1 day · 3 summary articles
Pedro Snchez backs Zapatero as corruption scandal escalates: daughters and secretary indicted
Snchez backs Zapatero amid money-laundering imputations: accuses PP of double standards
Judge rejects Zapateros innocence claim in Plus Ultra probe
Pedro Sánchez has thrown his full political weight behind José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero on Thursday, declaring his “confidence in his innocence” and “empathy” for the former prime minister after a Madrid judge formally imputed the ex-president’s two daughters and his private secretary on suspicion of money-laundering linked to the Plus Ultra airline case.
Speaking at the European Council summit in Brussels, Sánchez told reporters he had maintained “permanent contact” with Zapatero since the judge’s decision on Wednesday and had personally conveyed the government’s backing. “We trust in his innocence,” the prime minister said, adding that the Socialist party shared that confidence. He also expressed “empathy” for the former premier’s family, whose daughters—Alba and Laura Rodríguez Espinosa—and secretary, Gertrudis Alcázar, were charged with participating in the alleged laundering of commissions.
The judge, José Luis Calama of the Audiencia Nacional, acted on a request from Spain’s Anticorruption Prosecutor and a private prosecution, taking the step after Zapatero himself appeared before the court on Wednesday to answer questions about gifts he received from Saudi officials during his 2004-2011 tenure. Sánchez sought to normalise the practice, noting that “all prime ministers receive gifts” and that Spain’s legal framework had since been tightened. “The Spain of 2007 is not the Spain of 2026, and the legislation of today is not that of 2007,” he said. “Fortunately, we have legislated on this as well.”
The PSOE leadership swiftly moved to reject what it called a “personal lynching” of Zapatero, his family and his staff, while Sánchez also used the occasion to criticise the conservative opposition. He accused the Partido Popular leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, of applying a double standard after reports emerged that the partner of Madrid’s regional president, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, had invoiced Quirón Prevención SL €4.4 million between 2021 and 2023. Alberto González Amador is under investigation by the tax authority for alleged invoice simulation and corruption-related crimes, according to documents seen by El Confidencial .
Sánchez also announced that the cabinet would bring forward its next meeting to 29 June to extend the social shield decree first approved in March to cushion households and businesses from the fallout of the Iran war. He pledged to work with parliamentary groups to prolong key measures, insisting the government would “sweat blood” to pass the 2027 budget.
Meanwhile, Spanish media have revisited the academic and professional backgrounds of Zapatero’s daughters, whose advertising agency was raided by police on Wednesday as part of the same investigation. Both women studied communications and set up their firm after graduating, though the current judicial focus centres on their alleged role in channelling funds linked to Plus Ultra contracts.