Spanish police have raided the offices of construction firm OHL and the Popular Party of acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in a corruption probe, a judicial source said.
The source said police yesterday searched the office properties of former PP official Beltran Gutierrez and OHL board member Javier Lopez, as they pursue a bribery and money laundering probe.
The raids are the latest in a series that have embarrassed the PP and concern the alleged payment of illegal commissions for the award of public works contracts worth a reported 250 million euros (USD 260 million).
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In a separate operation last month, police detained 24 people in Valencia in the east, including a former PP regional president, in a case surrounding alleged commissions in exchange for public work contracts and there has been a series of other cases of alleged wrongdoing.
The corruption cases have seen the main political parties lose popular support, leading to the inconclusive election outcome as many voters switched to new parties campaigning against graft.
In October 2014, a high court judge ordered that 51 people, including mayors and businessmen, be detained on suspicion of bid rigging including conservative Francisco Granados, a former member of the Madrid regional government.
Three years ago, Rajoy, who became prime minister in 2011, had to deny media allegations that he and party colleagues received cash from a parallel party account or slush fund.
El Pais published information it said proved the PP's treasurers had maintained the slush fund for years.
The corruption allegations have been seized on by a public weary of the political class after six years of political crisis with unemployment topping 20 percent.
Underpinning the discontent is yet another graft case - a landmark trial involving Princess Cristina, King Felipe VI's sister. She is charged with two counts of tax fraud in a scandal centred on the business dealings of her husband, former Olympic handball medallist Inaki Urdangarin.
Opinion polls show corruption ranks second only to unemployment as Spaniards' current main social concern.