Spanish ex-PM Zapatero in unprecedented graft probe hearing
17 Jun 2026, 17:29 | BSS

MADRID, June 17, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Former Spanish prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero on Wednesday began two days of unprecedented court hearings on suspected influence peddling, the latest corruption affair threatening the leftist government.
The investigation into the Socialist titan comes as a string of graft probes into Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's family and former top political allies have threatened to topple his minority coalition.
Clashes with US President Donald Trump and virulent criticism of Israel have made Sanchez a global progressive star, but the scandals have eroded the domestic standing of one of Europe's few remaining Socialist leaders.
Zapatero, who governed Spain from 2004 to 2011, was placed under formal investigation last month for alleged influence peddling in connection with the bailout of small airline Plus Ultra in 2021.
Plus Ultra received 53 million euros ($61.5 million) of public money after the Covid-19 pandemic paralysed global travel.
Investigating judge Jose Luis Calama has said Zapatero allegedly headed a "stable and hierarchical" structure that used "opaque financial channels" to conceal the movement of money and obtain bribes for his illicit manoeuvring.
Zapatero has denied the allegations, while Sanchez has expressed "full support" for his mentor.
A police search of Zapatero's office found jewellery and luxury watches valued at 1.3 million euros, leading Calama to probe additional alleged offences of tax fraud and smuggling.
Zapatero's entourage attributes the hoard to a family inheritance.
Zapatero began his hearing at the Audiencia Nacional court in Madrid -- becoming the first former or serving Spanish prime minister to be declared as a suspect in a corruption probe.
"What is at stake is the reputation of someone who has become... the moral beacon of Pedro Sanchez and the current Socialist party," Astrid Barrio, a political science professor at the University of Valencia, told AFP.
- Government under threat -
Sanchez vowed to clean up Spanish politics when he took power in 2018 after the main conservative Popular Party (PP) was convicted in its own graft affair.
But a two-year-long investigation into his wife Begona Gomez for alleged influence peddling had already shaken the government, with a decision to send her to trial potentially coming in days.
Verdicts are also due in separate corruption trials of Sanchez's former right-hand man Jose Luis Abalos and his brother David Sanchez.
Recent revelations about an ongoing police probe into a former Socialist activist suspected of leading a plot to sabotage investigations into Sanchez's entourage have piled further pressure on the government.
Amid the relentless stream of negative headlines, the Socialists have suffered four regional election drubbings since late 2025, in a possible precursor to next year's national vote.
The conservative and far-right opposition have demanded Sanchez's resignation and early elections, saying the scandals have exposed systemic Socialist corruption.
Sanchez insists he will see out his term until 2027, highlighting his government's achievements and declining to directly answer a question about corruption from the PP in parliament on Wednesday.
But researcher Barrio said "two very serious issues" could yet bring him down: being placed under investigation himself or a charge of illegal financing against the Socialists.

