logo
Tired of elections, Portuguese just want a stable government

Tired of elections, Portuguese just want a stable government

Straits Times15-05-2025

People wave flags of the Socialist party (PS) as a man wears a card reading, \"To be socialist is not a sin\", while waiting for PS leader Pedro Nunes Santos, for a rally ahead of the snap elections, in Lisbon, Portugal, May 13, 2025. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes
MARINHA GRANDE, Portugal - For many Portuguese, the hope for Sunday's general election is pretty simple: a government that can navigate the challenges thrown up by global trade tensions and other geopolitics, and an end to the non-stop cycle of polls every year.
But for sceptical residents of Marinha Grande, a working-class town of 40,000 in central Portugal and a hub for the injection moulding industry, even that seems like wishful thinking.
The vote is the third general election in as many years and comes after a 10-year period of fragile governments, only one of which has had a parliamentary majority but which still collapsed halfway through its term last year.
Luis Simoes, a 36-year-old moulding plant worker, was among those worried that no lasting government would emerge on Sunday, leaving much-needed stability hinging on fragile deals between parties. That, at a time of global trade tensions triggered by Donald Trump's tariff blitz, and a high domestic tax burden.
"If they (parties) don't reach an understanding up there at the top of the pyramid, we will suffer here," he told Reuters at the Iberomoldes plant filled with the hum of precision machines.
The impact of new U.S. tariffs on imports - including from the EU - has barely featured in the election campaign, however, even as Portugal's net exports already felt the pinch in the first quarter and the economy shrank from the previous three months, setting off alarm bells at Marinha Grande's big exporters.
Portugal's moulding industry is Europe's third-largest after Germany and Switzerland, selling almost 1 billion euros ($1.12 billion) a year mostly to other European countries. Its moulds are used to make plastic toys, cars and aircraft cabin panels.
Iberomoldes President Joaquim Menezes, whose company exports 90% of its output, said he feared trade tensions may affect his big European clients and subsequently his company, while any further political instability at home would only compound such risks and "surely affect our productivity".
NO MAJORITY IN SIGHT
Opinion polls show the centre-right Democratic Alliance (AD) of Prime Minister Luis Montenegro garnering the most votes but no parliamentary majority, a similar outcome to the previous ballot in March 2024.
There's also little change for its perennial rival, the centre-left Socialist Party (PS), which is hard on its heels.
Marinha Grande has traditionally voted for the PS but in last year's election many turned to the far-right Chega party, which won 20.5% of the vote in the region, up from 7% in 2023. The PS won 29.8%, well below the 43.5% it won the year before in the region.
At a national level, Chega has been polling steady to lower since quadrupling its parliamentary representation last year. Its anti-establishment, anti-immigration rhetoric is seen as too toxic for it to serve as kingmaker to any party.
No party has come up with fresh proposals to generate much enthusiasm among the Portuguese or address their concerns.
"Each party is just saying they are the serious ones and the others are unethical or corrupt," said Samuel Silva, an office administrative assistant in Lisbon. "Europe's economic woes will reach Portugal sooner or later, but I don't see any of the major parties talking about it, it doesn't bring votes."
Much of the campaign has centred around ethical matters such as the business dealings of Montenegro's family consulting firm. The issue brought down his government in March but failed to resonate with voters - who still largely consider him the better man for the job, according to opinion surveys. Montenegro has denied any wrongdoing.
VOTER FATIGUE
"People really don't care that much about the issue. They are fed up," said political science professor Jose Tomaz Castello Branco of Lisbon's Catholic University, citing voter fatigue after so many elections.
"There is not that much hope that the future will be different to the present," he added.
The only potential for some stability appears to lie with the fourth-placed, pro-business Liberal Initiative party, which could garner enough votes to form a majority ruling coalition with Montenegro's AD, with which it has some affinities.
There could be a prolonged legislative paralysis before yet another election, Castello Branco said. No new general election can be called until at least mid-2026 because Portugal will hold a presidential election next January.
"If you are an optimist, you will hope for the parties to come together the day after the election to form an alliance to rule the country for at least the coming year," he said.
Retired metalworker Luis Esperanca, 58, held out little such hope. He was angry with what he said was politicians' reluctance to compromise for the good of the country and criticised a disappointing campaign dominated by "very weak ideas for the future".
"They think they don't need to explain anything to anyone, as if everyone were idiots," he said. "This cannot continue." REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Poland's Tusk seeks fresh start after presidential election blow
Poland's Tusk seeks fresh start after presidential election blow

