The Jerusalem Post

Portugal’s center-right prepares to rule, far-right warns of instabilit­y

- • By PATRICIA VICENTE RUA and CATARINA DEMONY

LISBON (Reuters) – Portugal’s centrist-rightist Democratic Alliance (AD) won Sunday’s general election by a slim margin and is preparing to govern without an outright majority as the far-right Chega warned of instabilit­y if it is not included in government.

With 99.1% of the vote counted, the AD won 79 seats in the 230seat legislatur­e, followed by the Socialists with 77 seats, prompting the latter to concede defeat.

Chega, meaning “enough,” came third, quadruplin­g its parliament­ary representa­tion to 48 lawmakers after campaignin­g on a clean governance and anti-immigratio­n platform.

Chega voters said before the poll that Portugal was in a bad way and they wanted changes in housing, education, healthcare, and justice in Western Europe’s poorest country.

AD leader Luis Montenegro told reporters on Sunday that he expected President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa to formally invite him to form a government after he speaks to political parties from Tuesday until March 20.

He said he hoped the PS and Chega would not form a negative alliance to prevent the government the Portuguese people wanted.

Chega’s leader Andre Ventura told reporters the vote clearly showed that the country wants

a government of the AD with Chega.

The outcome was broadly in line with pre-election opinion polls but the AD’s victory was significan­tly smaller and Chega’s growth was larger than predicted, political scientist Andre Azevedo Alves told Reuters.

Alves, a professor at Lisbon’s Catolica University and St. Mary’s University in London, added that the fragility of an AD government due to its reliance on either the PS or Chega to pass legislatio­n made it unlikely to last for several years.

Chega’s surge was boosted by widespread dissatisfa­ction with the mainstream parties and Ventura’s communicat­ion skills, he said, factors that could help it garner even better results in the European Parliament elections.

“Political disaffecti­on was brewing for a very long time,” said political scientist Pedro Magalhaes, at the Lisbon’s Institute of Social Sciences (ICS). “But there was no political supply to address this political demand.”

Marina Costa Lobo, who heads ICS, said she believed Montenegro

would keep his word and not strike a formal deal with Chega but there might be “piecemeal” agreements between the two going forward.

“It’s difficult to predict Chega’s behavior because they’re an anti-system party,” she said, adding the far Right’s success in Portugal was a harbinger of what can be expected in the European Parliament election in June.

Eurointell­igence consultant­s said the result marked a new political chapter in Portugal after alternate governance by two mainstream parties for the past 50 years.

The AD would need to either seek the backing of Chega or the Socialists for a minority government, or invite them into a coalition.

“We don’t know who’ll be in charge of the country, the far Right has little or nothing to offer,” PhD student Jorge Catanheira, 29, told Reuters.

TILT RIGHT

The election result underscore­d a political tilt to the far Right across Europe and a dwindling of Socialist governance.

Chega has since 2020 been part of the European Parliament’s Identity & Democracy group, which is expected to see gains in June.

Spain’s far-right VOX and Matteo Salvini, who leads Italy’s co-ruling party Lega, congratula­ted Ventura.

Portugal’s PSI stock index fell 0.3% at open, in line with a decline by European peers, before flattening out.

“The impact of the elections on the market turned out to be nil,” XTB analysts said in a note.

Under Socialist leadership since 2015, Portugal has grown at solid annual rates above 2%, except for the pandemic-induced slump of 2020, but many struggle to make ends meet due to low salaries and a housing crisis.

Voter turnout was 66.23%, the highest in nearly three decades.

Magalhaes said it was possible turnout reached such levels because voters who had been “out of the system” came back to support the radical Right.

 ?? ?? PORTUGAL’S DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE leader Luis Montenegro addresses his supporters following the result of the general election, in Lisbon yesterday. (Pedro Nunes/Reuters)
PORTUGAL’S DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE leader Luis Montenegro addresses his supporters following the result of the general election, in Lisbon yesterday. (Pedro Nunes/Reuters)

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