Hints and tips:
Related Special Reports
...A former Socialist prime minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, said his message to Sánchez was: “Of course it’s worth it, Pedro.”The PP’s attacks on Sánchez continued on Thursday....
...Isabel Díaz Ayuso, the PP head of the Madrid regional government, accused Sánchez of creating a power vacuum....
...Arguing that the lack of gender equality was a breach of the law, Díaz said her leftwing party Sumar, an ally of prime minister Pedro Sánchez, was filing an official complaint against the Royal Spanish Football...
...It comes at a delicate time for regional politics, given Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s contentious deal with Catalan separatists to stay in power....
...But the PP will not need a coalition partner in the Madrid region, where the incumbent president Isabel Díaz Ayuso strengthened her position and won an absolute majority....
...PP mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida is leading but would need the hard-right Vox party to secure a majority....
...Agriculture minister Luis Planas, a member of Sánchez’s Socialist party, rebuked his fellow cabinet member, citing the need to protect smaller retail chains....
...José Luis Ábalos, a Socialist veteran who served as minister of transport....
...On Tuesday night, José Luis Ábalos, a senior Socialist leader, said the results were “disappointing but do not reflect all of Spain.”...
...In a recent hour-and-a-half-long interview with the FT’s Daniel Dombey in Madrid, Casado compared his career to that of Socialist prime minister Pedro Sánchez....
...One of Podemos’s most significant appointments is Yolanda Díaz, a labour lawyer and Communist party member who is taking up the employment portfolio....
...Parliament is due to vote on the formation of a new government as early as this month but Mr Sánchez and his potential partners are not assured of a majority....
...Born in 1972 in Madrid, Mr Sánchez grew up in a middle-class family; his mother was a lawyer and his father a businessman....
...Mr Sánchez won 50 per cent of the vote, more than 10 points ahead of Susana Díaz, the regional president of Andalusia and the party official who led the coup against her rival last year....
...“I will march for Venezuela, for my children, we can’t stand this any longer,” said middle-class worker María Sánchez in Caracas. “We are facing a dictatorship disguised as a democracy.”...
International Edition