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Spain’s ex-PM Zapatero denies wrongdoing in graft court hearing

By Thomson Reuters Jun 17, 2026 | 8:09 AM

By David Latona and Emma Pinedo

MADRID, June 17 (Reuters) – Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, a former prime minister of Spain, told a High Court judge on Wednesday that he never intervened to secure ​a state bailout on an airline’s behalf – the allegation at the ‌heart of an influence-peddling probe against him.

Zapatero, who led the country between 2004 and 2011, is the first Spanish premier to be formally investigated since the country’s return to democracy.

He remains a widely respected figure in the ruling Socialist Party and is a ‌key ally ​to Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, whose government faces ⁠a slew of corruption ⁠scandals.

Wearing a navy-blue suit and matching tie, Zapatero arrived at the High Court by car and accessed the building through a cordoned-off pavement. His testimony lasted three-and-a-half hours.

Zapatero is being investigated for allegedly leading an influence-peddling ​and money-laundering network suspected of profiting from lobbying public authorities on behalf of third parties.

One of those alleged clients is Spanish airline Plus ⁠Ultra, which was bailed out with €53 million ($61 million) ⁠at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021.

‘DECENCY ​AND HONESTY’

“I’m accused of very serious crimes that I didn’t commit,” Zapatero said ​in a statement released after the hearing, adding that he had ‌submitted a voluntary blanket authorisation to the court to show he holds no companies or assets outside Spain.

“I’ve always conducted myself with decency and honesty, and now that I have the task ahead of me of proving it, ⁠I will do so with absolute transparency.”

Last week, investigating judge Jose Luis Calama opened a separate probe over jewellery found during a search of Zapatero’s office – ⁠provisionally valued at about €1.3 ‌million and currently lacking documented proof of origin – for ⁠potential tax evasion or smuggling offences.

Citing court sources, state ​news agency ‌EFE said that when Calama asked Zapatero about ​the jewellery on ⁠Wednesday, the ex-premier exercised his right not to testify, arguing his defence had not had enough time to prepare.

The anti-corruption prosecutor had asked to withdraw Zapatero’s passport, but Calama declined, saying the former politician’s public notoriety offset any flight risk.

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(Reporting by David Latona and Emma Penedo; Editing by Andrei Khalip ​and Ros Rossell)