Spanish
PM’s former right-hand man detained in corruption investigation
Santos
Cerdán’s alleged criminal activities put Pedro Sánchez’s government under
pressure to call fresh elections
Sam Jones in
Seville
Mon 30 Jun
2025 15.14 BST
A former
senior official in Spain’s ruling Spanish Socialist Workers’ party (PSOE) has
been remanded in custody by a supreme court judge investigating corruption
allegations that have put the country’s centre-left government under
unprecedented pressure.
Santos
Cerdán, who served as the PSOE’s organisational secretary and was the
right-hand man of the prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, quit earlier this month
after a judge found “firm evidence” of his possible involvement in taking
kickbacks on public construction contracts.
Cerdán’s
alleged criminal activities, which have become the latest in a slew of
corruption allegations against Sánchez’s circle, led the prime minister to
demand his resignation and to apologise to voters, but he dismissed calls for a
snap general election.
On Monday,
Cerdán appeared at the supreme court to testify over the allegations – which he
denies – of bribery, influence peddling and criminal association. After giving
evidence, he was denied bail and remanded in custody by the judge, Leopoldo
Puente.
The
investigation began after the anti-corruption unit of the Guardia Civil police
force handed material to the court that suggested Cerdán had discussed taking
kickbacks on public contracts with the former PSOE transport minister José Luis
Ábalos and one of the minister’s aides, Koldo García. Ábalos and García are
also under investigation and have denied wrongdoing. Cerdán, who stepped down
from his party role and resigned his parliamentary seat shortly after the news
broke, has vowed to clear his name.
Sánchez, who
became prime minister in 2018 after using a motion of no confidence to turf the
corruption-mired conservative People’s party (PP) out of government, is already
contending with graft investigations relating to his wife and his brother, who
both deny any wrongdoing. A former PSOE member was also recently implicated in
an alleged smear campaign against the Guardia Civil police unit investigating
the corruption allegations.
Speaking
after the judge’s decision, the prime minister said: “We acted firmly and now
it will be up to the judicial authorities to establish Mr Cerdán’s
responsibility.”
But the move
led the PP to renew its demands for a fresh election.
“The person
who Sánchez personally chose as his number two six months ago is today off to
prison, accused of criminal charges including bribery,” said the party’s
leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo. “If that doesn’t call for a resignation and an
election, then it means [Sánchez] has totally lost touch with reality.”

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