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Spain’s PM may quit over wife’s corruption probe

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said Wednesday he was weighing the possibility of resigning after a court opened an investigation into his wife Begoña Gómez on suspicion of graft.

Spain's PM may quit over wife's corruption probe
Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and his wife Begoña Gómez. (Photo by JORGE GUERRERO / AFP)

“I need to stop and think” in order to decide “whether I should continue to head the government or whether I should give up this honour,” he wrote in a letter posted on X, formerly Twitter.

He added that he would announce his decision on Monday and suspend his schedule until then.

A Madrid court said earlier on Wednesday that it had “opened an investigation into Begoña Gómez for the alleged offence of influence peddling and corruption” in response to a complaint by Manos Limpias (Clean Hands), an anti-corruption pressure group whose leader is linked to the far right.

READ ALSO: What happens and who takes over if Spain’s Prime Minister resigns?

The court statement came several hours after online news site El Confidencial said investigators were probing Gómez’s ties to several private companies that received government funding or won public contracts.

The site said the probe was linked to the alleged ties which Gómez had with Spanish tourism group Globalia, which owns Air Europa.

It said she had twice met with Javier Hidalgo, Globalia’s CEO at the time, when the carrier was in talks with the government to secure a huge bailout after it was badly hit by the plunge in air traffic due to the Covid-19 crisis.

At the time, Gómez was running IE Africa Center, a foundation linked to Madrid’s Instituto de Empresa (IE) business school, a position she left in 2022.

The announcement sparked an angry backlash from the right-wing opposition Popular Party (PP), which has harangued Sánchez for months about his wife’s alleged business ties.

But Socialist premier Sánchez, in office since 2018, said in his letter that the complaint was based on “non-existent” facts and was part of a campaign of “harassment” against his wife led by “ultraconservative” media and supported by the conservative and far-right opposition.

“I am not naïve. I am aware that they are bringing charges against Begoña, not because she’s done anything illegal, because they know full well that’s not true, but because she’s my wife,” he added.

PROFILE: Spain’s Pedro Sánchez, a risk-taker with a flair for political gambles

Talks during airline bailout

El Confidencial said IE Africa Center had “signed a sponsorship agreement with Globalia in 2020” and that Gomez had also held a private meeting with Hidalgo at the company’s offices.

“At the same time Globalia was negotiating a multi-million-euro bailout with the government,” it noted.

Last month, Globalia told El Confidencial that Hidalgo and Gómez had met at its Madrid offices on June 24 and July 16.

Between those dates, Sánchez’s government on July 3rd announced the creation of a €10-billion fund to bail out strategic firms worst hit by Covid.

Four months later, his cabinet approved a 475-million-euro lifeline for Air Europa, the first Spanish company to tap the funds.

Investigators are also looking into two letters of support Gomez allegedly provided for a joint venture bidding for a public contract, El Confidencial said.

The joint venture’s main shareholder was consultant Carlos Barrabes, who has ties to the department run by Gómez at Madrid’s Complutense University.

It won the contract, beating 20 rivals, and was awarded €10.2 million, it said.

‘Trumpesque practices’

Manos Limpias, which filed the complaint, is headed by lawyer Miguel Bernad.

Bernad was initially sentenced to four years behind bars in 2021 over a scheme to extort major firms, but last month was acquitted by the Supreme Court for lack of evidence.

Questioned in Wednesday’s parliamentary session about the El Confidencial story, Sanchez told lawmakers: “Despite everything, I still believe in Spain’s justice system.”

Senior PP official Ester Muñoz said it was “imperative” he explain.

“His family is being investigated by the court… it is important enough that the prime minister explains himself to the Spanish people.”

In a parliamentary session last month, PP leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo had warned Sánchez there would be an investigation.

READ ALSO:

“If you refuse to give explanations again… there will be a specific investigation into matters affecting those closest to you, a parliamentary probe for sure, and a judicial one if necessary.”

But Sanchez’s deputy, Budget Minister María Jesus Montero, hit back.

“They are using a spurious complaint by a far-right organisation to defame and slander the prime minister,” she said.

“We will not let these Trumpesque practices undermine Spain’s democracy.”

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BREXIT

Spain and UK insist post-Brexit Gibraltar deal is ‘getting closer’

After at least two and a half years of negotiations, Britain and Spain insisted they were closer to a deal on post-Brexit arrangements for disputed Gibraltar after they made "important breakthroughs" in talks on Thursday.

Spain and UK insist post-Brexit Gibraltar deal is 'getting closer'

The two countries are aiming for an agreement allowing free circulation of goods and people between Gibraltar and Spain.

“Today’s discussions took place in a constructive atmosphere, with important breakthroughs and additional areas of agreement,” the United Kingdom, European Commission, Spain and Gibraltar said in a statement.

“All sides are reassured that the agreement is getting closer and will work closely and rapidly on outstanding areas towards an overall EU-UK agreement,” they added.

Foreign ministers from Britain and Spain met alongside European Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic and Gibraltar government chief Fabian Picardo in a bid to reach a deal over the tiny British territory’s status following Britain’s 2020 exit from the European Union.

It is the second time they have met in this format after talks in April.

READ ALSO: What Brits need to know about crossing the border from Gibraltar to Spain

Sefcovic told reporters that the talks covered “new areas” that had not been addressed in the past including the environment, mobility and trade.

Spanish Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares would not say what outstanding issues remained and told a press conference no date had been set for the next meeting.

But he said technical teams would be in contact “immediately”.

Britain and Spain have disputed control of the tiny territory since it was ceded to Britain in the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht.

The two countries reached a provisional deal in 2020 on free access for goods and people after Brexit, but no definitive agreement has been reached.

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