Raid on
party headquarters dials up pressure on Spain’s Sánchez
The
ruling Socialist Party is alleged to have commissioned individuals to discredit
critics bringing legal proceedings against the government.
May 27,
2026 10:17 am CET
By Aitor
Hernández-Morales
https://www.politico.eu/article/pedro-sanchez-spain-police-raid-headquarters-of-pm-socialist-party/
Spain’s
anticorruption police raided the headquarters of the ruling Socialist Party in
Madrid on Wednesday, ramping up pressure on
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who is already reeling from a stream of
corruption scandals involving key allies.
Spain’s
National Court confirmed agents of the Civil Guard’s elite Central Operative
Unit (UCO) had been sent to obtain evidence for a probe into a plot to
discredit critics engaged in legal proceedings against the government.
It also
announced the indictment of Ana Fuentes, who has been in charge of managing the
party’s finances since 2021, for her alleged role in that scheme and other
fraudulent activities.
According
to the National Court’s investigative dossier, first reported by El País, the
alleged fraud began in 2024, when Sánchez considered stepping down after
growing exasperated with the questionable legal complaints filed against
members of his family.
Socialist
Party officials are alleged to have spent tens of thousands of euros
commissioning individuals to go after the right-wing organizations filing the
complaints. Fraudulent invoices were allegedly used to cover up payments made
to the party’s agents, who were ordered to “systematically obstruct any legal
proceedings that could directly or indirectly impact the interests of the
government.”
Opposition
leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo, of the center-right People’s Party, called for
Sánchez to step down, but the prime minister ruled out leaving office before
the current legislative term concludes in August 2027.
“I cannot
call elections for partisan interests, I have to call elections for the general
interest of the citizens,” Sánchez told reporters in Rome following a meeting
with Pope Leo XVI.
Wednesday’s
raid comes one week after the National Court indicted former Prime Minister
José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, a key Sánchez ally, for alleged money laundering,
influence peddling and other criminal offenses committed in connection with the
2021 bailout of Plus Ultra airlines.
It also
follows on weeks of corruption scandals involving members of his family, his
government and his political party.
Coalition
nerves
The big
question centers on the cumulative effect of the Socialist party’s scandals on
its coalition partners.
The
parliamentary allies that allowed Sánchez’s left-wing coalition to form a
government in 2023 are increasingly wary of being associated with the prime
minister.
Enrique
Santiago, lawmaker for the far-left Sumar party, on Wednesday said irregular
financing was a “red line” for his group, which is the junior partner in
Spain’s coalition government. He added that his colleagues would leave the
executive if the allegations against the Socialists were proven.
Aitor
Esteban, head of the Basque Nationalist Party, on Sunday said Sánchez should
call snap elections before the end of the year, arguing that it would be “very
difficult” for the prime minister to remain in power until the current
legislative term ends in August 2027.
“There
are already nine open cases, now Zapatero,” he said. “It would be irresponsible
to continue beyond 2026 without direction, without a budget, without a stable
majority, and with an agenda that is out of control and plagued by court
cases.”
Another
key Sánchez ally, the Republican Left of Catalonia’s Gabriel Rufián, said on
Monday that the red line for his party would be evidence of widespread
corruption in the form of illegal party financing.
Rufián
recalled that after the center-right People’s Party was shown to have benefited
from a massive graft scheme involving kickbacks, his party backed the 2018 no
confidence motion that ousted Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.
“We would
call for elections if there were a similar case with the Socialists,” he said.
“It’s the logical thing to do.”
But
Spain’s constitutional framework, and the complex alliances binding the
country’s political parties, make Sánchez’s imminent exit unlikely.
Spanish
prime ministers can only be forced from power through no confidence motions in
which they are replaced by an alternate candidate backed by a majority of
lawmakers in the national parliament. The most likely figure to replace Sánchez
would be Feijóo, but his bid would require the support of both the far-right
Vox party and regionalist groups like the Basque Nationalist Party or the
Catalan separatist Junts party.
Complex
dynamics
Pablo
Simón, a political scientist at Madrid’s Carlos III University, said that
ideologically opposed parties are unlikely to forge an alliance to oust Sánchez
anytime soon.
“There
are a lot of factors in play: Basque nationalists have a coalition government
with the Socialists in the Basque Country, for example” he noted. “If they push
Sánchez out of power in Madrid, his party could hand the regional government to
the left-wing Bildu group instead.”
Similarly,
the Junts party is unlikely to make moves that would risk separatist leader
Carles Puigdemont’s return from self-imposed exile. Sánchez passed a
controversial amnesty of Catalan independence leaders in exchange for the
party’s support for his government in 2023, but Spanish judges have so far
blocked its application.
“In the
end, no one is going to force him out, so it’s up to Sánchez to decide if he
wants to call early elections,” Simón said. “And he knows that if he takes that
route, he’s likely to lose them, and given the ongoing judicial proceedings,
why would he do that?”
The
analyst predicted Sánchez would attempt to keep a low profile until parliament
goes into recess for the summer, with the hope that tensions will die down once
Spaniards head off for vacation.
“Ultimately,
he’s more protected in the prime minister’s palace than he is as a member of
the opposition, so he’ll do everything to remain in power,” Simón added. “Of
course, if the current furore doesn’t abate by fall, he may have to reassess
his course of action.”
This
article has been updated.


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