Elections Portugal braces for snap election as far right advances

LeonardoBjj

Professional Wrestler
@Brown
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
4,522
Reaction score
5,483
Chega, an Islamophobic nationalist party, is predicted to win a large chunk of support in Sunday’s vote.

By Alasdair Fotheringham
Published On 6 Mar 20246 Mar 2024


Viana do Castelo, Portugal – It’s been nearly three months since Portugal’s hard-right party, Chega, held its annual congress in the northern city of Viana do Castelo.

But its electoral propaganda remains fixed to almost every lamp-post on the main avenue, trumpeting one of its key messages for next Sunday’s general elections: “We will end corruption and [get] jobs for the boys in Portugal!”

LEGO-Ideas-Lisbon-tram-featured.jpg

Graft and its consequences certainly play a pivotal role in these snap polls, Portugal’s third in five years.

So, too, will the seemingly unstoppable rise of Chega, already the country’s third-largest parliamentary party behind the ruling Socialist Party (PS) and the mainstream centre-right formation, the Social Democratic Party (PSD).

But along with the wearily familiar tale of a hard-right European populist party netting protest votes from centrist formations battered by scandals, at the grassroots level it’s also evident the Portuguese electorate wants other issues, much closer to people’s everyday lives, to form part of the narrative of this March’s poll.

The March 10 elections were called after long-standing Prime Minister Antonio Costa resigned amid the fallout from a corruption investigation into the Socialist government’s handling of various major environmental projects.
1695058

While Costa himself has not faced any charges and denies all wrongdoing, recently it emerged that another former Socialist premier, Jose Socrates, is to stand trial over allegations of graft, fraud and money laundering to the tune of 34 million euros ($37m) during his 2005-2011 administration.

Nor has the PSD emerged unscathed from the spotlight into public corruption cases, after two of its top party officials in the Madeira Islands recently had to resign over a graft investigation.

Meanwhile, the Chega party’s bubble of popularity continues to expand.

After taking 1.3 percent of votes in 2019’s election and 7.3 percent in 2022, polls for next Sunday’s elections put the party soaring to 17 percent support.

That’s still well behind the PS and the main opposition Democratic Alliance (AD), the coalition of centre-right parties led by the PSD, who are currently running neck and neck at around 28 percent.

But it is more than enough to give Chega – which advocates for the death penalty and chemical castration for repeat rapists and whose leader Andre Ventura has made xenophobic rants about “uncontrolled Islamic immigration” – a potential kingmaker role in a hung parliament.

“I think that Chega’s increase, a novelty in the Portuguese context but expectable if one observes the political panoramas of other established democracies, mainly has to do with disappointment with how the current government has performed, together with the idea that a [future] centre-right government would not do things very differently,” Jose Santana Pereira, professor of political science at the University Institute of Lisbon, told Al Jazeera.

lego_370675763.jpg

“Also, the corruption scandals may contribute to the understanding of both parties as similar, as two comparable pillars of a rotten system.

“However, it must be said that corruption has not been the most important campaign topic, at least in the 28 televised debates broadcast in February – it ranks sixth in terms of the most frequently discussed topics, having been raised especially by Chega.”

As Santana Pereira points out, according to a Eurobarometer survey carried out a few months ago, “the Portuguese were very worried, and more worried than in the summer of 2023, about the increase in the cost of living resulting from inflation, as well as health, education and housing – areas that have consistently presented crises in recent times”.

“And another more recent study, a survey by the Catholic University of Portugal carried out last month, shows that these last three themes are those that a greater number of people would like the campaign to address. Only five percent expressed the desire for the campaign to focus mainly on the topic of corruption.”

Dave Prichard, a British translator and long-standing resident of the area, said “Of all the party posters and banners you see around town, Chega’s are easily the most striking, but in all the conversations I’ve had with people in the last five years I’ve lived here in Viana do Castelo about politics, you rarely hear the topic of corruption come up … It’s more about other questions, like health.”

Health is a primary concern among voters across the country.
main-qimg-ec9ef74b82c15fe8f9f254bf3ee2f6b5-lq


“I live in a rural area, and if my two-year-old daughter gets sick, I have two options,” said Milena Araujo, a communications specialist who lives in the southern region of Beja. “I either spend six or seven hours waiting for a doctor to see her in the public sector or I pay and I go to a private hospital.

“The private hospital is still two hours’ drive away in Lisbon, but I know it’ll be less than an hour before she sees a doctor.”

She said public education was also “terrible”.


“There are students without teachers for months and months. Imagine a student in the seventh grade spending five months without a maths teacher, they won’t learn anything, their education will be jeopardised,” she said.


