Portuguese legislative election, 2011

Portuguese legislative election, 2011
Portugal
5 June 2011

All 230 seats in the Portuguese Assembly
116 seats needed for a majority
Registered 9,624,354 Increase1.1%
Turnout 5,585,054 (58.0%)
Decrease1.7 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Pedro Passos Coelho José Sócrates Paulo Portas
Party PSD PS CDS–PP
Leader since 26 March 2010 29 September 2004 21 April 2007
Leader's seat Vila Real[1] Castelo Branco[2] Aveiro[3]
Last election 81 seats, 29.1% 97 seats, 36.6% 21 seats, 10.4%
Seats won 108 74 24
Seat change Increase27 Decrease23 Increase3
Popular vote 2,159,181 1,566,347 653,888
Percentage 38.7% 28.0% 11.7%
Swing Increase9.6% pp Decrease8.6% pp Increase1.3% pp

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Leader Jerónimo de Sousa Francisco Louçã
Party CDU BE
Leader since 27 November 2004 24 March 1999
Leader's seat Lisboa[4] Lisboa[5]
Last election 15 seats, 7.9% 16 seats, 9.8%
Seats won 16 8
Seat change Increase1 Decrease8
Popular vote 441,147 288,923
Percentage 7.9% 5.2%
Swing ±0.0 pp Decrease4.6 pp

The first and the second most voted parties in each district
(Azores and Madeira are not shown)

Prime Minister before election

José Sócrates
PS

Prime Minister-designate

Pedro Passos Coelho
PSD

Coat of arms of Portugal
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Portugal
Constitution
Foreign relations
  • Politics portal

A general election was held in Portugal on 5 June 2011 to elect all 230 members of the Assembly of the Republic.[6] Pedro Passos Coelho led the centre-right Social Democratic Party to victory over the Socialist Party, led by incumbent Prime Minister José Sócrates.[7] Despite a historically low turnout of less than 60% of registered voters, the right-wing won a clear mandate, winning nearly 130 MPs, more than 56% of the seats, and just over 50% of the vote. While the People's Party, continuing the trend they began in 2009, earned their best score since 1983, the Social Democrats exceeded the expected result in the opinion polls and won the same number of seats as they did in 2002, when the PSD was led by José Manuel Durão Barroso. Of the twenty districts of the country, Pedro Passos Coelho's party won seventeen, including Lisbon, Porto, Faro and the Azores, which has been governed by the Socialists since 1996.

The defeat of the PS was severe, as they lost in eleven districts and fell below 30% of the votes cast, a first since the election of 1991. This heavy defeat led José Sócrates to resign as General Secretary of the party on election night. However, it was not the Socialists' worst result, which dated back to 1987 when they polled 30 points behind the Social Democrats. The Socialists were also beaten in José Sócrates district, Castelo Branco, that he dominated since 1995.

For the left-wing parties, the result was mixed. On one hand, the Left Bloc faced a huge setback, losing half of its MPs and regaining its 2005 numbers, where they obtained however, one more percentage point in a context of greater participation. As a whole, the Portuguese left-wing parties trails by ten points in support to the right-wing parties, the biggest lead since the absolute majority of the Social Democrat Aníbal Cavaco Silva in the 1990s.

Voter turnout was the lowest in Portuguese election history to date, with just 58% of the electorate casting their ballot on election day.

Background

The previous parliamentary elections were held in September 2009, and, as such, technically no elections were due until September or October 2013. However, the 2009 elections resulted in a hung parliament, as the Socialist Party (PS) continued to be the most voted force but loosed the majority it previously had in the chamber. A minority government supported by the PS and headed by José Sócrates was formed, relying on negotiations with the opposition parties (namely the major opposition party PSD) to approve the most important and/or controversial bills, such as the State Budgets for 2010 and 2011.

