


Corruption at the heart of his party wounds Spain’s prime minister
Pedro Sánchez is a survivor, but it is getting harder
PEDRO SÁNCHEZ came to power in 2018 through a censure motion that ousted his conservative predecessor, Mariano Rajoy, after a court found the centre-right People’s Party (PP) had practised “institutionalised corruption”. Mr Sánchez promised “democratic regeneration”. But he and his Socialist Party have now come almost full circle. After a judge released a police report containing devastating evidence of systematic corruption by two of Mr Sánchez’s closest party aides, a sombre prime minister apologised eight times at a press conference on June 12th. He promised a shake-up in the party leadership and an external audit of its finances. That is unlikely to be enough to restore his authority, or perhaps even to save his job.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The leader’s sea of troubles”

A revival for the classic Renault 5
Now with an electric motor and a baguette-holder

Europe wants to show it is ready for war. But would anyone show up to fight one?
The “peace project” at the heart of the continent has worked rather too well

Ukraine looks abroad to boost its manpower
Both sides are actively recruiting soldiers from overseas
Serbia’s Aleksandar Vucic is rattled
Huge demonstrations led by students calling for elections are proving resilient
Next week’s NATO summit will be all about placating Donald Trump
The Europeans plan to keep it short and snappy
Emmanuel Macron flies in to show his support for Greenland
A message to Donald Trump—and to Europe