Pedro Sánchez’s PSOE Faces New Scandal as Fernández Rodríguez Resigns

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The crisis of harassment allegations impacting Spain’s PSOE saw a new addition this week: Francisco Luis Fernández Rodríguez, who had been the Socialist mayor of Belalcázar (Córdoba), stepped down and asked to withdraw his party membership following the publication by various media of messages reportedly sent by him to a municipal subordinate.

What is under investigation and what has been released

In coverage by RTVE / EFE, the case is framed as one of two complaints processed through the party’s internal reporting channel (the other involves a PSPV-PSOE figure in Valencia). Regarding Belalcázar, RTVE reports that the mayor resigned “after being singled out” for allegedly sending sexual and sexist messages to a subordinate, and adds that he is also accused of sending unwanted photographs. Fernández, for his part, denies that it amounted to harassment and describes the exchanges as “inappropriate.”

Cadena SER introduces a timeline detail: the released messages are said to span from March 2023 through the early months of 2024, with the original publication credited to the newspaper ABC.

As of today, what is confirmed in public sources is:

  • Reports have been published containing messages credited to the mayor.
  • He has stepped down from his position and left the party, as reported by SER and RTVE.
  • An internal procedure has been initiated via the PSOE channel, as stated by RTVE.

What remains undisclosed to the public (in accessible, verifiable sources) encompasses the complete evidentiary record, the identity of the complainant (usually safeguarded), and whether a formal criminal proceeding has advanced beyond preliminary stages.

How the PSOE’s internal protocol works

In the party’s Protocol against sexual harassment (published in 2025), an Anti-Harassment Body is described, made up of three members and expected to act with independence and autonomy. It is responsible for receiving complaints, conducting the review, proposing protective measures, and producing a final report (which may lead to internal disciplinary proceedings).

The same document emphasizes two concepts that clarify why numerous cases are first addressed “internally”:

  • The confidentiality of the complainant and of the procedure.
  • The presumption of innocence and the right of defence of the person affected by the allegation.

It also notes that the protocol does not prevent recourse to the courts, and that internal processing may even be suspended if there is an ongoing judicial proceeding.

Reasons this situation highlights the broader crisis within the PSOE

RTVE places the Belalcázar episode within a succession of complaints and resignations that have become public over just a few days, alongside other names already in the public agenda, and notes that Ferraz announced a reinforcement of the protocol in response to “the cases coming to light.” The political context—amid rising public and media pressure—helps explain why these situations are being resolved through rapid organizational decisions (membership withdrawals, resignations, internal files), even though establishing full responsibility can take longer.

What may happen next

From this point, three paths generally emerge (not necessarily exclusive to one another):

  1. Local institutional track: the departure of the mayor compels the town council to restructure its government (in accordance with applicable local regulations).
  2. Party/organizational track: the PSOE may proceed with its internal investigation and, based on what is confirmed, implement further actions.
  3. Judicial track: if a complaint is present before the prosecution service or a court, the progression and extent will rely on procedural actions and judicial decisions.

In this case, the PSOE is opting, in numerous cases made known this year, to keep them under wraps and not report them to the authorities, something that has been criticized by citizens and the political class.

By Benjamin Taylor

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