In March 2011, when the government had tried to introduce a Stability and Growth Pact without consultation with the president and the parliament, the opposition parties called for a resolution vote.[8] The vote came over proposed spending cuts and tax hikes that had been demanded by the EU to offer a bailout over Portugal's debt levels amidst the European sovereign debt crisis. PM Jose Socrates had previously said that if the measure failed he would not be able to govern anymore.[8] All five opposition parties combined to vote down the measure. With all other parties voting against the government, the Socialist Party was unable to avoid defeat as it only had 97 MPs in the 230-seat parliament. Following the vote in parliament on the evening of 23 March, Socrates stepped down, reiterating that he could no longer govern the country:[7] "Today every opposition party rejected the measures proposed by the government to prevent that Portugal resort to external aid. The opposition removed from the government the conditions to govern. As a result I have tendered my resignation to the president." The main opposition party, the Social Democratic Party (PSD), tipped the scales against the government by voting against the package, despite having abstained when voting previous austerity measures, thus allowing them to pass.[8]

Following the vote, European markets read the move as making a possible 50–70 billion euro[9] bailout "inevitable" the day before a European Union summit concerning the debt crisis. German Chancellor Angela Merkel praised Socrates for his "far-reaching" austerity bill in parliament. Portuguese two-year bond yields also increased to the most since 1999 on speculation of possible further credit downgrades.[10][11][12]

President Anibal Cavaco Silva then met with the various political parties to either resolve the crisis, or dissolve the parliament and call an early election, which, according to the Portuguese Constitution, can be held no sooner than 55 days after the announcement.[13][14] On 1 April, the president set 5 June as the date for an early election, deeming it the only way to create conditions for a new government.[15]

Following the call for an election, Socrates finally did make a request to the EU for a bailout on 6 April as the country's sovereign bond yield hit a record high; Portugal became the third EU state after Greece and Ireland, respectively, to request an EU bailout. Socrates said that "I tried everything but we came to a moment that not taking this decision would bring risks we can’t afford. The Social Democrats' Pedro Passos Coelho said that his party would support the aid request; the International Monetary Fund also added that it was ready to support assistance that Portugal requested.[16] Socrates said in a nationwide television address that his caretaker government had formally requested a bailout as it was "inevitable" and that "I tried everything, but in conscience we have reached a moment when not taking this decision would imply risks that the country should not take." His Finance Minister Fernando Teixeira dos Santos also said that Portugal would need the European Union support to avoid defaulting on its debt. In response, the European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn said the action was "a responsible move" and that the specific amount of aid money would soon be determined.[17] European Union officials suggested that they hoped a deal would be finalised by the middle of May with an expected bailout of around 80 billion euros.[18]

Electoral system

The Parliament of the Portuguese Republic consists of a single chamber, the Assembly of the Republic, composed of 230 members directly elected by universal adult suffrage for a maximum term of four years. Assembly members represent the entire country, rather than the constituencies in which they were elected. Governments require majority support in the Assembly in order to remain in office.

Each one of Portugal's eighteen administrative districts, as well as each one of the country's two autonomous regions - the Azores and Madeira - is an electoral constituency. Portuguese voters residing outside the national territory are grouped into two electoral constituencies - Europe and the rest of the world - each one of which elects two Assembly members. The remaining 226 seats are allocated among the national territory constituencies in proportion to their number of registered electors.

Political parties and party coalitions may present lists of candidates. The lists are closed, so electors may not choose individual candidates in or alter the order of such lists. Electors cast a ballot for a single list. The seats in each constituency are divided among parties according to the largest average method of proportional representation (PR), conceived by the Belgian mathematician Victor d'Hondt in 1899. Although there is no statutory threshold for participation in the allocation of Assembly seats, there is an effective threshold at the constituency level that depends on the district magnitude.[19] The use of the d'Hondt method makes for a higher effective threshold than certain other allocation method such as the Hare quota or Sainte-Laguë method, which are more generous to small parties.[20]

Parties

The parties that partook in the election, and their leaders, were:

Pedro Passos Coelho, leader of the Social Democratic Party, was designated Prime Minister and formed a coalition government with the People's Party.

Concurrent issues

Popular anger arose during the electoral process leading to mass protests in multiple cities around the country.

