Spanish minister, left leader get death threats dismissed by Vox as a trick

Spain’s politics turn nasty as Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska and leader of left-wing Unidas Podemos party Pablo Iglesias get threatening letters called into question by Vox Party Madrid leader Rocio Monasterio.

Then Spanish second deputy prime minister, Pablo Iglesias, delivers his speech during a no confidence motion against the government at parliament in Madrid, Spain, October 22, 2020.
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Then Spanish second deputy prime minister, Pablo Iglesias, delivers his speech during a no confidence motion against the government at parliament in Madrid, Spain, October 22, 2020.

Most political parties in Spain have put aside their differences to condemn a series of death threats mailed to the country's interior minister, the director of the Civil Guard police force and the leader of a far-left political party.

But the issue provoked a bitter confrontation between United We Can leader Pablo Iglesias, the recipient of one of the letters, and the far-right candidate in an upcoming regional election in Madrid, who cast doubts on the threats.

Vox Party Madrid leader Rocio Monasterio said she was against “all kinds of violence” but, during a radio debate with Iglesias, refused to back away from earlier remarks that she didn't believe her opponent's account.

As a result, three left-wing candidates refused to continue talking with the far-right politician and the debate ended abruptly.

The threats were delivered in envelopes filled with bullets and accompanied by anonymous letters either demanding the three officials step down from their positions or plainly menacing the recipients and their relatives.

Iglesias, who recently stepped down as one of Spain's four deputy prime ministers to run in the May 4 Madrid election, posted a photo on Twitter showing the four bullets he said arrived inside the envelope and the letter addressed to him at the Interior Ministry's headquarters in Madrid.

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'Your time is running out'

“You have let die our parents and grandparents,” the letter posted by Iglesias read, adding: “Your wife, your parents and you are sentenced to capital punishment. Your time is running out.”

Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska and his appointee, Civil Guard Director General Maria Gamez, received similar letters.

“You have 10 days to step down. The time to laugh at us has ended. National Police. Civil Guard," read the letter addressed to Grande-Marlaska, according to the private news agency Europa Press. The interior minister oversees both police bodies.

Monasterio had said that she didn't believe the Spanish government or Iglesias. “They have tricked us since the beginning of the pandemic,” she said during an interview.

The far-left candidate said that he refused to whitewash the far-right's hate speech and left a debate hosted by Cadena SER radio later in the day when Monasterio refused to back away from her remarks. Iglesias was followed by two more left-wing candidates, leading the show's host to close the debate.

The incumbent conservative Madrid president, Isabel Diaz Ayuso, is set to win next week's election according to the latest polls. But her ability to form a government is likely to hinge on opening the door to Spain's first regional coalition government with the far-right.

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