
Spanish PM Turns on the Fan, But the Stench of Corruption Still Lingers
“We are not corrupt,” claimed Sánchez in parliament, but reality contradicts his claim on all fronts.

“We are not corrupt,” claimed Sánchez in parliament, but reality contradicts his claim on all fronts.

As the prime minister resists calls for early elections, thousands demand accountability in the streets.

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

Farmers warn their land and livelihoods are being sacrificed for foreign profits, as centuries-old olive trees are uprooted.
The amendment delivers a clear condemnation of the Spanish PM’s “authoritarian drift.”

A film exposing the violent legacy of the PSOE was banned just hours before its premiere in Parliament.
Right-wing VOX says the programme is a risk to the country’s cultural and educational sovereignty.

National sovereignty—not subsidies or slogans—is the key to defending Spanish workers.

Other major parties have kept surprisingly quiet despite the scale of the crisis.
Vox politician Jorge Buxadé said the Spanish will never know the cause of the blackout because prime minister Sánchez “is a liar.”