The Hear
Flag of spain
24.07.2025

24.07.2025The Curriculum's Shadow Lengthened

THE
The Hear Logo
HEAR

This page is an archive of main headlines from Spain for 24.07.2025.

It displays 77 headlines from many sources chronologically, as they appeared throughout the day, accompanied by AI overviews that were written in real time.

24.07.2025The Curriculum's Shadow Lengthened
The day's editorial focus in Spain continued to highlight political integrity and corruption. Building on yesterday's revelations, the Popular Party faced intensifying scrutiny over alleged fabricated CVs, culminating in Noelia Núñez's resignation early in the day. By evening, this issue extended to Yolanda Díaz's academic qualifications, reflecting a broader media focus on politicians' professional backgrounds.
Concurrently, the multi-day Montoro case saw a judge rule out political misuse of the Tax Agency, though reports on his consultants' financial dealings persisted.
Spain's economy gained significant media attention with repeated reports of employment surpassing 22 million and unemployment reaching a 2008 low.
Internationally, the European Union's approval of potential tariffs against US products dominated economic headlines, influencing the ECB's decision to pause interest rate cuts due to trade war fears. The humanitarian crisis in Gaza also garnered deeper international concern, with the UN's stark descriptions.
24.07.2025
04:03

04:05PP's Curriculum Quagmire

Spanish media continues to highlight the women's national football team's historic Eurocup final qualification, led by Aitana Bonmatí (El Mundo, El Periódico). Concurrently, political corruption remains a central theme, with the Popular Party facing scrutiny over alleged fabricated CVs, leading to Noelia Núñez's resignation confirmed by RTVE (La Razón, El Plural, RTVE). Investigations into former minister Ábalos also gain new details regarding Operation Chamartín (El Confidencial). The Juana Rivas case sees further legal action (Público, Libertad Digital).
04:46
05:47

07:42Montoro Partners' Payouts Revealed

Spanish media continues to heavily feature political corruption, with new revelations in the Montoro case detailing profit distribution among partners and tax agency vetos on investigations (El Periódico, Público). A formal complaint against Hacienda's alleged abuses has also been lodged with the OECD (Libertad Digital). Ongoing probes related to Koldo (La Razón) and Ábalos (El Confidencial) persist. Countering this, Spain reports record employment figures and the lowest unemployment rate since 2008 (RTVE).
08:41
10:01
10:10
10:27
11:37

11:56Europe Readies US Tariffs

Spanish media heavily features the European Union's approval of potential 30% tariffs against US products, valued at 93 billion euros, to be implemented if a trade agreement falters (El Español, 20minutos). Concurrently, Spain's economy shows continued strength, with employment surpassing 22 million and unemployment at a 2008 low (El Salto, RTVE). Political and legal investigations also remain prominent, including a judge rejecting Ayuso's boyfriend's attempt to avoid a fraud trial (infoLibre).
14:41
15:24

17:01Spain Hits 22 Million Jobs

Spanish media highlights the country's economic strength, as employment surpasses 22 million and unemployment falls to a 2008 low (RTVE, El Salto). Judicial developments remain prominent, with new legal action ordered against Juana Rivas for child abduction (Público, Libertad Digital). Other ongoing political and corruption investigations continue (El Plural, infoLibre, La Razón). Internationally, concerns include the ECB pausing interest rate cuts due to trade war fears (20minutos) and the severe hunger crisis in Gaza (La Marea).
17:25
17:34

21:36Political Integrity Under Constant Scrutiny

Spanish media reports deepening international concern over Gaza, with the UN describing Gazans as "walking corpses" amid negotiator withdrawals (El País, La Marea). Domestically, political integrity continues to face scrutiny. A judge has found no indication of the Tax Agency being used against political rivals in the Montoro case (RTVE), though controversies around Montoro's consultants persist (El Plural). Separately, Yolanda Díaz's academic qualifications are under new scrutiny (La Razón).