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Home » Politics » Uncertainty reigns in Portugal. Head-to-head between center-right and socialists, far-right surges

Uncertainty reigns in Portugal. Head-to-head between center-right and socialists, far-right surges

In the snap elections, the Democratic Alliance came in first, followed by a Socialist Party that limited the damage after the corruption scandal (but with 12 percentage points lost in two years). Chega's nationalists quadrupled their strength in Parliament and are now pushing to enter the majority

Federico Baccini</a> <a class="social twitter" href="https://twitter.com/@federicobaccini" target="_blank">@federicobaccini</a> by Federico Baccini @federicobaccini
11 March 2024
in Politics
Portogallo Andre Ventura Chega

CHEGA leader Andre Ventura addresses supporters at Marriot Hotel, where the party holds the election night event, in Lisbon on March 10, 2024. Portugal's opposition centre-right party won today's general election while support for populist far-right Chega surged making it a kingmaker in the new parliament, an exit poll indicated. The centre-right Democratic Alliance (AD) is expected to win 83 to 91 seats in the 230-seat parliament, the poll for public television RTP showed. That compares to the 69 to 77 seats for the Socialists who have ruled since 2015. Chega is on track to win 40 to 46 seats, up from just 12, making it a kingmaker in the new parliament. (Photo by ANDRE DIAS NOBRE / AFP)

Brussels – Portugal is entering an unprecedented political phase in which it essentially sees bipolarity coming to an end. In the snap elections held yesterday (March 10), the only real winner is the far-right Chega party, which, with 18.1 percent of the vote, quadruples its presence in the Assembly of Portugal and,  more importantly, makes the two major parties — and more specifically the center-right Democratic Alliance — face a historic choice: collaborate or let the ultra-nationalists into the majority for the first time since the fall of the dictatorship in 1976.

Socialist Party candidate  Pedro Nuno Santos

According to the almost final results (only the votes from the foreign constituency are missing), the center-right bloc Democratic Alliance – composed of the Social Democratic Party (PSD), Popular Party (CDS), and Popular Monarchist Party (PPM) – came in first with 29.5 percent of the vote, closely followed by the Socialist Party (PS) with 28.7 percent. The Socialists, led by party secretary Pedro Nuno Santos, have limited the damage after the alleged corruption investigation related to some projects for the green transition in the country – which also indirectly involved the resigning premier, António Costa. It was a sharp drop from two years ago when they won 41.4 percent and an absolute majority in Parliament. In the newly formed Assembly of Portugal, the center-right rises to 79 deputies (from 77), while the Socialists lose 43 seats (dropping to 77).

Portogallo Luis Montenegro

Candidate of the centre-right Democratic Alliance block Luís Montenegro (credits: Miguel Riopa / Afp)

Although the leader of the center-right, Luís Montenegro, claimed victory and called on the other parties to “respect the wish of the Portuguese people,” the one who can claim victory at the polls is the far-right Chega led by André Ventura, which rose from 7.2 percent in 2022 to 18.1 yesterday and now sees quadrupled its strength in Parliament (from 12 to 48 deputies). The result of the Liberal Initiative (at 5.1 percent and eight seats), which Montenegro was looking  towards, hoping for a traditional center-right government, was disappointing. In this scenario of political fragmentation, in which bipolarity can no longer play any role in the formation of the next government, it is clear that there are only two viable paths (except for a new return to the polls): either a centrist bloc to isolate the far right or Chega’s entry into the majority with Democratic Alliance, with or without executive power sharing.

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