27th November 2025
Barcelona NewsCatalonia NewsMadrid NewsMain News

Spain’s PP apologises for PM death tweet

Spain’s People’s Party (PP) was left embarrassed on Saturday after posting a video on Twitter suggesting it wished Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez dead, drawing criticism and forcing it to delete the tweet.

Furious, the government said in a statement it would take the matter to prosecutors to see if ‘this tweet constitutes an offence and if it does, to move forward with criminal proceedings against the authors and those that publically disseminated it’.

The video, posted on the eve of Epiphany – a popular celebration in Spain that sees the Three Kings give presents to children just like Father Christmas – shows a man reading out his son’s wish-list to the Biblical Magi (three kings).

PP Tweet
Screenshot of the original Tweet by the People’s Party (PP) (via Twitter @PPopular)

‘My favourite singer was Amy Winehouse, and you took her away,’ the father says in the video, meant to be a humorous sketch, with his son on his knees.

‘My favourite actor was Robin Williams, and you took him away. My favourite comic was Chiquito de la Calzada, and you also took him away.

‘I’m only writing you another letter to tell you that my favourite prime minister is Pedro Sánchez.’

The video caused an outcry amid criticism the PP had gone too far in wishing the death of its arch-rival, prompting the party to delete its tweet and apologise. ‘It was not our intention to offend or wish harm on anyone. It was a mistake,’ it tweeted.

Recent Posts

Spain’s former transport minister detained without bail in corruption investigation

News Desk

OECD warns climate change ‘increasingly threatens’ Spain’s dynamic economy

News Desk

Aena to challenge €10 million facial-recognition fine from Spain’s data watchdog

News Desk

Spanish Congress rejects coalition government’s 2026 spending plan

News Desk

Spanish government proposes Teresa Peramato, leading gender-violence specialist, as next Attorney General

News Desk

Telefónica to pursue 5,000 job cuts in Spain, according to union

News Desk

Leave a Comment