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Sanchez brother convicted as Spanish corruption scandals multiply

Sanchez brother convicted as Spanish corruption scandals multiply

A Spanish court has banned Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's brother from public office for nine years, adding to a cascade of corruption investigations that threaten to destabilise the ruling Socialists and distract from economic governance.

David Sanchez has been convicted of administrative misconduct and barred from holding public office for nine years. The ruling from a Badajoz court found that a senior cultural position overseeing the province's music conservatories was created in 2017 without genuine administrative need.

The judges ruled the role was tailored to David Sanchez due to his family connection, noting the post was later modified to accommodate his interest in opera. "The defendants engaged in a grossly arbitrary exercise of power with the sole aim of favouring specific individuals," the court said. The ruling can be appealed.

Pedro Sanchez dismissed the conviction as a politically-motivated campaign driven by the far right. The prime minister, who has held office since 2018, has previously labelled the various legal troubles facing his family as a "smear campaign."

However, this conviction is not an isolated incident for the ruling Socialist Party. Last month, a former close aide to Sanchez received a 24-year prison sentence in a separate corruption case. In May, the Civil Guard searched the party's headquarters under judicial orders to seize documents for a National Court probe into a former party member linked to a state-run company. Speaking from Rome after meeting Pope Leo, Sanchez argued a request for documents did not constitute a police search and insisted the party was fully cooperating.

The legal net has widened to include former Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, who is being investigated for alleged influence peddling tied to a government airline bailout. Sanchez's wife is also facing a probe over similar allegations. Furthermore, a former minister and a senior party official are under investigation for their alleged roles in a pandemic-era kickback ring. All have denied wrongdoing.

Governance risks

For investors and businesses operating in Spain, this accumulation of scandals represents a significant political risk. A government consumed by legal defences and internal turmoil is inherently less equipped to pursue structural economic reforms or manage complex budgetary debates. The sheer breadth of the investigations—spanning the prime minister's immediate family, former leaders, and current officials—raises pressing questions about governance standards within the state apparatus.

Sanchez acknowledged the gravity of the situation last year when he asked the nation for "forgiveness" over the corruption cases involving his former associates. While he maintains the courts are being weaponised against him, the ongoing drip of convictions and high-level raids ensures political instability will remain a persistent backdrop for the Spanish economy.

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