External influence

Licor Beirão's advertisement featuring Angela Merkel

EU bailout

In what was read as external interference during the campaign the EU's Olli Rehn said Portugal must make even stronger budget cuts than the measures that failed in parliament leading to the fall of the government. EU Finance Ministers said that about 80 billion euros could be available by mid-May should the austerity measures it demanded pass. Rehn said that the measures would be "a starting point. It is indeed essential in Portugal to reach a cross-party agreement ensuring that such a programme can be adopted [by] May."[21]

On 16 May, the EU endorsed a 78-billion euro joint package with the IMF.[22]

Finnish influence

Facing an election of his own, Finnish Finance Minister Jyrki Katainen said that Portugal's deficit-reduction steps must be even stronger than what was proposed in parliament prior to the election call. "The package must be really strict because otherwise it doesn't make any sense. The package must be harder and more comprehensive than the one the parliament voted against."[23] The surge in popularity of the True Finns prior to the election could threaten a bailout for Portugal.[24] Finland’s support for the bailout was important because it would need unanimous support to pass.[25]

Following a dramatic showing, stronger than opinion polls predicted, by the True Finns, and amid government formation talks, a bailout for Portugal was thrown into doubt.[26] This was despite Katainen's pro-bailout National Coalition Party winning more seats than any other party (44 out of 200).

Economic outlook

On 5 April, Moody's cut Portugal's debt grade for the second in weeks citing its reason for doing so as "driven primarily by increased political, budgetary and economic uncertainty, which increase the risk that the government will be unable to achieve [its] ambitious deficit reduction targets." Its debt rating was decreased from A3 to Baa1, which was three grades above junk bond status.[27]

IMF bailout

On 20 May, the IMF approved a €26 billion bailout for Portugal as part of joint support mechanisms with the EU. Of the total €6.1 billion would be made available immediately.[22]

Opinion polling

Opinion polling for parliamentary represented parties is as such:

