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Ruling party tops Portugal polls marked by far-right surge

Ruling party tops Portugal polls marked by far-right surge

LeMonde19-05-2025

Portugal's incumbent center-right party won the most seats in the country's third general election in three years on Sunday, May 18, but again fell short of a parliamentary majority, while support for the far-right Chega rose. The outcome threatens to extend political instability in the NATO and European Union member state as the bloc faces growing global trade tensions and works to strengthen its defences.
Near complete official results showed that Prime Minister Luis Montenegro's Democratic Alliance (AD) captured 32.7% of the vote in Sunday's poll, with the Socialist Party (PS) and Chega virtually tied in second place. That would boost the AD's seat tally in the 230-seat parliament to 89, short of the 116 seats required for a ruling majority.
"The people want this government and this prime minister," Montenegro told his cheering supporters after the results were announced.
The Socialists had 23.4%, their worst result in decades, trailed closely by Chega ("Enough") with 22.6%, which would give each party 58 seats. Even with the backing of the upstart business-friendly party Liberal Initiative (IL), which won nine seats, the AD would still need the support of Chega to pass legislation. But Montenegro, 52, a lawyer by profession, has refused any alliance with the anti-establishment party, saying it is "unreliable" and "not suited to governing."
'Nothing will be the same'
Support for Chega has grown in every general election since the party was founded in 2019 by Andre Ventura, a former trainee priest who later 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 and mirroring gains by similar parties across Europe.
There are still four seats left to be assigned representing Portuguese who live abroad, and Ventura said he was confident Chega would pick up a few and become the country's second political force for the first time, ahead of the Socialists.
"Nothing will ever be the same again," Ventura told his supporters, who chanted "Portugal is ours and it always will be."
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Sunday's election was triggered when Montenegro lost a parliamentary vote of confidence in March after less than a year in power. He called for the vote following allegations of conflicts of interest related to his family's consultancy business, which has several clients holding government contracts. Montenegro denied any wrongdoing, saying he was not involved in the day-to-day operations of the firm.
Tighter immigration rules
The AD formed a minority government after the last election. It passed a budget that raises pensions and public sector wages, and slashes income taxes for young people, because the PS abstained in key votes in parliament. But relations between the two main parties soured after the confidence vote, and it is unclear if a weakened PS will be willing to allow the centre-right to govern this time around.
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. After the results were announced, he said he would call an internal party election to pick a new leader.
Montenegro has criticized the immigration policies of the previous Socialist government, accusing it of leaving Portugal in "bedlam." Under the Socialist Party, 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 the 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 far-right voters.

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