Sanchez is mired in corruption scandals all around him
The Spanish Socialists are crumbling under multiple corruption investigations.
Today (24), Spanish anti-corruption police have raided the headquarters of PM Pedro Sánchez’s socialist PSOE party.
This is yet another damaging development in a season of scandals that have sparked talks about the government having to resign and hold snap elections later this year.
“The agents were sent to secure evidence for an ongoing probe into the alleged illegal financing of the country’s ruling party.
The raid comes just days after the socialist former PM José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero was indicted on corruption charges linked to the Venezuelan regime.
Today’s raid is linked to an unrelated investigation overseen by Spain’s Anti-Corruption Prosecutor.
Many in the closest circle around PM Sanchez, including his wife and brother, are already under criminal investigation for corruption.”
“Spain’s National Court confirmed agents of the Civil Guard’s elite Central Operative Unit (UCO) had been sent to obtain evidence for a probe into a plot to discredit critics engaged in legal proceedings against the government.
It also announced the indictment of Ana Fuentes, who has been in charge of managing the party’s finances since 2021, for her alleged role in that scheme and other fraudulent activities.
According to the National Court’s investigative dossier, first reported by El País, the alleged fraud began in 2024, when Sánchez considered stepping down after growing exasperated with the questionable legal complaints filed against members of his family.
Socialist Party officials are alleged to have spent tens of thousands of euros commissioning individuals to go after the right-wing organizations filing the complaints. Fraudulent invoices were allegedly used to cover up payments made to the party’s agents, who were ordered to ‘systematically obstruct any legal proceedings that could directly or indirectly impact the interests of the government’.”
Germany is moving toward what critics are calling a sweeping new form of state influence over online speech, after plans surfaced to force social media platforms to prioritize content from government-approved outlets—raising serious concerns about censorship, narrative control, and the future of free expression in Europe.
According to documents obtained by Apollo News, regulators are preparing a system that would require platforms such as X, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok to give preferential treatment to content from so-called “reliable” media.
What makes the proposal particularly controversial is not just the intent, but the mechanism. For the first time, state-linked authorities would directly shape the algorithms that determine what information citizens see—effectively inserting government priorities into the digital public square.
At the center of the plan is the concept of “public value” media. In theory, these are outlets that provide socially beneficial information, but in practice, critics argue, they are media organizations vetted and approved by the same political system they are meant to scrutinize.
That distinction is crucial. The power to define what is “reliable” would rest with regulatory bodies tied to the state, not with citizens, readers, or independent market forces.
Once granted this status, approved outlets would receive algorithmic advantages. Their content would be pushed higher in feeds, made easier to discover, and given preferential visibility over competing voices.
The proposal does not stop there. Individual articles and videos could also be labeled as “public value,” creating a two-tier information system where some content is actively promoted while other viewpoints are quietly deprioritized.
Platforms would then be required to adjust their recommendation systems accordingly. In some cases, regulators are even discussing quotas to guarantee exposure for approved content, effectively turning private platforms into vehicles for state-guided messaging.
For many critics, this crosses a fundamental line. It transforms social media from an open marketplace of ideas into a managed information ecosystem shaped by political authorities.
Supporters of the initiative claim it is necessary to combat “disinformation” and preserve democratic discourse.
But that justification is precisely what alarms opponents. They argue that “fighting disinformation” has increasingly become a catch-all rationale for restricting dissent and controlling narratives.
“This is not about removing illegal content,” one observer noted. “This is about deciding which legal speech deserves to be seen—and which does not.”
Critics describe the system as a form of “soft censorship.” Instead of banning opposing views outright, it ensures they are drowned out by state-preferred content. “It is reverse censorship,” analysts warn. “You don’t delete the message—you just make sure nobody sees it.”
The consequences for independent and alternative media could be severe. Outlets that challenge government policy or question mainstream narratives may find their reach quietly throttled, without any formal accusation or legal recourse.
Meanwhile, established media—many of them publicly funded or closely aligned with political institutions—stand to benefit. Major broadcasters like ARD and ZDF are already positioned to dominate under such a system.
Critics argue that this creates an uneven playing field that undermines genuine pluralism. Rather than promoting diversity of opinion, it risks reinforcing a narrow range of approved viewpoints.
The concept itself is not entirely new. A limited version of “public value” already exists in app stores and smart TV interfaces, where certain outlets are prioritized.
However, extending this model to social media marks a dramatic escalation. Social platforms are now the primary arena for political discourse, making algorithmic control far more consequential.
Under the proposed system, platforms would have to prove compliance. They would be required to demonstrate how they are boosting approved content and aligning with regulatory expectations.
This effectively places private companies under indirect state supervision. The distinction between platform autonomy and government control becomes increasingly blurred.
The authorities behind the proposal are not directly elected. The Commission for Licensing and Supervision (ZAK), composed of heads of state media authorities, would play a central role.
While officially independent, these bodies are deeply embedded within the political system. Their leadership is shaped through processes linked to regional governments and political institutions.
That reality raises fundamental questions about accountability. Who decides what qualifies as “truth,” and on what basis are those decisions made?
The timing of the proposal is also significant. Across Europe, governments are facing growing public pressure over issues like migration, security, and national identity.
These are precisely the topics where alternative media have gained traction. And they are also the areas where authorities appear most eager to regulate discourse.
Critics warn that the new system could disproportionately affect voices calling for stricter immigration policies or remigration strategies. These perspectives, while increasingly popular among voters, often fall outside the boundaries of accepted discourse.
At the same time, support for parties like the Alternative for Germany continues to grow. Many of these movements have built their base by addressing issues that mainstream outlets have been reluctant to confront.
