❌

Reading view

Profile | Zapatero, from spotless Spanish leader to former prime minister under suspicion

La Moncloa, the seat of government in Spain, seems to carry a curse. Ever since Adolfo SuΓ‘rez decided in 1976 to establish the headquarters of the first democratic government in 40 years at La Moncloa Palace, no prime minister has left it without calamity or disgrace.

Seguir leyendo

Zapatero, during an interview in 2024.

Β© Efe

JosΓ© Bono raises JosΓ© Luis RodrΓ­guez Zapatero’s arm after the latter won the PSOE’s 35th congress in July 2000.
  •  

Zapatero, a decade on the edge in Venezuela

Those were turbulent times. It was November 2024 and NicolΓ‘s Maduro was holed up inside Miraflores Palace, the Venezuelan presidential residence. When any foreign leader hinted to him that it might be time to leave power, he answered with a single word: β€œNever.” The police and intelligence services under his command detained thousands of people who had taken to the streets to protest the electoral fraud that Chavismo had perpetrated in plain view of the world. Protesters had pulled down bronze statues of Hugo ChΓ‘vez across the country. Prisons were overflowing. The nation was on the brink of rebellion or a bloodbath β€” or both.

Seguir leyendo

Β© OEA/EUROPA PRESS

Zapatero with Delcy RodrΓ­guez in 2016.
  •  
❌