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Spain’s socialists face drubbing in Madrid regional election

Madrid votes Tuesday in an early regional election. The incumbent conservative Popular Party is expected to win comfortably, dealing a blow to Spain's Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

Madrid regional elections
Photo: PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU / AFP

Isabel Díaz Ayuso, the outgoing leader of the key Madrid regional administration, has consistently pushed back against central government pressure to impose tighter virus restrictions.

The 42-year-old rising star in the PP argues keeping the economy afloat and preserving social interaction is also important for health.

On her watch, Madrid has had Spain’s lightest virus restrictions. It has been the only major European capital to keep bars, restaurants and theatres open with few restrictions since a nationwide lockdown ended in mid-2020.

“Having beers is important,” Díaz Ayuso told Ser radio station last month. “After a bad day, a beer cheers you up.”

She has been campaigning under the slogan “Freedom”. Critics however say her lax restrictions have come at too high a price.

They point out that Madrid has the highest percentage of intensive care beds occupied by Covid-19 patients in the country, at nearly 45 percent – and one of the country’s highest infection rates.

Just over 5.1 million people are eligible to vote in the election in Spain’s richest region, which has been governed by the PP since 1995.

Polling stations opened at 9:00 am and close at 8:00 pm, with results expected several hours later.

Bottles of hand sanitiser are placed next to ballots at a polling station in Madrid during the Madrid regional elections. Photo: JAVIER SORIANO / AFP

Death threats 

Final opinion polls give the PP party around 40-percent support, almost double their result in the May 2019 election.

That would put them well ahead of the Socialists, whose backing in the opinion poll had dropped to 20 percent from just over 27 percent in 2019.

Depending on the scale of her victory Díaz Ayuso may yet still need the support of far-right Vox party to govern. That would not be “the end of the world”, she has said.

Leftist parties have sought to rally their voters by warning of the dangers of the PP governing with anti-immigrant Vox.

During the Socialist party final campaign rally on Sunday night, Sanchez repeated his warning that “our democracy” was at stake in the elections.

The campaign has also seen anonymous death threat letters with bullets sent to top politicians, including Díaz Ayuso and the leader of far-left party Podemos, Pablo Iglesias.

Podemos is the junior partner in Sánchez’s minority coalition government and Iglesias stepped down as a deputy prime minister in Sánchez’s coalition government to run as the party’s candidate.

The early election was called by Díaz Ayuso in March after she broke up her ruling coalition with the centrist Ciudadanos party, which is expected to struggle to win any seats in this election.

READ ALSO: Five things to know about Madrid’s regional election 

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BREAKING

BREAKING: 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.

BREAKING: Spain's PM may quit over wife's corruption probe

“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.

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.

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.

“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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