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Spain's ex-transport minister sentenced to 24 years for corruption

Former Spanish transport minister Jose Luis Abalos leaves after testifying before a Supreme Court investigating judge in alleged corruption case affecting the ruling Socialist Party in Madrid, Spain, June 23, 2025. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes
Former Spanish transport minister Jose Luis Abalos leaves after testifying before a Supreme Court investigating judge in alleged corruption case affecting the ruling Socialist Party in Madrid, Spain, June 23, 2025. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes Reuters

MADRID - Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's former transport minister, Jose Luis Abalos, was sentenced on Monday to 24 years in prison for a slew of offences involving corruption, the first verdict in a series of court cases linked to the ruling Socialist Party.

The unusually long sentence reflected the accumulation of felonies committed, including kickbacks from facemask purchases during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the damage to public trust caused by a minister of Abalos' rank breaching the rules, according to the Supreme Court's verdict.

"A society that perceives that those in positions of power act guided by private interests, or interests unrelated to public service... experiences a loss of institutional legitimacy, which compromises the stability of the system itself," the verdict read.

Nevertheless, the effective time Abalos will serve is capped under Spanish law at around 16-1/2 years, the court said.

The sentence comes as more than a dozen people close to the prime minister are being investigated or tried for corruption, including his wife and brother and an influential former Socialist premier.

To date, none of the cases has named Sanchez, who came to power eight years ago by ousting a corruption-plagued centre-right government on the promise of cleaning up politics.

RENEWED CALL FOR ELECTIONS

Public concern over corruption is far below what it was 10 years ago, but polls show it is drifting upwards in voters' classification of the country's top problems, said Luis Cornago-Bonal, a political scientist at consultancy Teneo.

"With allegations now hanging over the government and the opposition, the risk is that Spain drifts into a prolonged phase of public discontent and deeper polarization," he added.

Monday's ruling renewed calls from the opposition for Sanchez to step down and call an election, an option the government has ruled out taking before its term ends in August 2027.

The opposition does not at present have the support for a no-confidence motion.

"The prime minister of the government is responsible for the actions of his ministers," Alberto Feijoo, leader of the conservative Partido Popular, said in a statement from his party's Madrid headquarters.

Spain's Supreme Court found evidence of corruption in the awarding of a contract for 13 million facemasks to a company linked to businessman Aldama.

It also uncovered monthly payments of €10,000 ($11,434) to Abalos for "fixed expenses" and the hiring of two of his associates in public companies, one of whom had their housing costs covered.

($1 = 0.8746 euros)

(Reporting by Emma Pinedo and David Latona, Writing by Emma Pinedo and Victoria Waldersee, Editing by Andrei Khalip and Jan Harvey)

People attend a demonstration where Spain's opposition leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo demands snap elections after former Transport Minister Transport Minister Jose Luis Abalos was jailed over a corruption scandal dogging the leftist government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, in Madrid, Spain, November 30, 2025. REUTERS/Juan Barbosa
People attend a demonstration where Spain's opposition leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo demands snap elections after former Transport Minister Transport Minister Jose Luis Abalos was jailed over a corruption scandal dogging the leftist government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, in Madrid, Spain, November 30, 2025. REUTERS/Juan Barbosa JUAN BARBOSA Reuters

Copyright Reuters or USA Today Network via Reuters Connect.

This story was originally published June 22, 2026 at 6:34 AM.

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