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Portugal's incumbent centre-right party wins election

Portugal's incumbent centre-right party wins election

NZ Herald19-05-2025

The Chega (Enough) party was projected to win 20-24% of the vote, up from 18% in the last election in 2024, which would make it kingmaker.
But Montenegro, 52, a lawyer by profession, has refused any alliance with Chega, saying it is 'unreliable' and 'not suited to governing'.
University of Lisbon political scientist Marina Costa Lobo told AFP governing would not be easier after the election and that Chega was 'the big winner of the night'.
Sunday's election was triggered when Montenegro lost a parliamentary vote of confidence in March after less than a year in power.
He called the vote following allegations of conflicts of interest related to his family's consultancy business, which has clients holding government contracts.
Montenegro denied any wrongdoing, saying he was not involved in the firm's day-to-day operations.
Tighter immigration rules
The AD formed a minority government after the last election. It could pass a budget that raises pensions and public sector wages, and slashes income taxes for young people, because the PS abstained in key parliamentary votes.
But relations between the two parties soured after the confidence vote, and it is unclear if a weakened PS will allow the centre-right to govern this time.
Socialist leader Pedro Nuno Santos, a 48-year-old economist, had accused Montenegro of engineering the election 'to avoid explaining himself' about the firm's activities to a parliamentary enquiry.
He has vowed to continue pushing for an inquiry.
Meanwhile, Montenego has criticised the immigration policies of the last Socialist government, accusing it of leaving Portugal in 'bedlam'.
Under the Socialists, Portugal became one of Europe's most open countries for immigrants.
Between 2017 and 2024, the number of foreigners living in Portugal quadrupled, reaching about 15% of the total population.
Montenegro has since toughened immigration policy, and during the campaign his government announced the expulsion of some 18,000 irregular migrants, leading critics to accuse it of pandering to the far-right.
Tiago Manso, a 33-year-old economist, welcomed the government moves to cut taxes and restrict immigration, saying that the country's struggling public services were unable to cope with the influx.
'If the country doesn't create new schools, new hospitals, it can't keep its doors open to everyone,' he told AFP after voting for the AD in Lisbon.
Like other far-right parties across Europe, Chega has tapped into hostility to immigration and concerns over crime.
The party has grown in every general election since it was founded in 2019 by Andre Ventura, a one-time trainee priest who became a television football commentator.
It won 1.3% of the vote in a general election in 2019 the year it was founded, giving it a seat in parliament - the first time a far-right party had won representation in Portugal's parliament since a coup in 1974 toppled a decades-long rightist dictatorship.
Chega became the third-largest force in parliament in the next general election in 2022 and quadrupled its parliamentary seats last year to 50, cementing its place in Portugal's political landscape.

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Colombian presidential candidate's condition 'grave' after assassination attempt
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Colombian presidential candidate's condition 'grave' after assassination attempt

By Alba Santana , AFP Miguel Uribe. Photo: AFP/SEBASTIAN BARROS A prominent Colombian presidential candidate was in "grave" condition and "fighting for his life" in hospital Sunday, after an alleged teen gunman shot him twice in the head at a Bogota campaign rally. Thirty-nine-year-old right-wing Senator Miguel Uribe underwent successful initial surgery to contain injuries from Saturday's attack, but doctors warned his life was still in serious peril. He remains in "the most grave condition and the prognosis is reserved" said medics at the capital's Santa Fe Clinic. Uribe's shooting has utterly shocked a nation that had believed decades of bloody political and narco violence were largely in the past. Hundreds took to the streets in major cities on Sunday to light candles, pray and voice their anger at the attack. "Our hearts are broken, Colombia hurts," Carolina Gomez, a 41-year-old businesswoman, told AFP as she lit candles and prayed outside the hospital where Uribe was being treated. The crowd joined together in cries of "strength to you Miguel" and "the people are with you." Uribe's wife Maria Claudia Tarazona thanked Colombians for their support and asked that they collectively pray for his survival. "He is fighting hard for his life," she said. The senator received two gunshot wounds to the head and was also shot once in the leg. Although a security guard at the scene captured the alleged gunman, the motive for the shooting is still not publicly known. Uribe had been a fierce critic of Colombia's leftist government, of guerrilla groups that still control chunks of the country and of ultra-powerful drug cartels. The government has vowed to use every police, military and intelligence resource to uncover the motive and find those who hired the alleged would-be assassin. Police said there had been no specific threats against Uribe's life, but like other public figures he had close personal protection. The young Senator's family history traces the tragedies of modern Colombia, making the attack all the more poignant for many. He is the grandson of a former president Julio Cesar Turbay whose 1978-1982 term was marked by guerrilla insurgencies and the emergence of the Medellin and Cali drug cartels. Pablo Escobar. Photo: supplied But Uribe is best known as the son of Diana Turbay, a famed Colombian journalist who was killed after being kidnapped by Pablo Escobar and whose death rocked the nation. A team of about 100 investigators are now working to determine the motive for the attack, Defense Minister Pedro Sanchez said Sunday. Earlier he had offered a roughly US$725,000 (NZ$1.2m) reward for information about who was behind the shooting. The suspect, believed to be about 15 years old, was injured in the affray and was receiving treatment, said police director Carlos Fernando Triana. Two others - a man and a woman - were also wounded, and a Glock-style firearm was seized. The attack has been condemned by politicians across the political spectrum. Leftist President Gustavo Petro condemned the violence as "an attack not only against his person, but also against democracy, freedom of thought, and the legitimate exercise of politics in Colombia". The shooting was similarly condemned from overseas, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio calling it "a direct threat to democracy". But Rubio also pointed blame at Petro, claiming the attack was the "result of the violent leftist rhetoric coming from the highest levels of the Colombian government". "President Petro needs to dial back the inflammatory rhetoric and protect Colombian officials," the top US diplomat said. - AFP

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