Spain’s Socialist Party government has approved a mass amnesty for at least half a million illegal immigrants, sparking concerns over safety and security, particularly as these migrants could eventually flood other parts of the European Union (EU) under its open borders internal migration regime.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Spain‘s government, led by far-left Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, has approved a decree granting legal status to an estimated 500,000 to 800,000 illegal immigrants. Consequently, thousands of migrants are flooding consulates across the country to secure the necessary documentation, and immigration offices are bracing for an overwhelming influx of applications. 📺 DETAIL: To qualify, applicants must prove they lived in Spain for several months before 2026 and have no criminal record. Large crowds quickly formed at consulates, with many migrants seeking to begin the application process as soon as possible. Reports describe long queues, mostly of men, waiting outside offices for documentation. Critics, including opposition parties, warn that the move will strain public services and encourage more illegal immigration. Some European figures have also raised concerns about the amnesty’s wider impact on the continent, since migrants with legal status in Spain will eventually be able to travel throughout the European Union’s 27 member states. 💬 KEY QUOTE: “The government is once again implementing a new regularization without giving offices enough economic resources to handle it,” complained Cesar Perez, a union leader for Spain’s immigration officers. 🎯 IMPACT: The amnesty has sparked a political firestorm, with conservative and populist parties accusing the government of using it as “electoral engineering” to secure future votes. The right-wing populist VOX party has also vowed to challenge it in the country’s Supreme Court, with party leader Santiago Abascal warning Sanchez, “The Spanish people have not given permission for this… Sooner rather than later you will have to pay for it.” 📺 FLASHBACK: A previous amnesty in 2005 granted residency to 577,000 migrants. Spain’s population has grown by 1.5 million in the past three years alone, driven almost entirely by immigration. |
Image © European Union, 1998 – 2026.
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