Date Polling Firm Sample size PS PSD CDS-PP BE CDU Others Lead
5 June Election Results 5,585,054 28.1
74 seats
38.7
108 seats
11.7
24 seats
5.2
8 seats
7.9
16 seats
8.5
0 seats
10.7
5 Jun (20:00) Exit Poll - RTP1
Universidade Católica
28,762 26.0 – 30.0
67 – 77 seats
37.0 – 42.0
104 – 114 seats
11.0 – 14.0
22 – 28 seats
5.0 – 7.0
8 – 11 seats
7.0 – 9.0
14 – 18 seats
5.0 – 8.0
0 – 1 seats
11.0 – 12.0
5 Jun (20:00) Exit Poll - SIC
Eurosondagem
42,712 25.5 – 29.7
69 – 77 seats
38.3 – 42.5
102 – 109 seats
11.1 – 13.9
22 – 25 seats
4.5 – 6.7
7 – 10 seats
6.8 – 9.0
15 – 16 seats
12.8
5 Jun (20:00) Exit Poll - TVI
INTERCAMPUS
29,636 24.4 – 28.8
64 – 78 seats
37.7 – 42.5
107 – 121 seats
10.1 – 13.7
12 – 28 seats
3.8 – 7.0
4 – 12 seats
6.2 – 9.4
11 – 20 seats
6.6 – 9.8
0 – 1 seats
13.3 – 13.7
Exit polls
2 Jun Eurosondagem 520 31.0 35.5 13.0 6.3 8.2 6.0 4.5
31 May–2 Jun Aximage 968 29.2 37.4 12.5 6.7 8.0 6.2 8.2
1 Jun Eurosondagem 507 31.1 35.9 13.0 5.9 7.8 6.3 4.8
29 May–1 Jun Aximage 1,200 30.1 36.3 12.4 6.6 8.1 6.5 6.2
28 May–1 Jun INTERCAMPUS 1,026 31.1 36.5 11.6 6.0 7.4 7.3 5.4
31 May Eurosondagem 503 31.3 35.4 13.4 6.0 7.9 6.0 4.1
28–31 May Marktest 1,208 30.1 38.5 9.7 4.5 8.5 8.7 8.4
30 May Eurosondagem 522 32.2 35.5 12.6 6.3 7.6 5.8 3.3
28–29 May Universidade Católica 3,963 31.0 36.0 11.0 7.0 8.0 7.0 5.0
29 May Eurosondagem 505 32.1 34.7 12.9 6.3 7.7 6.3 2.6
25–29 May INTERCAMPUS 1,010 32.3 37.0 12.7 5.2 7.7 5.2 4.7
27 May Eurosondagem 521 32.4 33.7 13.2 6.4 7.8 6.5 1.3
26 May Eurosondagem 511 32.3 33.9 13.4 6.3 7.9 6.2 1.6
21–26 May INTERCAMPUS 1,015 34.1 35.8 11.3 6.5 7.7 4.5 1.7
25 May Eurosondagem 515 32.5 33.6 12.8 6.5 8.1 6.5 1.1
24 May Eurosondagem 510 32.0 33.7 13.2 6.7 8.1 6.7 1.7
23 May Eurosondagem 525 32.6 33.1 13.7 6.6 7.6 6.4 0.5
21–22 May Universidade Católica 1,490 36.0 36.0 10.0 6.0 9.0 3.0 Tied
18–22 May INTERCAMPUS 1,024 33.2 39.6 12.1 5.6 6.6 3.0 6.4
14–18 May Aximage 750 29.5 31.1 12.9 5.2 7.3 14.0 1.6
11–15 May INTERCAMPUS 1,025 35.4 36.1 12.6 6.2 7.5 2.2 0.7
7–12 May INTERCAMPUS 1,029 36.8 33.9 13.4 6.0 7.4 2.4 2.9
9–10 May Marktest 805 33.4 39.7 9.0 4.8 6.5 6.6 6.3
4–8 May INTERCAMPUS 1,020 35.1 36.2 10.9 6.5 7.7 3.6 1.1
2–5 May INTERCAMPUS 1,009 34.8 37.0 10.5 7.0 7.9 2.8 2.2
28 Apr–May 3 Eurosondagem 2,048 32.5 35.8 11.1 6.6 7.7 6.3 3.3
29 Apr–May 2 Aximage 600 28.3 31.5 11.2 7.7 9.3 12.0 3.2
30 Apr–May 1 Universidade Católica 1,370 36.0 34.0 10.0 5.0 9.0 6.0 2.0
14–19 Apr Eurosondagem 1,025 32.7 36.3 11.3 6.9 7.8 5.0 3.6
15–17 Apr Marktest 805 36.1 35.3 7.5 6.0 8.1 7.0 0.8
8–10 Apr INTERCAMPUS 917 33.1 38.7 9.4 7.6 8.1 3.1 5.6
2–3 Apr Universidade Católica 1,288 33.0 39.0 7.0 6.0 8.0 7.0 6.0
28–30 Mar Aximage 600 28.4 34.8 10.8 6.5 8.5 11.0 6.4
27–30 Mar Eurosondagem 1,021 30.4 37.3 10.7 7.7 8.4 5.5 6.9
24–26 Mar INTERCAMPUS 805 32.8 42.2 8.7 7.9 7.1 1.3 9.4
