Sánchez declined to give details of the expected changes. Credit: La Moncloa
The prime minister and general secretary of the PSOE, Pedro Sánchez, has apologised for the alleged involvement of a party MP in a corruption case and announced that an external audit will be carried out on the party’s finances.
He also expressed his “deep disappointment” and, despite the impact this case is having on his party, confirmed that he will not call an early general election. The current legislature, he insisted, will run its full course until 2027. According to Sánchez, there is no government crisis. The opposition, however, claims this could be the beginning of the end.
Speaking at a press conference at the party’s headquarters in Calle Ferraz, Madrid, following the resignation of party organisation secretary Santos Cerdán over his alleged role in the so-called Koldo case, Sánchez said his response to corruption would be as firm as the disappointment he feels.
“I want to offer my apologies to the public, because the Socialist Party – and I, as general secretary of the PSOE – should not have placed our trust in him,” he said with a sombre expression, before more cameras and journalists than usual.
External audit and federal executive reshuffle
Sánchez announced that, despite the positive reports issued by the Court of Auditors, an independent audit will be commissioned to dispel “any shadow of doubt” the public may hold.
Alongside the audit, he also plans to overhaul the party’s leadership structure. The changes will be made official at a federal committee – the PSOE’s highest decision-making body between congresses – scheduled to take place in Seville on 5 July.
The meeting will coincide with the opening of the national congress of the main opposition party, the Partido Popular.
Sánchez declined to give details of the expected changes but noted that they are necessary, stressing that the organisation secretariat – the post held by Cerdán – is “a key responsibility in the structure of any political organisation”.
The current leadership of the PSOE was elected only six months ago, during a federal congress also held in Seville. At the time, the new leadership team received 90% of the votes, with Cerdán remaining as organisation secretary and María Jesús Montero continuing as the party’s deputy secretary general.
Sánchez insists elections will be held in 2027
Sánchez reaffirmed that there will be no early general election and said he plans to run again as the Socialist candidate when the vote is held in 2027.
“This isn’t about me, or the Socialist Party, or the MPs in our parliamentary group alone,” he said.
The prime minister revealed that he personally demanded Cerdán’s resignation after learning of a Guardia Civil report implicating him in alleged corruption. “Although the disappointment is great, the response will always be firm,” he said.
The roots of the corruption case
The so-called Koldo case erupted on Thursday, 12 June, with the emergence of eight audio recordings made over four years (2019–2023) by former adviser Koldo García, involving former minister José Luis Ábalos and former PSOE organisation secretary Santos Cerdán. The recordings, investigators say, paint “a highly incriminating picture”.
According to the public prosecutor’s office, the recordings “are of paramount importance” in the proceedings and are so explicit that “in many instances they require no further explanation”.
This view was set out in a written submission responding to the Guardia Civil’s report of 5 June, in which prosecutors requested several investigative actions – including the search of Ábalos’s home in Valencia, which took place two days ago.
The prosecutor highlights two key elements: “Koldo’s role as interlocutor in all the recordings” and “the common theme that runs through the conversations” – namely, “the pursuit of payment for alleged kickbacks following the award of public contracts”.
Eight recordings over four years
The eight recordings span from 2019 to 2023, beginning a year after Ábalos became minister and continuing beyond his departure from Sánchez’s cabinet in July 2021.
In each of them, Koldo and Ábalos review the sums they are allegedly owed. Koldo then turns to Santos Cerdán, with whom he discusses the specific payments due. Prosecutors say Cerdán “appears to be the person in charge of handling these alleged payments”.
The public prosecutor notes that “these demands follow a consistent pattern” across the eight recordings, all of which were made by Koldo between 2019 and 2023. The conversations, the statement says, always revolve around demands for payment: “Ábalos Meco, and by extension Koldo García, generated the debt with Acciona through allegedly fraudulent public contracts, and Santos Cerdán was allegedly responsible for managing the sums and their disbursement.”
“I won’t be an accomplice like his coalition partners”
The leader of the Partido Popular, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, called for a general election following what he described as Pedro Sánchez’s “insufficient” and “disappointing” explanations regarding the corruption scandal engulfing the PSOE. However, he ruled out tabling a motion of no confidence against the prime minister for the time being.
Speaking at a press conference at party headquarters in Madrid, Feijóo said that since he does not currently have the necessary support in parliament, now is not the time to present such a motion. He stressed that he does not intend to give Sánchez “a breath of fresh air” by allowing him to be reaffirmed as head of government.
“I won’t be an accomplice like his coalition partners, helping to ratify Mr Sánchez once again as prime minister,” Feijóo declared. He added that the moment he sees “any possibility” of success, he will act, because “the Spanish people know” he is ready to serve.
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