“If you think about it, health, housing and education are the three major things a state can offer you and all three are failing.”

Joao Pedro Barata, a doctor who quit Portugal to work in the United Kingdom several years ago principally because of poor wages, but who continues to vote at home by post, said “nothing” has changed since the elections of 2022.

“Absolutely nothing has improved in terms of the housing crisis and salaries and as a result, other things end up working less well,” he said.

“In my profession, for example, last year many doctors in Portugal refused to do extra overtime, which triggered a lot of emergency-ward closures. A pay rise was offered, but it was below the level of inflation and so the dispute goes on.

“And compared to England when doctors are also in a dispute about pay conditions, wages for specialists here [in the UK] are five times higher.”

9fe2511f095ea72c168c8f76d96010e5.jpg

Beyond Portugal’s two mainstream voting options, another six smaller formations could see their representation boosted by widespread voter dissatisfaction.

But with Chega currently the clear voting frontrunner among them, their leader Andre Ventura has insisted on a role in government in exchange for breaking a likely parliamentary deadlock.

PSD leader Luis Montenegro has already ruled out the possibility of an alliance with Chega and his PS counterpart Pedro Nuno Santos said that he will not object to a minority centre-right government if the PSD garners the most votes.

However, such a politically fragile administration means another snap general election could well be on the cards, said Santana Pereiro.

“That is indeed very likely if the next parliament is as fragmented as polls say it will be – and with Chega constituting a third pole but isolated by a cordon sanitaire. In that situation, the odds of a minority government being able to fulfil their mandate are low.”
7741606328_8d28b8d8d8_z.jpg

Araujo, in Beja, does not expect a “stable government” anytime soon.

“I’m also afraid everything stays the same and after so many years of government by the Socialists, I think it’s time for a change,”
she said. “We need something different.”

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/3/6/portugal-braces-for-general-election-as-far-right-advances

- @Rod1 as a socialist what you think about it?D
 
My only concern about European politics is

"Are the guys winning pro-Russia or pro-Ukraine?"

- To be fair i was thinking. Those Portugal dudes elected guys that dont sound nothing like socialists. They could athleast play a little with the public.
 
Chega, an Islamophobic nationalist party, is predicted to win a large chunk of support in Sunday’s vote.

By Alasdair Fotheringham
Published On 6 Mar 20246 Mar 2024


Viana do Castelo, Portugal – It’s been nearly three months since Portugal’s hard-right party, Chega, held its annual congress in the northern city of Viana do Castelo.

But its electoral propaganda remains fixed to almost every lamp-post on the main avenue, trumpeting one of its key messages for next Sunday’s general elections: “We will end corruption and [get] jobs for the boys in Portugal!”

LEGO-Ideas-Lisbon-tram-featured.jpg

Graft and its consequences certainly play a pivotal role in these snap polls, Portugal’s third in five years.

So, too, will the seemingly unstoppable rise of Chega, already the country’s third-largest parliamentary party behind the ruling Socialist Party (PS) and the mainstream centre-right formation, the Social Democratic Party (PSD).

But along with the wearily familiar tale of a hard-right European populist party netting protest votes from centrist formations battered by scandals, at the grassroots level it’s also evident the Portuguese electorate wants other issues, much closer to people’s everyday lives, to form part of the narrative of this March’s poll.

The March 10 elections were called after long-standing Prime Minister Antonio Costa resigned amid the fallout from a corruption investigation into the Socialist government’s handling of various major environmental projects.
1695058

While Costa himself has not faced any charges and denies all wrongdoing, recently it emerged that another former Socialist premier, Jose Socrates, is to stand trial over allegations of graft, fraud and money laundering to the tune of 34 million euros ($37m) during his 2005-2011 administration.

Nor has the PSD emerged unscathed from the spotlight into public corruption cases, after two of its top party officials in the Madeira Islands recently had to resign over a graft investigation.

Meanwhile, the Chega party’s bubble of popularity continues to expand.

After taking 1.3 percent of votes in 2019’s election and 7.3 percent in 2022, polls for next Sunday’s elections put the party soaring to 17 percent support.

That’s still well behind the PS and the main opposition Democratic Alliance (AD), the coalition of centre-right parties led by the PSD, who are currently running neck and neck at around 28 percent.

But it is more than enough to give Chega – which advocates for the death penalty and chemical castration for repeat rapists and whose leader Andre Ventura has made xenophobic rants about “uncontrolled Islamic immigration” – a potential kingmaker role in a hung parliament.

