Spain is in the grip of a corruption scandal that threatens to topple Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez. Sources confirm that a web of illicit payments and influence peddling has ensnared members of his Socialist Party, with documents obtained by this paper detailing kickbacks tied to public contracts in Madrid and Barcelona. Sánchez, already weakened by a fragile coalition, has refused to resign, insisting the allegations are a smear campaign by political rivals.
But the stench of rot is unmistakable. The UK Treasury is watching closely. Whitehall sources confirm that officials are modelling the potential fallout of a Spanish government collapse, fearing contagion across Eurozone bond markets.
“Spain is too big to fail, but not too big to wobble,” one source said. The instability could hit British exports and expose London banks to Spanish debt. Sánchez’s survival depends on a knife-edge vote of confidence next week.
If he falls, expect chaos. The bodies are piling up.








