60.6 F
Chicago
Saturday, March 7, 2026

Spain’s Government: Spinning Out Of Control

Must read

Spain’s Government: Spinning Out Of Control

Authored by Drieu Godefridi via The Gatestone Institute,

Between corruption and radicalization, Spain’s government seems to be spinning out of control.

In 1936, SpainĀ plungedĀ into civil war. A proud nation collapsed into violence, fire, and devastation. The Spanish Civil War, which set a communist-dominated Republican left against an authoritarian nationalist right, claimed roughly half a million lives. Priests were dragged through the streets, beaten, and mutilated — ears, noses, even genitals cut off — before being shot or having their throats slit. Nuns were raped prior to execution, in cases documented across several regions. Churches were set ablaze with priests still inside. In many towns, militiamen forced clergy to drink motor oil or gasoline before burning them alive. Spain’s right wing, not to be outdone, killed just as many.

Almost a century later, when one might have hoped that these wounds had finally healed, political and cultural fault lines are reopening. Polarization has reached levels rarely seen since Spain’s transition to democracy.

1. The original trauma of the Spanish left

The Spanish Civil War, in Spain’s collective memory, remains an open wound. For a significant portion of the Spanish “left” — standing for workers’ rights, a shorter work week, women’s and transgender rights, reducing carbon emissions — the dominant narrative remains that of a revolutionĀ betrayed, confiscated by fascism, and still pending, never repaired. This historical resentment has been transmitted from generation to generation like an act of faith. Today, under the government of Prime Minister Pedro SĆ”nchez and his coalition, which governs with the support of theĀ extreme-left, this resentment is resurfacing in the form of historical revisionism.

By constantly summoning the specters of the past — going so far as to exhume Francisco Franco’s remains, in a direct evocation of civil-war-era practices, when communists gleefully desecrated the graves of their so-called “class enemies” — is the left not in danger of reviving the hatreds and violence of the past?

2. A left without a compass: ideological orphanhood

Spain’s left is becoming more radical precisely because it has run out of ideas. Marxism, long the doctrinalĀ backboneĀ of the global left, lost all credibility with the implosion of the USSR, amid the stench ofĀ cabbageĀ andĀ corpses. Spain is no exception. Stripped of this ideological foundation, the Spanish left now finds itself without a compass.

Before the July 2023 elections, SÔnchez promised a bold progressive agenda: mass public housing construction, reducing the working week to 37.5 hours, large minimum wage hikes, slashing healthcare waiting lists with binding maximum times, free public transport for youth, and expanded public education. Critically, delivery on these massive flagship promises has been dismal to date: virtually no new public housing built, prices soaring, the work-week reduction defeated in parliament, real wages eroded by inflation, and chronic healthcare waiting lists unchanged.

SĆ”nchez’s Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE), once anchored in moderate, reformist social democracy, has gradually shifted toward a strategy of sheerĀ political survival. To remain in power, it allied itself first with Podemos and then with Sumar—two extreme left-wing parties obsessed with supporting Palestinians, against NATO, and soft on Russia — as well as withĀ separatistĀ movements. In doing so, the PSOE diluted its original moderate reformist vision through blatant opportunism, sacrificing doctrinal coherence in favor of questionable alliances.

3. A patchwork of incoherent dogmas

Deprived of Marxism, the Spanish left has sought refuge in a disparate ideological mosaic: radicalĀ environmentalism, complicit indulgence toward political Islam, theĀ dismantlingĀ of borders, unconditionalĀ supportĀ for the Palestinians against Israel – all stacked together into an improbable and incoherent magma. Added to this are recurring undertones ofĀ anti-SemitismĀ in left-wing discourse — one thinks in particular of Yolanda DĆ­az, seemingly a figure of clinical hysteria, whose face visiblyĀ contortsĀ the moment she pronounces the word “Israeli.”

By radicalizing itself across every issue, the left fuels theĀ angerĀ of the right, the middle classes, and a growing segment of the population that feels marginalized, despised, and alienated within its own country.

4. A regime corrupt to the core?

The SĆ”nchez government has another reason for aligning with jihadists: the corruption scandals that have engulfed even the prime minister’s immediate family.

First comes the Koldo-Ábalos scandal involving irregular public contracts, illegal commissions, and bribes linked to public-works contracts, totaling several hundred million euros. Several figures are particularly implicated. Former Minister of Transport José Luis Ábalos, a close ally of SÔnchez, is in pre-trial detention for criminal organization, corruption, embezzlement, and influence peddling.

Koldo GarcĆ­a, Ɓbalos’s former adviser, is a central figure in the scheme. He too is in pre-trial detention and under prosecution. Santos CerdĆ”n, former secretary of organization of the PSOE and Ɓbalos’s successor, is under investigation and wasĀ detainedĀ for corruption in public-works contracts. The Civil Guard is examining 22 contracts, worth €355 million, that were allegedly manipulated by favoritism.

Added to this are the cases involving SĆ”nchez’s own family. BegoƱa Gómez, his wife, was formallyĀ chargedĀ with influence peddling, corruption in business, embezzlement of public funds, misappropriation, and illegally practicing a regulated profession, in a case that was opened in April 2024. In August 2025, the probe was extended to include her advisor Cristina Ɓlvarez.

The investigation into Gómez has been extended until at least April 2026 and continues with active measures, including February 2026 requests to the Interior Ministry for travel records of Gómez and Álvarez since 2018 (covering destinations such as the Dominican Republic, Congo, Guinea, and Russia), access to emails, and Civil Guard reports.

David SĆ”nchez, the prime minister’s brother, is also beingĀ prosecuted, for influence peddling and malfeasance in connection with his employment at the Badajoz Provincial Council. “The prime minister faces multiple legal challenges this year that could lead to the downfall of his family, his party, and his government,”Ā summarizesĀ Spanish dailyĀ El Mundo.

5. An ideological junta radicalizing itself to survive

The high point of the Spanish left’s radicalization was reached with a January 2026Ā decreeĀ legalizing between 500,000 and a million illegal immigrants. Although presented as a humanitarian and economic measure, this slap-happy decision provoked widespread outrage among Spaniards. The Vox party hasĀ identifiedĀ this as a massive “pull factor” that will inevitably attract millions of additional illegal immigrants. Public services, already under severe strain, are on the brink of collapse. Entire swathes of Spanish territory are, additionally,Ā driftingĀ toward an Islamic cultural environment.

Heading toward the point of no return?

The warning signs are multiplying. Traumatized by its history, cornered by the judiciary, and deprived of ideological reference points, the Spanish left appears to be locking itself into radical dogmas and adopting increasingly divisive policies simply to remain in power.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 – 03:30

- Advertisement -spot_img

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest article