MADRID (AP) – The leader of Spain’s Valencia region said Monday he was stepping down over his government’s handling of the devastating flash floods that killed more than 230 people last year and whose response he is widely seen as having bungled.
Outrage over deadly Valencia floods prompts Spanish regional leader to resign
MADRID (AP) – The leader of Spain’s Valencia region said Monday he was stepping down over his government’s handling of the devastating flash floods that killed more than 230 people last year and whose response he is widely seen as having bungled.
Since the Oct. 29, 2024 floods, Carlos Mazón faced regular calls to resign, including last week at a state memorial held on the first anniversary of the disaster where family members of victims insulted him and called him a “killer” before the event began.
“I know I made mistakes. I acknowledge them, and I will live with them for the rest of my life,” Mazón told reporters on Monday in Valencia, Spain’s third-largest city. “I have apologized, and I apologize again today, but none of them were due to political calculation or bad faith.”
Mazón has been slammed by citizens and political rivals for his administration’s slow response to the emergency. In particular, his government faced scrutiny for issuing a flood alert to people’s cell phones hours after rushing waters were already overflowing banks, sweeping away cars and destroying homes.