“I think that Chega’s increase, a novelty in the Portuguese context but expectable if one observes the political panoramas of other established democracies, mainly has to do with disappointment with how the current government has performed, together with the idea that a [future] centre-right government would not do things very differently,” Jose Santana Pereira, professor of political science at the University Institute of Lisbon, told Al Jazeera.

lego_370675763.jpg

“Also, the corruption scandals may contribute to the understanding of both parties as similar, as two comparable pillars of a rotten system.

“However, it must be said that corruption has not been the most important campaign topic, at least in the 28 televised debates broadcast in February – it ranks sixth in terms of the most frequently discussed topics, having been raised especially by Chega.”

As Santana Pereira points out, according to a Eurobarometer survey carried out a few months ago, “the Portuguese were very worried, and more worried than in the summer of 2023, about the increase in the cost of living resulting from inflation, as well as health, education and housing – areas that have consistently presented crises in recent times”.

“And another more recent study, a survey by the Catholic University of Portugal carried out last month, shows that these last three themes are those that a greater number of people would like the campaign to address. Only five percent expressed the desire for the campaign to focus mainly on the topic of corruption.”

Dave Prichard, a British translator and long-standing resident of the area, said “Of all the party posters and banners you see around town, Chega’s are easily the most striking, but in all the conversations I’ve had with people in the last five years I’ve lived here in Viana do Castelo about politics, you rarely hear the topic of corruption come up … It’s more about other questions, like health.”

Health is a primary concern among voters across the country.
main-qimg-ec9ef74b82c15fe8f9f254bf3ee2f6b5-lq


“I live in a rural area, and if my two-year-old daughter gets sick, I have two options,” said Milena Araujo, a communications specialist who lives in the southern region of Beja. “I either spend six or seven hours waiting for a doctor to see her in the public sector or I pay and I go to a private hospital.

“The private hospital is still two hours’ drive away in Lisbon, but I know it’ll be less than an hour before she sees a doctor.”

She said public education was also “terrible”.


“There are students without teachers for months and months. Imagine a student in the seventh grade spending five months without a maths teacher, they won’t learn anything, their education will be jeopardised,” she said.


“If you think about it, health, housing and education are the three major things a state can offer you and all three are failing.”

Joao Pedro Barata, a doctor who quit Portugal to work in the United Kingdom several years ago principally because of poor wages, but who continues to vote at home by post, said “nothing” has changed since the elections of 2022.

“Absolutely nothing has improved in terms of the housing crisis and salaries and as a result, other things end up working less well,” he said.

“In my profession, for example, last year many doctors in Portugal refused to do extra overtime, which triggered a lot of emergency-ward closures. A pay rise was offered, but it was below the level of inflation and so the dispute goes on.

“And compared to England when doctors are also in a dispute about pay conditions, wages for specialists here [in the UK] are five times higher.”

9fe2511f095ea72c168c8f76d96010e5.jpg

Beyond Portugal’s two mainstream voting options, another six smaller formations could see their representation boosted by widespread voter dissatisfaction.

But with Chega currently the clear voting frontrunner among them, their leader Andre Ventura has insisted on a role in government in exchange for breaking a likely parliamentary deadlock.

PSD leader Luis Montenegro has already ruled out the possibility of an alliance with Chega and his PS counterpart Pedro Nuno Santos said that he will not object to a minority centre-right government if the PSD garners the most votes.

However, such a politically fragile administration means another snap general election could well be on the cards, said Santana Pereiro.

“That is indeed very likely if the next parliament is as fragmented as polls say it will be – and with Chega constituting a third pole but isolated by a cordon sanitaire. In that situation, the odds of a minority government being able to fulfil their mandate are low.”
7741606328_8d28b8d8d8_z.jpg

Araujo, in Beja, does not expect a “stable government” anytime soon.


“I’m also afraid everything stays the same and after so many years of government by the Socialists, I think it’s time for a change,”
she said. “We need something different.”

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/3/6/portugal-braces-for-general-election-as-far-right-advances


- @Rod1 as a socialist what you think about it?D
Those ladies need to cover up
 
- To be fair i was thinking. Those Portugal dudes elected guys that dont sound nothing like socialists. They could athleast play a little with the public.

I tend to not give much of a fuck over labels because political parties change overtime and a lot of times its just the name that remains over a legacy.
 
My only concern about European politics is

"Are the guys winning pro-Russia or pro-Ukraine?"
"We can't get education or healthcare for our children"
"Sure thing bud, how about sending a few more billion dollars to Ukraine?"
 