For supporters, the connection is clear. As political alternatives gain ground, institutions are moving to reassert control over the flow of information.
The broader concern is not just about media regulation. It is about whether citizens in Western democracies will retain the ability to freely access and share information outside of government-approved channels.
If algorithms can be shaped to favor certain viewpoints, critics argue, then the very foundation of open debate is at risk. What emerges is not censorship in the traditional sense, but something more subtle—and potentially more effective.
The proposal is still in development. A draft Digital Media State Treaty could be introduced in the coming months.
But the direction is already clear. Germany appears to be moving toward a system where information is not just regulated—but actively curated by the state.
For defenders of free speech, the stakes could not be higher. The question now is whether public pressure will halt this trajectory—or whether Europe will continue down a path toward managed discourse and controlled narratives.
New Jersey Democratic House candidate Adam Hamawy worked for an Al-Qaida-linked nonprofit in the 1990s before international investigations led to its closing, Jewish Insider reported.
Hamawy said in a 1996 interview that he had passed out humanitarian supplies around Bosnia two years earlier for the Benevolence International Foundation (BIF), the outlet reported, citing the archived story from the Newark Star-Ledger. The U.S. government and United Nations (UN) later identified the Illinois-based foundation as a clandestine funding source for Al-Qaida and 9/11 architect Osama bin Laden.
“I worked in Sarajevo for 10 days and then the rest in Zenica, a large regional center in central Bosnia,” Hamawy, who was born in Egypt, reportedly told the paper at the time. “We went out to hospitals around the area and in the mountains to check what supplies they needed and we tried to deliver them.”
Hamawy’s campaign did not respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment. He has received endorsements from high-profile Democrats such as Muslim and Somali-born Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
The Muslim candidate previously came under fire for his past association with convicted terrorist mastermind Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman, for whom he worked as a translator and testified in his defense in his 1996 federal trial in New York, Jewish Insider and the Washington Free Beacon reported. Abdel-Rahman, nicknamed “the Blind Sheik,” and co-defendants were convicted of roles in the deadly 1993 World Trade Center bombing and other terrorist plots.
“He did speak about violent things that I think most people disagree with and most people condemn, including myself,” Hamawy told The Philadelphia Inquirer about the Blind Sheik. “But it wasn’t the only thing he spoke about.”
Hamawy’s past ties to extremists run deeper than previously acknowledged, Jewish Insider’s report found. A 2002 federal investigation of BIF found extensive communications between the foundation and Al-Qaida, financial transactions and records describing a plan to “establish a base for operations in Europe against al Qaeda’s true enemy, the United States,” courtrecordsshow.
The Democrat dismissed his critics as bigoted in May 7 comments to InsiderNJ, touting his past work as a doctor for the U.S. in the Iraq War and a responder on 9/11.
“As a Muslim, they’re always going to find something to attack,” he told the outlet.
CBS News has parted ways with longtime 60 Minutes correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi after declining to renew her contract.
The split comes months after Alfonsi clashed with CBS editor-in-chief Bari Weiss over a segment about conditions inside El Salvador’s CECOT prison involving deported migrants and President Trump’s administration.
The Trending Politics report laid out the contract decision and the internal fight that preceded it:
Alfonsi’s deal expired over the weekend, and CBS chose not to renew it after nearly two decades with the network and more than a decade on 60 Minutes. The exit followed a high-profile fight over a CECOT segment that examined conditions inside the Salvadoran prison used to hold deported migrants.
The dispute traces back to CBS holding the segment before it aired. Alfonsi told colleagues in internal emails that Bari Weiss’s decision to spike the piece was political, while CBS leadership treated the situation as a serious newsroom chain-of-command problem.
Several sources told the New York Times that CBS executives viewed Alfonsi’s actions as insubordinate. Alfonsi did not back down, arguing that the network was punishing a reporter for refusing to soften accurate reporting.
The segment eventually aired in January with administration comment and additional material included. That is the key detail: the fight was not simply over whether the story would run, but over how CBS handled editorial control, sourcing, and public defiance inside one of television’s most famous news programs.
That is the part legacy media usually prefers to bury.
The same network that spent years lecturing America about institutions is now dealing with an internal war over who actually controls its flagship newsmagazine.
Fox News reported Alfonsi’s own account of the split and the message she says CBS sent to its newsroom:
There is a certain irony in all of this.
CBS brought Weiss into a battered newsroom after years of credibility problems, including public fights over President Trump and 60 Minutes.
Then one of the program’s longtime correspondents went public against the new boss and ended up out of the show.
TheWrap added more detail on Alfonsi’s status and her refusal to quietly accept the move:
Alfonsi remains technically employed by CBS News, but her 60 Minutes contract was not renewed. TheWrap tied the decision to the months-long fallout from the CECOT story and the broader clash with Weiss over the segment.
Alfonsi had also warned she was not resigning. She said that if CBS wanted her gone because she did her job, the network would have to fire her, putting CBS in the position of either keeping a defiant correspondent or making the separation unmistakable.
TheWrap also described the segment as a major internal flashpoint at CBS. The issue was not merely a programming delay; it became a public dispute over whether CBS leadership was demanding stronger editorial standards or bending to political pressure.
Either way, the result is now clear. Alfonsi is not expected back on 60 Minutes, and CBS has another very public media drama tied to its handling of President Trump-era coverage.
The old media guard wants to call every newsroom fight a noble crusade for truth.
Sometimes it is simpler than that.
A correspondent challenged the new leadership, accused them of a political decision, and reportedly got viewed by executives as insubordinate.