Portugal's PM Costa stuns with majority win in snap election

Authored by reuters.com and submitted by alabasterheart
image for Portugal's PM Costa stuns with majority win in snap election

Portugal's Prime Minister and Socialist Party (PS) Secretary General Antonio Costa speaks to media before the announcement of the results of the general elections, in Lisbon, Portugal, January 30, 2022. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes

LISBON, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Defying all odds, Portugal's centre-left Socialists won an outright parliamentary majority in Sunday's snap general election, securing a strong new mandate for Prime Minister Antonio Costa, a champion of balanced public accounts.

The result, boosted by a higher than expected turnout despite the coronavirus pandemic, comes as a surprise after the Socialists had lost most of their advantage in recent opinion polls, and means Portugal will have a stable government to oversee the application of EU pandemic recovery funds.

The vote was called in November after Costa's hard-left former Communist and Left Bloc allies joined the right in striking down his minority government's budget.

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The two far left parties paid the price, losing more than a half of their seats, according to exit polls.

After last week's opinion polls Costa had himself acknowledged that Portuguese did not want to give him a full majority and said he was prepared to strike alliances with like-minded parties, which is no longer necessary.

"An absolute majority doesn't mean absolute power. It doesn't mean to govern alone. It's an increased responsibility and it means to govern with and for all Portuguese," Costa said in his victory speech.

Before the final results came in, Costa said the party had won 117 or 118 seats in the 230-seat parliament, up from 108 won in the 2019 election, and his supporters erupted in loud celebrations, singing old revolutionary anthem "Grandola" and waving flags.

Costa, who came to power in 2015 in the aftermath of a 2011-14 debt crisis, has presided over a period of steady economic growth that helped shrink the budget deficit and even eke out a small surplus in 2019, before the pandemic struck.

Still, Portugal remains western Europe's poorest country and relies on EU pandemic recovery funds.

Economist Filipe Garcia, head Informacao de Mercados Financeiros consultants in Porto, said investors would likely appreciate Costa's new strong mandate, given the government's record cutting of the budget deficit.

"Furthermore, the Socialists will not need to compromise (with other parties), which guarantees stability and a clear line of action. The biggest challenge will be to promote potential growth," he said.

The centre-right Social Democrats came a distant second at below 30% of the vote, according to provisional results, against the Socialists' around 42%.

The far-right Chega emerged as the third-largest parliamentary force making a big leap from just one seat in the previous legislature to at least 11.

A stable government would bode well for Portugal's access to a 16.6-billion-euro ($18.7 billion) package of EU pandemic recovery aid and its success in channelling funds into projects to boost economic growth.

With more than a tenth of Portugal's 10 million people estimated to be isolating due to COVID-19, the government had allowed infected people to leave isolation and cast ballots in person, and electoral officials donned protection suits in the afternoon to receive them.

Turnout was on track to beat 2019's record low 49% participation.

As in many European countries, infections have spiked, although vaccination has kept deaths and hospitalisations lower than in earlier waves.

Writing by Andrei Khalip, additional reporting by Miguel Pereira; editing by Peter Graff, Chizu Nomiyama and Michael Perry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

MarioMuzza on January 31st, 2022 at 05:51 UTC »

Some context for non-Portuguese people: PS (the winners) were leading in the polls until a couple weeks back, and then the race tightened with PSD (centre-right) making big gains. However, even when they surpassed PS in a few polls, their victory hinged on making a coalition with the other right-wing parties, assuredly with IL (new libertarian party), CDS (Christian social conservatives), PAN (centrist - imo leftist in practice), and most likely with Chega.

Now, Chega is a far-right, populist party, and currently the third biggest one (though much smaller than either PS or PSD). I don't wanna beckon American politics, but the easiest way to describe them really is by comparing them to Trump Republicans. In fact, Chega's goal is to implement a full presidential system in Portugal, akin the US's, a move that according to our current president (centre-right) "would lead to a dictatorship". Their government program is literally 9 pages long, most of it about "upholding the traditional family unit" and lots of talk about God, foreigners, gypsies, people leeching off the state, the whole schtick. Their motto is basically the same as the one of the dictatorship we had until 1974. Dictatorship's: God, country, family. Chega's: God, country, family and work.

Extra context: talks of God and etc aren't really a thing in politics, despite us being a Catholic country. Not even the Christian party talks much about it, and the candidates' faith is seen as something private and unrelated to governing. Chega is very different in this regard. The leader even says he was chosen by God.

Some people will say PSD didn't distance themselves from Chega strongly enough. Other people will say PS scaremongered the people into believing a PSD government would mean a coalition with Chega. Whatever the truth is, I believe voters left of PS decided to vote as a way to prevent Chega from constituting government. Now, a vote for any left-wing party is an anti-Chega vote, as PS would likely form a coalition with other left-wing parties if needed, but delegates are allocated per district, with smaller districts getting fewer delegates. This means that in Lisbon, for example, 2% of votes is enough to elect a delegate, but in smaller districts (most of the country) you might need 20/25%. So outside of Lisbon and Porto the safest, often only viable anti-Chega vote would be a vote for PS.

There are other factors behind PS's victory, like the generally favourable view on how PS managed the pandemic after the initial hiccups (first country in the world to achieve 85% full vaccination, for example), but I think fear of Chega was the main motivating factor for people to rally behind PS.

ashstronge on January 31st, 2022 at 01:54 UTC »

Interesting result.

The centre left being the big winners, pulling votes in from far left parties, similar to the recent German election.

Rise in Far right vote and seat share is a concern, albeit still comparatively small

alabasterheart on January 31st, 2022 at 01:31 UTC »

Wow, this is a pretty shocking result. The last polls before the election showed an extremely tight race between the center-left Socialist Party and the center-right Social Democratic Party (confusing party names, right?). But the Socialists outperformed their polling numbers and it looks like it will be a landslide victory for them, securing 117 seats of the 230-seat parliament. This is even more surprising given that most people thought that even if the Socialists managed to win the most seats, they'd need to rely on smaller leftist parties to reach a majority. But they managed to win a majority government.