Spain's PM rejects calls for snap election as scandals mount

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez apeaks at a press conference in Beijing
FILE PHOTO: Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez speaks at a press conference at the Spanish Embassy in Beijing, China April 11, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/ File Photo
Source: REUTERS

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez asked citizens for forgiveness after his close ally quit his posts earlier on Thursday over graft allegations, and said his Socialist Party would undergo an external audit, but rejected the opposition's calls for an early election.

"We should not have trusted him (Santos Cerdan)," a sombre-looking Sanchez told a news briefing at his Socialist Party's headquarters, acknowledging that the accusations against him were very serious.

With various scandals swirling around his minority government, the case poses one of the biggest threats yet to the survival of the country's fragile leftist coalition government. Sanchez said, however, most of the attacks on his government were not grounded in reality.

This article was produced by Reuters news agency. It has not been edited by Global South World.

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