee's chief counsel, Robert Blakey, testified in 2014 that he asked Joannides about "Howard" and DRE, and that "Joannides assured me that they could find no record of any such officer assigned to DRE, but that he would keep looking," Blakey said. A former committee investigator, Dan Hardway, testified before a House Oversight committee last month that Joannides was running a "covert operation" to undermine the congressional probe into the assassination. Two years after stonewalling the committee, Joannides was awarded the Career Intelligence Medal by the CIA in 1981. He died in 1990. What they're saying: Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Florida Republican overseeing the House committee examining the newly released JFK documents, said Joannides was "1,000 percent" involved in a CIA coverup. Morley and some others who've written extensively about Kennedy's assassination believe rogue CIA agents might have been involved in the killing, but Morley's not ready to say Joannides was one of them. Others, such as author Gerald Posner, believe Oswald was the lone gunman. But all are in agreement that the CIA acted in bad faith after Kennedy was killed. "It's vintage CIA. They never provide transparency. They don't tell the truth. They obscure. They obfuscate. And when the documents come out, they look bad," Posner said. A CIA spokesperson told Axios the agency "has fully complied and provided all documents — without redactions — related to the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy to NARA consistent with President Trump's direction in an unprecedented act of transparency by the agency."