Justice prevails as Spain's FA president resigns over kissing scandal

Justice prevails as Spain's FA president resigns over kissing scandal

The suspended head of the Spanish soccer federation, Luis Rubiales, finally folded under immense pressure Sunday and resigned three weeks after his kiss of a player on the lips overshadowed Spain's first-ever Women's World Cup title.

Rubiales had been at the center of a controversy that had gone far beyond Spain's borders and the world of sport after he kissed Jenni Hermoso during the globally televised awards ceremony after Spain beat England to win the title on August 20 in Sydney, Australia. The player said the kiss was without her consent.

''After my swift suspension by FIFA, and the rest of the cases building against me, it is clear that I cannot return to the post,'' Rubiales said on Sunday in a message posted on X, formerly known as Twitter.

He had already been temporarily suspended from his job by FIFA for his conduct at the final and, after soccer's world body opened a disciplinary case, remained defiant and hostile toward those who criticized him.

Then came the most serious threat yet to Rubiales, when Spanish state prosecutors accused him on Friday of sexual assault and coercion after the kiss, two days after Hermoso formally accused him of sexual assault.

Once the most powerful man in Spanish football, Rubiales insisted the kiss was consensual and done in a ''moment of jubilation.'' He said it was like one ''I could give one of my daughters.''

Hermoso denied that claim in statements issued by her and her players' union. The player also said she and her family were pressured by the federation to show their support for Rubiales. Fans, players, and politicians publicly disagreed with Rubiales and saw it as a sexist act and an abuse of authority.

''The former president of the Spanish football federation has done what he had to do,'' Spain's Secretary of State for Sport Víctor Francos told Spain's Cadena SER radio. ''I think it is what practically the entirety of Spanish society had asked him to do.''

Rubiales said he had also resigned as UEFA vice president due to the reputational danger the scandal could inflict on Spain's joint bid to host the 2030 men's World Cup along with Portugal, Morocco,

and possibly Ukraine.

Rubiales said that he had told interim Spanish federation president Pedro Rocha — who replaced him when Rubiales was suspended on August 26 — of his resignation late Sunday night. The Spanish federation confirmed Rubiales' resignation in a statement, adding that it would follow its statutes and call an election for a new president.

Also Sunday, Rubiales said ''I am going to (resign), I cannot continue my work,'' in reply to a question from TV host Piers Morgan on Britain's TalkTV. Clips from the show were released Sunday at a similar time to Rubiales' social media post appearing.

''My father, my daughters, I spoke with them ... and some friends very close to me, and they say to me 'Luis, now you have to focus on your dignity and to continue your life, because if not, probably you are going to damage people you love, and the sport you love,'" Rubiales told Morgan.