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02.05.2025

02.05.2025Day Blackout Claims First Victim As Political Battle Intensifies

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This page is an archive of main headlines from Spain for 02.05.2025.

It displays 85 headlines from many sources chronologically, as they appeared throughout the day, accompanied by AI overviews that were written in real time.

02.05.2025Day Blackout Claims First Victim As Political Battle Intensifies
The blackout investigation reached a somber milestone with confirmation of the first fatality in Portugal. The energy minister López rejected allegations that renewable energy caused the crisis, suggesting "economic interests" were behind such claims. Minister Bolaños controversially stated the government "is not in a hurry" to determine the cause.

Madrid's May 2nd celebrations became a political battlefield, with President Ayuso using the occasion to challenge Sánchez, declaring "no one can shut us down" in reference to the power outage. Opposition leader Feijóo escalated pressure by demanding an international audit.

Spain and Portugal established a joint monitoring group to identify causes and prevent future incidents. Meanwhile, Red Eléctrica's governance structure came under scrutiny, with reports noting its board lacks industrial engineers. Debate continued about nuclear energy policy, with critics warning plant closures would increase energy prices by 36%.
02.05.2025

00:45Red Eléctrica Surrenders All Blackout Data As CNMV Approves Sabadell Takeover

The newspapers report extensively on Spain's nationwide blackout aftermath, with Red Eléctrica now having delivered all requested data including the "black box" to the government's investigation commission (RTVE, 20minutos, La Razón). In financial news, Spain's Securities Market Commission (CNMV) has accepted BBVA's takeover bid for Banc Sabadell, causing "shock and disappointment" (El Periódico). In political developments, Madrid's May 2nd celebrations are marked by high political tensions with parallel events organized by PSOE and surprises planned at Sol square (Libertad Digital). Internationally, Trump has appointed Mike Waltz as UN ambassador following a Signal messaging scandal (La Vanguardia).
04:03
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05:12

05:31Nuclear Plant Closures Would Spike Energy Prices 36%

The newspapers report on the nuclear power debate in Spain, with critics arguing that closing plants like Almaraz is based on "ideological and sectarian criteria" (El Confidencial) and would increase energy prices by 36% (La Razón). The nationwide blackout investigation continues with El País examining possible causes and unanswered questions. War coverage features American ex-marines fighting for Ukraine (El Mundo) and a US-Ukraine agreement on mineral resource exploitation (La Vanguardia). Health system concerns appear with reports of lengthy private healthcare waiting times despite insurance companies approaching €12 billion in revenue (infoLibre).
05:38
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07:59
08:35

08:36Blackout Claims First Fatality As Investigation Intensifies

The newspapers report extensively on the aftermath of Spain's nationwide electric blackout. Multiple sources describe it as "the darkest day of the electrical system" with investigations seeking to clarify what happened (El País, 20minutos, El Periódico). The disaster reportedly claimed its first fatality in Portugal (20minutos). The debate over energy policy continues, with concerns about Red Eléctrica's governance structure lacking industrial engineers on its board (El Periódico) and ongoing discussions about nuclear energy (El Confidencial, La Razón). Other headlines cover American ex-marines fighting in Ukraine (El Mundo), Madrid's conservative voting tendencies (RTVE), and Amazon's 64% profit increase (La Marea).
09:19

11:17Ayuso Weaponizes Blackout at Madrid Holiday Celebrations

The newspapers report extensively on Madrid's Dos de Mayo celebrations, dominated by discussion of the nationwide blackout. Madrid President Ayuso used the occasion to challenge Prime Minister Sánchez, declaring "no one can shut us down" in reference to the power outage (El Confidencial, El Español, Libertad Digital). Meanwhile, the government investigation continues with officials stating electric companies "are unable" to identify the blackout's causes (El Periódico), while Minister López claims blaming renewable energy is "unfair" and driven by "economic interests" (RTVE). Minister Bolaños controversially stated the government "is not in a hurry" to determine the cause (20minutos).
11:22
18:34

18:36Feijóo Demands International Audit of National Blackout

The newspapers report extensively on the national electrical blackout aftermath, with opposition leader Feijóo demanding an international audit of the incident (La Razón, 20minutos). Political confrontation continues as Madrid President Ayuso used the May 2nd celebrations to attack Prime Minister Sánchez over the blackout (Público, El Confidencial, El Español). Spain and Portugal have created a joint monitoring group to identify causes and prevent future incidents (RTVE). In separate news, medical concerns are growing about the increasing use of intravenous drugs during sexual encounters, known as "chemsex" and "slam" (El Periódico), while Reporters Without Borders warns about economic fragility threatening press freedom globally (La Vanguardia).
18:52