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Spanish police raided the Madrid headquarters of the ruling Socialist Party (PSOE) as part of an expanding corruption investigation involving alleged illegal financing and attempts to obstruct judicial proceedings. Authorities seized documents linked to claims that party operative Leire Díez led a misinformation campaign aimed at interfering in legal cases affecting the government. Searches were also conducted at the homes of senior party figures and a businessman connected to the probe.

The latest development adds pressure on Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, whose administration has been rocked by multiple scandals involving current and former allies, as well as members of his family. Opposition leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo of the conservative People’s Party accused the government of being consumed by corruption and renewed calls for early elections. Sánchez, however, rejected demands to step down and said he would complete his term in office.

Several prominent Socialist figures are now facing investigations or trials, including former Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero over alleged influence-peddling linked to a 2021 airline bailout. Former Transport Minister José Luis Ábalos is also awaiting a verdict in a separate corruption case involving pandemic-era contracts. Meanwhile, Sánchez’s wife Begoña Gómez and his brother David Sánchez are facing separate legal proceedings, though all involved have denied wrongdoing and the prime minister has described the allegations as politically motivated attacks.

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Slovakia’s national security adviser Miroslav Lajcak has resigned after newly released files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein revealed the two had exchanged emails discussing young women. The disclosures emerged from a fresh release of Epstein-related documents by the U.S. Justice Department, triggering political fallout in Bratislava.

Lajcak, a former Slovak foreign minister and seasoned diplomat, denied any wrongdoing and strongly condemned Epstein’s crimes. He said the email exchange from 2018 was informal, light-hearted and without substance, but decided to step down to ensure the issue was not used to politically damage Prime Minister Robert Fico. He stressed that his resignation was not an admission of unethical or criminal behaviour.

Prime Minister Fico said he had accepted Lajcak’s resignation, praising him as an invaluable figure in diplomacy and foreign policy. The controversy centres on correspondence from October 2018, when Lajcak was serving as foreign minister, and is part of a broader release of millions of Epstein-related files that have implicated several public figures globally.

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Maximilian Krah, a prominent far-right German politician from the Alternative for Germany (AfD), announced he would scale back his campaign efforts for the upcoming EU elections while remaining the party’s lead candidate. This decision followed a controversial interview with the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, where Krah remarked that not all SS members were automatically “criminals” and emphasized assessing individual culpability. He referenced Günter Grass, the German novelist who served in the Waffen SS, to support his point.

The SS, or Schutzstaffel, was a Nazi paramilitary group notorious for its central role in the Holocaust and other war crimes. Krah’s comments provoked a strong reaction, leading France’s far-right National Rally (RN) to sever ties with the AfD in the European Parliament. RN leader Marine Le Pen called for a “cordon sanitaire” to distance her party from the AfD, stating the urgency of this separation due to the extremity of Krah’s views.

The relationship between RN and AfD had already been strained following a secret meeting involving AfD members discussing the mass deportations of non-ethnic Germans. Marine Le Pen had previously condemned such ideas.

Facing mounting pressures ahead of the EU elections in June, Krah declared on social media that he would step back from public campaign appearances and resign from the federal executive board to preserve party unity. This decision comes amid various scandals, including the arrest of one of his staffers for alleged espionage for China and an ongoing investigation into Krah over purported payments from Russia and China, which he denies. Despite these controversies, the AfD remains a significant political force, polling second or third nationally and leading in some states set for local elections later this year.

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