The Spanish Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez, announced Monday that he would remain in power after threatening to resign for five days in the face of a “discredit campaign” launched, according to him, by the right-wing opposition which accused him of “making fun of ” the Spanish.
“I have decided to continue” at the head of the government, said, in a serious tone, the 52-year-old socialist leader, in power since 2018, from the steps of the Moncloa Palace, seat of the government presidency.
Absolutely unprecedented, Mr. Sánchez remained silent and suspended all his public activities after the announcement on Wednesday by a Madrid court of the opening of a preliminary investigation for “influence peddling” and “corruption” against his wife, Begoña Gómez.
Provoking the amazement of the entire country, he then published a four-page letter in which he explained to the Spaniards that he was considering resigning to protect his family.
Denying on Monday any “political calculation” and assuring that the suspicions against his wife were the product of disinformation, he affirmed that the five-day pause he had observed was intended to push the country to undertake “a collective reflection” in order to prevent “misinformation from directing the public debate”.
“Either we say ‘enough!’, or the degradation of public life will determine our future and doom us as a country,” he added.
Later, in an interview on public television, Mr. Sánchez explained that his wife had asked him not to throw in the towel. “She was the first to tell me not to resign. »
He also called for “an end to insults in public life”, but was pessimistic: harassment “will increase”.
“Not up to par”
The opposition leader, Mr Sánchez’s conservative arch-rival Alberto Núñez Feijóo, unreservedly condemned the prime minister’s announcement, accusing him of having “made fun of the Spaniards” by deciding to stay in power.
Spain “does not have a president of government who is worthy of its citizens,” declared the leader of the Popular Party (PP). “Today he lost a fantastic opportunity to leave,” he said in a vitriolic speech which seemed to augur a further hardening of Spanish political life.
If the socialists and their far-left allies welcomed the Prime Minister’s announcement, the Catalan independence party ERC, which is nevertheless one of his allies in Parliament, denounced “a comedy, a smokescreen”, the voice of Catalan regional president Pere Aragonés.
The investigation against the wife of Pedro Sánchez, placed under the seal of investigative secrecy, was opened following a complaint from the association “Manos limpias” (Clean Hands), a collective close to the extreme right who said they were basing themselves on press articles, without knowing if this information was founded.
The prosecution has requested the closure of this investigation, but the judge responsible for the case has not yet revealed his intentions.
Mr. Sánchez wants to see in the filing of this complaint a new illustration of a campaign of destabilization carried out against him by the right and the extreme right.
Since his arrival in power six years ago, the legitimacy of the socialist leader has always been questioned by the PP and the far-right formation Vox, who have never forgiven him for having been brought to power by the far left. and the Basque and Catalan parties as part of a motion of censure against his conservative predecessor Mariano Rajoy, weighed down by a corruption scandal.
Political tensions
And the political context has become even more tense in recent months when Mr. Sánchez, who came second in the July 23 elections behind Mr. Feijóo, nevertheless managed to be returned to power by Parliament in November thanks to the support of the independence parties. Catalans, in exchange for a very controversial amnesty law for separatists involved in the attempted secession of Catalonia in 2017.
This law, voted on by deputies in March, should be definitively adopted at the end of May.
The investigation against the prime minister’s wife concerns in particular, according to the online media The Confidentialon the links established by Begoña Gómez with the Globalia group, which sponsored, according to this media, the foundation in which she worked, at the time when Air Europa, an airline belonging to Globalia, was negotiating with the Sánchez government to obtain public aid.
This company actually received, in November 2020, 475 million euros, from a 10 billion fund intended to support strategic companies in difficulty due to the pandemic. But dozens of others then benefited from aid, including several of its competitors (Iberia, Vueling, Volotea, etc.).