Spain's PM says knew 'nothing' about corruption case

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez on Thursday said that he knew "absolutely nothing" about the corruption case that prompted a top official in his Socialist Party to resign, and rejected calls for his resignation over the affair.
The case adds to mounting legal and political pressure on Sánchez, one of Europe's longest serving socialist leaders whose inner circle faces several ongoing investigations.
Santos Cerdán, the party's organisation secretary and its third-highest ranked figure, is suspected of being an accomplice in the alleged improper awarding of public contracts, according to a newly published judicial report.
Cerdán, a member of parliament, stepped down from all his positions "to defend" the government and the party, adding in a statement that he "never committed any illegal act".
Shortly afterwards, Sánchez told a news conference he knew "absolutely nothing" about the corruption accusations against his longtime associate, having learned about them in the press earlier on Thursday.
"We never should have trusted him," the premier said, adding that he had demanded that Cerdán step down.
A judge said that a police report "reveals the existence of consistent evidence" suggesting that Cerdán acted in collusion with former transport minister José Luis Ábalos and the latter's former adviser, Koldo García Izaguirre, in exchange for financial gain.
Cerdán's position became untenable after excerpts of recordings were published on Thursday in the press, reportedly capturing conversations with Ábalos and García.
In the recordings, the three men appear to discuss secret commission payments by companies in exchange for public contracts.
Cerdán has been invited to testify voluntarily before the Supreme Court on June 25th.
Lawmakers from the main opposition Popular Party (PP) greeted Cerdán in parliament with chants of "resignation".
"If anyone had doubts that there was a mafia-like network behind the ruling party and the government, I suppose those doubts have now been dispelled," PP leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo told reporters, while calling for Sánchez to resign.
"This is unacceptable in a European Union country. A European prime minister wouldn't last 10 minutes after the revelations we've seen in recent weeks," he added.
But Sánchez ruled out calling early elections, saying that the case “does not affect the government of Spain, only the party".
'Smear campaign'
Tens of thousands of people took part in a protest against Sánchez's government on Sunday in Madrid which was called by the PP.
Ábalos, who served as transport minister from 2018 to 2021 and was once a key figure in Sánchez's administration, is accused of receiving illegal commissions through business contracts.
He faces charges of corruption, influence peddling and embezzlement.
Ábalos was dismissed from Sánchez's cabinet in 2021 and expelled from the Socialist Party earlier this year, but remains a member of parliament as an independent.
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His parliamentary immunity was lifted in January. During a court hearing in December, he denied receiving any kickbacks and maintained that there were no irregularities.
Sánchez's wife, Begoña Gómez, and his brother, David Sánchez, are also the targets of separate investigations for graft.
And Spain's top prosecutor, Alvaro Garcia Ortiz, who was appointed by Sánchez's government, is facing a possible trial over suspicions he leaked secret case files concerning the partner of Isabel Díaz Ayuso, the powerful conservative leader of the Madrid region.
The Spanish prime minister has dismissed the probes against members of his inner circle as part of a "smear campaign" carried out by the right wing to undermine his government.
Sánchez came to power in June 2018 after ousting his predecessor, Mariano Rajoy, in a no-confidence vote over corruption scandals involving the PP.
Most recent opinion polls show the PP holding a slim lead over the Socialists.
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