"We can't get education or healthcare for our children"
"Sure thing bud, how about sending a few more billion dollars to Ukraine?"
America spends almost 6 more times in healthcare than in its military, and the proposed aid to Ukraine would be just 10% of the military spending. Also Portugal has public healthcare already.


In a perfect world militaries wouldn't exist, but its funny how Susan Sarandons like you believe its the Western military industries that promote war, not you know, the extremely militant and hostile dictatorships that want to solve everything via violence.
 
My only concern about European politics is

"Are the guys winning pro-Russia or pro-Ukraine?"

pro-Putin. the deranged right wingers want to be lorded over by a fascist dictator. They are drawn to some weird sadomasochistic-bondage fantasy in political form.
they will open wide for literally anyone who is anti woke and if It triggers the Libs they’ll sell out all their principles if it means upsetting the Libs. to them, the opposite of anything the left generally stands for is good.
 
pro-Putin. the deranged right wingers want to be lorded over by a fascist dictator. They are drawn to some weird sadomasochistic-bondage fantasy in political form.
they will open wide for literally anyone who is anti woke and if It triggers the Libs they’ll sell out all their principles if it means upsetting the Libs. to them, the opposite of anything the left generally stands for is good.

Italy literally elected a fascist lady and she turned out to be a very staunch anti-Putinist.

Then you have commies like Melenchon and fascists like Le Pen both being pro-Putinist in the very same country.

If Portugal fascists are pro-Putin then i hope the left wingers win.
 
Good. Its unfortunate people don't notice there's a problem until shit is broken but better late than never. Portugal is one of very few first world countries with less housing affordability than Canada.
 
My estimate that Europe will be right wing as fuck by 2040 is slowly coming together.
I can't wait for us to start invading some shit. Colonialism back on the menu, boys.
 

Portugal’s center-right wins an election but surging populists want a say in the government​


BY BARRY HATTON
Updated 3:49 PM BRT, March 21, 2024

LISBON, Portugal (AP) — A center-right alliance led by the Social Democratic Party has won Portugal’s general election by a slender margin and is set to form a minority government that could have a difficult term in office as a radical-right populist party that came third in the voting tries to get a hand on the levers of power.

Results published late Wednesday after votes from abroad were counted to decide the last four lawmakers from the March 10 balloting gave the Democratic Alliance a final tally of 80 seats in the 230-seat National Assembly, Portugal’s parliament.

The center-left Socialist Party placed second with 78 seats and has said it won’t stand in the way of the Democratic Alliance forming a minority government in an upcoming parliamentary vote.
images


The hard-right Chega (Enough) party collected 50 seats, up from 12 seats in a 2022 election, in a staggering surge that upends traditional politics in Portugal, where the Social Democrats and Socialists have alternated in power for decades.

Chega leader Andre Ventura is demanding that the Social Democrats give his party a say in governing the country, either through granting it seats in the Cabinet or through a parliamentary alliance.

Final official results will be certified on Friday. By law, the parties have 48 hours to present legal challenges to the outcome.

President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, as head of state, invited Luis Montenegro, head of the Democratic Alliance and Social Democrat leader, to form a government at a meeting held after midnight.

Montenegro and his government are due to take office on April 2. The government then presents its policy proposals to Parliament, where other parties can bring a vote of no confidence. If that motion is successful, another party leader is invited to try to form a government, or another election is held.

Montenegro, the incoming prime minister, has so far ruled out any deal with the populists, many of whose policies are unpalatable for many Portuguese. But his hand could be forced by political circumstances because his minority government won’t be able to push through legislation on its own.

Ventura, the populist leader, has threatened to make life difficult for the new government in key votes, such as the state budget, unless Montenegro yields to his demands.

sommelier-576884.jpg

Ventura has made common cause with other radical-right parties across Europe. He has built ties with Matteo Salvini, Italy’s deputy prime minister and head of the populist, right-wing League party, French far-right leader Marine Le Pen and the leader of neighboring Spain’s far-right Vox party, Santiago Abascal.

Ventura says he is prepared to drop some of his party’s most controversial proposals -– such as chemical castration for some sex offenders and the introduction of life prison sentences — if that opens the door to power.

A slew of recent corruption scandals tarnished the Socialists and Social Democrats, and Chega ran under an anti-graft banner.

Low wages and a high cost of living — worsened last year by surges in inflation and interest rates — along with a housing crisis and failings in public health care contributed to a mood of disaffection with mainstream parties.

https://apnews.com/article/portugal-election-populist-radical-right-036bf49bf7d395be7b85e96b8b233a7c
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,237,113
Messages
55,468,181
Members
174,786
Latest member
plasterby
Back
Top