South China Morning Post

PM threatens to quit over far-right attacks on wife

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Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has said he might resign over right-wing attacks against him and his wife, a move that would push the country into uncharted political territory and raise the possibilit­y of a new general election.

Sanchez, 52, cancelled his public appearance­s through the weekend and said he would reflect on the situation and announce his decision on Monday, effectivel­y paralysing Spain’s political system for the next five days. “Is all this worth it?” he asked in an open letter posted on X. “Honestly, I don’t know.”

If Sanchez decides to step down, it would most likely trigger new elections. It is possible for the prime minister to resign and hand over power, but this would require the support of a majority of lawmakers, which would be unlikely in Spain’s politicall­y fragmented parliament.

Sanchez could also be using this as an opportunit­y to trigger a vote of confidence as a potential means to shore up his mandate in parliament, said Federico Santi, a senior analyst at Eurasia Group.

On Wednesday, a Spanish court announced it was opening an inquiry into Sanchez’s wife, Begona Gomez, for alleged influence peddling in connection with past business dealings while working for a university. The investigat­ion follows a complaint by a small union, which Sanchez says is a politicall­y motivated smear campaign by the far-right.

Sanchez’s announceme­nt adds to the political uncertaint­y surroundin­g his government and to the policy paralysis that has stymied it since mid-2023, when the premier called snap elections after his party suffered a scathing defeat in local and regional ballots. The premier’s minority coalition is Spain’s weakest government in about 90 years.

The country is already set for a high-stakes election on May 12 in Catalonia, the second-largest region, where Sanchez’s Socialists are trying to notch a win against separatist parties. Earlier this month, an election in the wealthy Basque region saw two nationalis­t parties take about 70 per cent of the combined vote.

Sanchez is “trying to victimise himself, alleging a collusion between the opposition and the media”, opposition leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo has said in a radio interview. Feijoo added that Sanchez was trying to mobilise support for his party ahead of the Catalonia elections and subsequent European elections in June.

Sanchez has built a career on unexpected comebacks and surprise decisions, many of which he does not even share with his closest collaborat­ors.

“This attack is unpreceden­ted and so grave and crass that I need to stop and think with my wife,” Sanchez wrote in his letter.

“Many times, we forget that politician­s are people. And I can say without shame that I’m a man deeply in love with my wife who watches helplessly the mud that is thrown on her day after day.”

Sanchez framed the court proceeding­s against his wife as part of a broader strategy of “harassment and destructio­n” against him by the far-right.

Spain has a long-tradition of keeping the private lives of its leaders’ families out of the spotlight. The letter comes against the backdrop of political discourse that has become aggressive over the past nine years.

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