Tens of thousands join protest in Madrid against Pedro Sanchez’s government
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Demonstrators at a protest against the ruling government, in Plaza de Espana square, Madrid, on June 8.
PHOTO: AFP
MADRID – Tens of thousands of people rallied on June 8 in an opposition-organised demonstration in Madrid, accusing the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez of corruption.
Protesters, many waving red and yellow Spanish flags, massed in the Plaza de Espana, a large square in the centre of the Spanish capital, and chanted “Pedro Sanchez, resign”.
“The expiry date on this government passed a long time ago. It’s getting tiring,” Ms Blanca Requejo, a 46-year-old store manager who wore a Spanish flag draped over her back, told AFP at the demonstration.
The Popular Party (PP) called the rally after leaked audio recordings allegedly documented a member of the Socialist party, Ms Leire Diez, waging a smear campaign against a police unit that investigated graft allegations against Mr Sanchez’s wife, brother and his former right-hand man.
Ms Diez has denied the allegations, telling reporters on June 4 that she was conducting research for a book and was not working on behalf of the party or Mr Sanchez. She also resigned from Mr Sanchez’s Socialist Workers’ party.
PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo has accused the government of “mafia practices” over the affair and said Mr Sanchez is “at the centre” of multiple corruption scandals.
“This government has stained everything – politics, state institutions, the separation of powers,” he told the rally, going on to urge Mr Sanchez to call an early election.
The PP estimated that more than 100,000 people attended the rally, held under the slogan “Mafia or Democracy”.
The central government’s representative in Madrid put the turnout between 45,000 and 50,000.
‘Go away’
The government’s spokeswoman, Ms Pilar Alegria, mocked the turnout, writing on social media platform X that veteran Spanish rock duo Estopa drew a larger crowd to their recent concert at Madrid’s Wanda Metropolitano stadium than “the apocalyptic Feijoo at the Plaza de Espana”.
Mr Sanchez 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.
He came to power in June 2018 after ousting his PP predecessor Mariano Rajoy in a no-confidence vote over a corruption scandal involving the conservative party.
Mr Rafael Redondo, a 73-year-old real estate agent, said the corruption cases that have affected the PP were “completely different”.
Spanish opposition leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo (centre) taking part in the anti-government protest.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
“The corruption that may have existed in the PP involved individuals acting on their own. But the Socialist Party is a criminal organisation which has committed crimes from A to Z,” he told AFP at the rally.
Ms Maria del Mar Tome, a 59-year-old businesswoman, said she had turned up because “we want Pedro Sanchez to go away once and for all, because this man is corrupt, he’s a liar”.
Poll lead
This is the sixth protest that the PP has organised against the government since Mr Feijoo took the helm of the party in April 2022
The demonstration comes as the PP is gearing up for an extraordinary party congress set for July.
Originally set for 2026, Mr Feijoo moved the event forward, citing the need for the party to “be prepared” in case of an early national election in what was seen as an effort to consolidate his power.
Mr Rajoy and another former PP prime minister, Mr Jose Maria Aznar, attended the June 8 rally, along with several heads of regional governments.
Recent polls show the PP holding only a slim lead over the Socialists, although Mr Sanchez remains the most highly rated party leader among voters.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez speaking at a press conference on June 6 in Barcelona, Spain.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
One in four voters, 24.6 per cent, said Mr Sanchez is their favourite party leader to lead the country, ahead of the leader of far-right party Vox, Mr Santiago Abascal, who was picked by 17.1 per cent, according to a poll published on June 9 in the daily El Pais.
Mr Feijoo was the third most popular option, with 16.6 per cent.
The next general election is expected in 2027. AFP