Straits Times

time7 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Poland's Tusk seeks fresh start after presidential election blow

FILE PHOTO: Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk talks to the press after their meeting on May 16, 2025 in Tirana, Albania. Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS//File Photo WARSAW - A vote of confidence in Poland's government will take place on Wednesday, as Prime Minister Donald Tusk seeks to regain the initiative for his ruling pro-European coalition after it was shaken by a presidential election defeat. Rafal Trzaskowski from Tusk's Civic Coalition was defeated by nationalist Karol Nawrocki in the June 1 ballot, unleashing recriminations from smaller partners in government and casting doubt over the administration's future when a hostile president wields the power of veto. While the ruling alliance's majority means it is almost certain to win Wednesday's vote, a SW Research poll for Rzeczpospolita daily showed that around a third of Poles thought Tusk's government would not survive until the end of its term in 2027. Tusk will present his government's plan of action to parliament. A debate will then take place before the vote is held in the afternoon. Analysts say that many voters are disillusioned with the government's failure to deliver on promises including liberalising abortion laws, reforming the judiciary and raising the tax-free limit. President Andrzej Duda, an ally of the nationalist Law and Justice party, known as PiS, that backed Nawrocki, has stymied elements of the government's programme that aim to roll back PiS reforms that the European Union said undermined judicial independence. The government had hoped for a Trzaskowski victory that would give it the freedom to fully implement its agenda. Critics say that since it took office in December 2023, Tusk's government has done too little to implement change, with initiatives put on hold in the ultimately futile hope that a sympathetic president would be elected. 'NEW MOMENTUM' It was against this background, and with voices in smaller coalition parties and normally sympathetic media outlets raising questions about his leadership, that Tusk called the vote of confidence. "This vote of confidence is not an attempt to continue everything we have been doing because we know well after this year and a half that some things can be done better, faster and this vote of confidence should be a new beginning," he told a government meeting. "I would like you to know that for the entire... coalition, this is to be a day of new momentum and I am convinced that you will live up to this task." After the vote of confidence, Tusk has said there will be a government reshuffle, which is likely to be in July. Meanwhile, members of the administration say that their coalition agreement will also need to be renegotiated, a process that could lead to conflict. PiS has relished the situation. Party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski proposed that a "technical government" made up of experts should be put in place immediately to restore calm. Former justice minister Zbigniew Ziobro, the architect of the judicial reforms Tusk's government has sought to overhaul, was more direct. "The lost presidential election is the end of Donald Tusk," he told reporters. "His fate is already sealed." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Criminals turn to drones and social media to sell illegal cigarettes
Criminals turn to drones and social media to sell illegal cigarettes

Straits Times

time7 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Criminals turn to drones and social media to sell illegal cigarettes

FILE PHOTO: Illegal produced cigarettes are seen during a news conference of German customs (Zoll) in Cologne, Germany, August 25, 2020. REUTERS/Stephane Nitschke/File Photo LONDON - Tobacco smugglers and black market salesmen are increasingly using technologies such as social media and drones to deliver cigarettes to smokers in Europe and avoid law enforcers, a report by consulting group KPMG published on Wednesday found. The report, produced annually and commissioned by Philip Morris International, looks at illegal consumption of cigarettes on the continent - which big tobacco companies say costs them sales and authorities say costs them tax revenues. In 2024, KPMG found that almost 40 billion illicit cigarettes were consumed across 38 European nations, based in part on a study of empty packs collected in those countries. It also cited interviews with law enforcement. The gangs' flexible strategies have helped to drive a 10.8% increase in illicit consumption versus 2023, according to KPMG, which also attributed the rise to higher taxes and prices in markets including France and the Netherlands. The report said criminal groups had shifted towards smuggling smaller packages, more often, via budget airlines. They are also making greater use of rail and drones, and are increasingly bypassing physical stores to sell directly to consumers on social media, it continued. The more recent change in tactics follows another shift from 2020, when the groups moved production closer to end-markets, partly in response to the pandemic disruption, but also reducing the chance of detection. KPMG said in 2024 the groups had also begun holding less inventory, which is reflected in a decrease in the size of illicit cigarette seizures as the gangs mitigate their risks and reduce the impact of raids by law enforcers. Big tobacco companies say tax increases have driven growth in illicit cigarette consumption. Public health campaigners and institutions such as the World Bank, however, have said such claims are overblown and that high taxes can support public health by reducing tobacco consumption, while generating revenues for governments. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Musk is the US$350 billion Rocket Man who fell to Earth
Musk is the US$350 billion Rocket Man who fell to Earth

