Spanish prosecutor asks judge to close corruption probe into PM Sanchez's wife


Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez (C), and his wife Begona Gomez, attend a speech at Tsinghua University, in Beijing, China, 13 April, 2026. ANDRES MARTINEZ CASARES/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

MADRID, April 22 (Reuters) - A Spanish ⁠prosecutor has asked a judge to close a corruption investigation into ⁠the business dealings of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's wife, in ‌a case brought by far‑right groups seeking a jail sentence of as much as 24 years.

The case against Begoña Gomez is the most serious legal challenge faced by the Socialist leader ​and his family. Sanchez's brother, David, is due ⁠to stand trial in May ⁠in a separate case over alleged influence peddling.

Gomez has denied any wrongdoing.

Sanchez briefly ⁠considered ‌resigning in April 2024 after investigating judge Juan Carlos Peinado opened the probe into Gomez. He has publicly defended his family, saying ⁠the cases are politically motivated and driven by far-right ​opponents.

Peinado must decide ‌whether to accept the prosecutor's request or order a trial before ⁠a jury in ​a different court. If he allows proceedings to continue, the prosecutor will seek her acquittal during the trial, the prosecutor said in a statement on Wednesday.

The charges ⁠against Gomez are backed by far-right party Vox ​and several right-wing pressure groups, including Hazte Oir. In a legal filing submitted this week and seen by Reuters, they asked for a prison sentence of ⁠up to 24 years for Gomez.

The investigation centres on whether Gomez used her position as the prime minister's wife to secure sponsors for a university master's degree programme she directed, allegedly bypassing a public bidding process.

Gomez and her ​aide at the prime minister's official residence are ⁠accused of influence peddling, corruption in private business, misappropriation and misuse of public funds.

Peinado, ​who is nearing retirement, described Gomez's alleged ‌conduct in his last ruling as more ​befitting of an "absolute monarchy" than that of a modern constitutional democracy.

(Reporting by Emma Pinedo; Editing by David Latona, Charlie Devereux, William Maclean)

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