‘It's over’: Spain’s soccer chief steps down in wake of unwanted kiss

Luis Rubiales, who kissed a player without her consent at the Women’s World Cup, resigned after weeks of pressure. Spanish soccer officials, bidding to host the 2030 Men’s World Cup, hope that his exit will put the controversy behind them.

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Manu Fernandez/AP
Luis Rubiales (center), president of the Spanish soccer federation, stands with Spain's women's team at an event hosted by Spanish leader Pedro Sanchez (left) on Aug. 22. Mr. Rubiales has resigned after protests erupted when he gave the team's captain an unwanted kiss.

Spanish soccer is ready to move forward, three weeks after its women’s team won the Women's World Cup but had its celebrations marred by a kiss that ignited a crisis.

Luis Rubiales, the Spanish soccer federation president who kissed a player on the lips without her consent during the trophy ceremony in Australia last month, resigned late Sunday following weeks of relentless pressure from inside the sport and Spanish society in general.

The decision, which many in the country had been hoping to see much earlier, was expected to help Spanish soccer start overcoming one of its most embarrassing chapters. It should also clear the way for Spain to get back on track with its bid to host the men’s World Cup in 2030 along with Portugal, Morocco, and possibly Ukraine.

“It’s over,” Irene Montero, the acting minister of equality in Spain, wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

Mr. Rubiales had been widely criticized after he kissed Jenni Hermoso on the lips during the awards ceremony following Spain’s 1-0 win over England in the Women's World Cup final on Aug. 20 in Sydney. Ms. Hermoso said the kiss was without her consent.

Mr. Rubiales had been expected to resign at an emergency general meeting of the federation shortly after the World Cup final, but instead said he was the victim of a “witch hunt” by “false feminists.”

His defiant stand did not make the problem go away.

“The feminist country is advancing faster and faster,” Yolanda Díaz, Spain’s acting Deputy Prime Minister, wrote on X after Mr. Rubiales made his resignation public. “The transformation and improvement of our lives is inevitable. We are with you, Jenni, and with all women.”

Mr. Rubiales had been without public supporters other than his mother, who held a short-lived hunger strike in a church in southern Spain. His own federation also publicly asked him to step down and one of his biggest supporters, women's team coach Jorge Vilda, was fired last week.

Pedro Rocha has been in charge of the federation since Mr. Rubiales was provisionally suspended by FIFA, the governing body of world soccer. The Spanish federation said in a statement early Monday that it would start proceedings to call for a new presidential election.

“The reputational damage that this has caused to Spanish soccer is tremendous,” said Spanish soccer league president Javier Tebas, who often clashed with Mr. Rubiales in the past. “Now we have to work to recover from it, and it’s not going to be easy.”

Mr. Rubiales also said he has resigned as a vice president of European soccer body UEFA because of the reputational danger the scandal could inflict on Spain’s joint bid to host the men's World Cup.

“I don’t want Spanish soccer to be hurt by this exaggerated campaign against me, and above all, I take this decision after being assured that my exit would help contribute to the stability that will allow both Europe and Africa to stay united for their dream of 2030, which will permit the greatest sporting event in the world to go to our country,” Mr. Rubiales said.

“Insisting in waiting and hanging on would not contribute anything positive [for] either the federation or Spanish soccer, among other reasons, because the powers that be would stop me from returning [to my job].”

The next men’s World Cup will be played in the United States, Mexico, and Canada in 2026.

The statement from Mr. Rubiales late Sunday came at about the same time as the release of clips of an interview he did with TV host Piers Morgan on Britain’s TalkTV.

Spanish state prosecutors last week opened the door for Mr. Rubiales to face criminal charges, which he still will have to deal with despite resigning from the soccer federation.

“What I hope is that he goes away through a conviction, a sentencing, not because of his voluntary decision,” Victoria Rosell, a government official dealing with gender violence, was quoted as saying by Spain’s EFE news agency.

Spain, which has moved up to No. 2 in the FIFA rankings, is scheduled to start the Women’s Nations League on Sept. 22 with a visit to top-ranked Sweden. Spain beat Sweden in the Women's World Cup semifinals.

In domestic soccer, Spain’s women’s league players are on strike and pushing for what they call a dignified minimum wage.

This story was reported by The Associated Press.

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