Business Times

time12 hours ago

  • Business Times

Musk is the US$350 billion Rocket Man who fell to Earth

THE popcorn emoji is out in force as the world's richest person feuds with its most powerful leader. Even Thierry Breton, the European regulator who was a frequent target of Elon Musk's ire, is at it. Still, as entertaining as the billionaire's spat with Donald Trump may be, it also carries costly lessons for a US$630 billion space economy dominated by Musk's Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX – such is the danger of co-dependence between de facto monopolies and increasingly protectionist states. This danger wasn't high on the agenda at the peak of Trump's 'bromance' with Musk, when the then-president-elect described SpaceX's reusable rocket revolution in the way a Renaissance monarch might have praised a successful colonial expedition – with a mix of national pride, geopolitical influence and financial potential: 'I called Elon. I said, 'Elon, was that (landing manoeuvre) you?' He said, 'Yes, it was.' I said, '...Can Russia do it?' 'No.' 'Can China do it?' 'No.' 'Can the United States do it, other than you?' 'No, nobody can do that.' 'That's why I love you, Elon.'' Since then, the love has turned to stardust as the contradictions inherent in Musk's US$350 billion space empire spill over. The hypocrisy of a billionaire pitching himself as 'dark Maga' – 'Make America Great Again' – and taking a chainsaw to government spending while SpaceX (and Tesla) benefits from US$22 billion worth of government contracts is exacerbating the clash of egos, with Trump threatening to withdraw taxpayer support. Meanwhile, Musk's casual threat – quickly withdrawn – to halt the Dragon capsule upon which the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) relies to ferry astronauts echoed the geopolitical blackmail exerted on the battlefield in Ukraine, where the billionaire has in the past halted attacks against Russia via SpaceX unit Starlink. These are high-stakes threats with huge societal costs. We are no longer in the realm of enterprising conquistadors but conflicted taxpayer-backed trade empires. Even if Musk deserves credit for his part in SpaceX's domination in both rocket launches and satellite communications, with 80 per cent market share in the former and more than 8,000 Starlink satellites in orbit, the feud's weaponisation of space suggests innovation has taken a backseat to favouritism. SpaceX's successes this year have not been on the launchpad but rather inside the corridors of power, where its market share looks like a lever for rent extraction instead of exploration. Rule changes to high-speed Internet subsidies have opened the door to Starlink awards, as has the prospect of a defence 'Golden Dome'. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Trump's tariff bullying of other countries has been reportedly accompanied by a push for regulatory approvals for Starlink. And putting a Musk ally atop Nasa appears to have been a last straw for the Maga movement. While Nasa and the Pentagon remain heavily reliant on SpaceX, the silver lining to all this is that Musk's competitors must get the message and step up their game. US commercial space companies including Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin have been contacted by government officials about rocket readiness, according to the Washington Post (owned by Bezos). Over in the European Union, which is desperately trying to not miss another technological revolution, governments are getting serious about reenergising legacy players such as Eutelsat Communications, which is in talks to raise 1.5 billion euros (S$2.2 billion) that would double the French state's stake to 30 per cent. The continent is also eyeing its first 'hop' test of a reusable booster project called Themis, which I glimpsed while on a recent tour of Airbus and Safran's Arianespace manufacturing facility near Paris. But one gloomy possibility is that a prolonged Maga-Musk war makes space a chillier place for everyone. Nasa is already facing hefty budget cuts; snapbacks and U-turns driven by personal rivalries won't inspire confidence. (Let's not forget Amazon once blamed Trump's personal dislike of Bezos for the loss of a US$10 billion Pentagon contract.) And Europeans have a huge gap to close: A report by think tank Institut Montaigne notes that its military space spending is one-fifteenth the US', while Bloomberg Intelligence's John Davies estimates Eutelsat's OneWeb network requires an extra four billion euros or more of capital spending by 2030. More mergers and more state meddling are likely in a de-Musking world – though hopefully with some lessons learnt ahead of time. BLOOMBERG

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store