
Spain’s Opposition Blunders on the Government’s Worst Day
A surprise resignation within Spain’s People’s Party stole the spotlight from major corruption trials that could have damaged Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

A surprise resignation within Spain’s People’s Party stole the spotlight from major corruption trials that could have damaged Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

The town of Jumilla won’t let Islamic groups use civic centres and municipal gyms for Eid and other religious events.

The announcement effectively ends a long-standing political blockade which has kept VOX out of power at the national level.

The ‘center-right’ has joined the Left in a surreal proposal to amend the Spanish Penal Code.

“The worst of Sánchez is still to come,” Abascal warned.

Spain’s opposition parties accuse the Sánchez government of favouring separatists, whose autonomous community got off lightly—while the capital was forced to take in hundreds of minors.

The creation of a new party would further fragment Spain’s already fractured conservative bloc and hinder Spain’s shift to the right.

New generations are abandoning the establishment parties in droves, as the right-wing VOX stands at nearly 30% among the youngest demographic.

The EPP threatening with rule of law procedure against Sánchez is just as anti-democratic as whatever they want to punish.

“The European Commission cannot be the hiding place of a minister who owes a lot of explanations to the people,” the PP leader said, referring to Teresa Ribera’s mismanagement of the recent deadly floods in Spain.