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The Socialist Autocrat of Spain, Pedro Sánchez, Targets Foreign Property Buyers with a 100% Tax While Daring to Criticize Trump’s Tariffs.

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Spain’s Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez — the most corrupt and autocratic socialist in recent history leading a far-left coalition — has announced a stunning policy: a 100% tax on real estate purchases by non-EU foreigners.

Recently unveiled, this measure threatens to destabilize Spain’s housing market, scare off investors, and allegedly prioritize housing for locals — all at the expense of economic growth. Yet Sánchez dares to call President Donald Trump’s tariffs “unfair,” revealing a level of hypocrisy that no longer surprises anyone.

Comrade Sánchez presents this tax as a solution to Spain’s housing crisis. He cites data showing that in 2023, non-EU buyers — Americans, Brits, and others — purchased 27,000 properties, often as investments rather than primary residences.

His argument? That these outsiders are inflating prices and locking ordinary Spaniards out of the market. His solution? Doubling the cost of any property for them — a move that could cripple foreign investment. It reeks of yet another authoritarian intervention: punishing success to cover deeper failures.

The consequences could be devastating. In 2024, foreign buyers accounted for 15% of property sales in Spain, injecting billions into tourist hotspots like Málaga and the Balearic Islands. Real estate experts warn that this tax won’t solve the housing shortage — it’s “a drop in the bucket” that could scare away the developers and investors who drive new construction. It’s a classic leftist move: strangling the free market instead of encouraging growth.

But the Spanish socialist’s rhetoric doesn’t stop at economics. He has hinted at using housing policy to address “social problems,” like supporting low-income residents and possibly immigrants — a clear nod to his progressive base. Outlets like El País have covered his push to prioritize “residents” in housing programs, sparking fears among critics that he’s more focused on redistributing wealth than creating it.

The picture is troubling: a socialist leader pushing out foreigners with taxes while preaching equality. It’s the kind of policy reminiscent of failed welfare states — hardly a winning model for a country that needs jobs, investment, and stability.

Then comes the knockout blow. In February 2025, Sánchez lashed out at Trump’s tariffs, designed to protect American workers from cheap foreign goods. Speaking in Galicia, he labeled them “unfair” and a threat of “trade war,” boasting that the EU doesn’t build wealth at the expense of the U.S.

Yet his own policy punishes American buyers and investors, undermining Spain’s global appeal. Trump’s tariffs, for all their flaws, aim to defend national interests; Sánchez’s policy reeks of ideological protectionism disguised as social justice. He can’t have it both ways — condemning one while doing the other.

Spain’s housing problems are real — rents in Madrid and Barcelona have soared, and new construction is falling behind demand. But Sánchez’s blunt, radical approach ignores smarter solutions like streamlining permits, cutting red tape, or incentivizing development.

Instead, he plays to the populist gallery, risking long-term damage for short-term applause. The Spanish economy, still shaky after multiple crises, cannot afford to lose the foreign capital that sustains it.

This is a red flag. Sánchez’s Spain shows what happens when leftist dogma overrides pragmatism: markets freeze, investors flee, and the state overreaches. Yet Sánchez continues lecturing Trump for putting America first. If that’s not hypocrisy, what is?

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