Pedro Sánchez one step away from the judge: Leire Díez's references to him as P. S. condemn him

Pedro Sánchez one step away from the judge: Leire Díez's references to him as P. S. condemn him

P
Pedro Sánchez
3 Visualizaciones de video·10 jun 2026  #política #noticias #españa

#política #noticias #españa
The diaries and notebooks seized from Leire Díez by the UCO (Central Operative Unit of the Civil Guard) are a ticking time bomb for Pedro Sánchez. In their pages, the former Socialist Party member casually notes “meeting with P.S.” (February 19, 2025), “possible strategy: to be the lawyer for P.S.’s brother,” and “the editorial line is set by P.S.” when referring to control of Prisa. The context is unequivocal: P.S. is Pedro Sánchez. There is no room for coincidence. The same woman whom Sánchez claims not to know “even by hearsay” detailed his movements, his distrust of the Police's Deputy Director of Operations, and his alleged maneuvers to protect his family and the party. Moncloa denies everything, but the notebooks don't lie.
Sánchez is trapped. There are too many clues—noted meetings, shared strategies, prior knowledge of his agenda—for Judge Santiago Pedraz to ignore them. At least as a witness, the president will have to explain before the National Court how a supposed "fixer" operating independently accessed information that could only have come from the inner circle at the PSOE headquarters or the Prime Minister's office. Denying knowledge is no longer enough. The handwritten evidence places him one step away from the dock.

And he's not alone. Other PSOE leaders who, like Sánchez, denied knowing Leire Díez or downplayed their relationship have also been exposed. Cristina Narbona, the party president and Díez's self-proclaimed political "godmother" in Madrid, had WhatsApp conversations with her in April 2024 to "redirect" attacks against the president and offer "qualified help." Narbona admits to the contact but claims she referred it to Santos Cerdán. Too late: the UCO (Central Operative Unit of the Civil Guard) already has the messages.

In Cantabria, the government delegate and PSOE general secretary, Pedro Casares, defended the €44,859 contract the party paid to Díez between 2015 and 2017 for “communications consulting.” Casares, who had Leire's active support in his primaries, asserted that everything was done “transparently.” Photos of them together and their presence at party events disprove any claim of ignorance.

The Leire Díez case is no longer an isolated incident involving a rogue member. It's a snapshot of a PSOE that denied knowing its own “fixer” while she jotted down the president's initials and strategies to protect the party in her notebooks. Too many clues, too many contradictions. Pedro Sánchez and his inner circle can no longer hide behind an “I didn't know anything.” Justice, for once, must get to the bottom of things.

Marcas de tiempo