23 March: José Sócrates resigns as prime minister due to the passage of a no-confidence motion and an election is called.[28]
18–23 Mar Marktest 805 24.5 46.7 6.3 8.9 6.7 6.9 22.2
3–7 Mar Aximage 600 27.9 37.9 8.9 6.5 10.7 8.1 10.0
23–28 Feb Eurosondagem 1,021 30.6 36.9 9.9 7.7 8.6 6.3 6.3
17–23 Feb Marktest 797 29.1 47.8 4.2 5.9 6.1 6.9 18.7
3–8 Feb Eurosondagem 1,025 29.3 36.3 10.2 9.5 9.2 5.5 7.0
1–3 Feb Aximage 600 27.8 37.8 9.5 6.5 9.3 9.1 10.0
19–21 Jan Eurosondagem 1,548 30.3 37.4 9.6 9.3 8.4 5.0 7.1
16–19 Jan INTERCAMPUS 1,004 30.8 36.8 5.8 7.3 7.1 12.2 6.0
5–11 Jan Eurosondagem 1,010 29.6 37.3 10.1 9.0 8.8 5.2 7.7
3–6 Jan Aximage 600 25.4 38.3 8.8 7.5 9.9 10.1 12.9
2011
10–15 Dec INTERCAMPUS 607 30.1 41.6 7.7 10.7 8.8 1.1 11.5
5–7 Dec Aximage 600 27.2 39.8 8.8 7.4 8.4 8.4 12.6
2–7 Dec Eurosondagem 1,020 30.3 36.2 9.6 9.3 8.4 6.2 5.9
16–19 Nov Marktest 804 26.9 44.3 6.9 8.7 6.7 6.5 17.4
12–17 Nov INTERCAMPUS 609 30.5 39.2 8.5 11.0 9.7 1.1 8.7
4–9 Nov Eurosondagem 1,025 30.0 36.9 9.3 9.2 8.8 5.8 6.9
26–29 Oct Aximage 600 26.5 35.2 9.1 8.4 9.8 11.0 8.7
23–25 Oct Universidade Católica 1,140 26.0 40.0 7.0 12.0 8.0 7.0 14.0
19–24 Oct Marktest 807 25.1 42.0 8.1 9.8 8.3 6.7 16.9
6–12 Oct Eurosondagem 1,021 35.3 35.3 8.0 7.8 8.4 5.2 Tied
4–6 Oct INTERCAMPUS 609 32.0 35.2 9.1 10.6 11.1 2.0 3.2
1–4 Oct Aximage 600 31.7 30.6 10.2 8.6 7.6 11.3 1.1
14–17 Sep Marktest 804 35.7 38.0 6.7 6.5 6.5 6.6 2.3
6–9 Sep Aximage 600 33.8 32.1 7.9 8.3 8.6 9.3 1.7
1–7 Sep Eurosondagem 1,035 36.0 35.8 8.4 7.1 7.7 5.0 0.2
28 Jul–Aug 2 Eurosondagem 1,031 35.0 36.0 9.0 7.2 8.0 4.8 1.0
20–26 Jul Marktest 802 33.3 37.3 7.5 8.5 6.8 6.6 4.0
16–19 Jul INTERCAMPUS 603 34.4 39.2 5.9 9.0 9.5 2.0 4.8
8–11 Jul Euroexpansão 1,504 31.7 41.0 3.8 6.5 6.3 10.7 9.3
1–6 Jul Eurosondagem 1,035 33.7 36.2 9.6 7.7 8.0 4.8 2.5
1–4 Jul Aximage 600 30.6 34.9 6.7 8.2 10.4 9.2 4.3
19–21 Jun Universidade Católica 1,179 34.0 37.0 6.0 6.0 10.0 7.0 3.0
15–20 Jun Marktest 804 24.1 47.7 6.9 8.9 6.0 6.4 23.6
2–8 Jun Eurosondagem 1,025 34.8 34.9 10.1 7.7 7.5 5.0 0.1
1–7 Jun Aximage 600 30.5 31.6 7.4 9.7 9.9 10.9 1.1
18–20 May Marktest 804 27.6 43.9 7.5 7.7 7.1 6.2 16.3
13–18 May Eurosondagem 1,024 36.2 33.0 11.3 7.1 7.7 4.7 3.2
4–7 May Aximage 600 30.2 31.5 8.2 8.6 10.4 11.1 1.3
27–30 Apr INTERCAMPUS 803 35.8 41.6 5.8 7.8 7.8 1.2 5.8
20–25 Apr Marktest 800 34.0 39.8 4.5 8.3 7.2 6.2 5.8
8–13 Apr Eurosondagem 1,020 36.0 28.5 13.1 8.0 8.2 6.2 7.5
5–8 Apr Aximage 600 32.2 30.4 10.8 8.3 8.7 9.6 1.8
26 March: Pedro Passos Coelho is elected leader of PSD[29]
16–21 Mar Marktest 806 35.6 30.8 9.9 11.0 6.6 6.1 4.8
6–9 Mar Universidade Católica 1,148 41.0 33.0 10.0 6.0 6.0 4.0 8.0
5–9 Mar Aximage 600 34.0 25.1 11.5 8.9 7.4 13.1 8.9
4–9 Mar Eurosondagem 1,019 36.9 26.2 14.8 8.8 8.4 4.9 10.7
23–27 Feb INTERCAMPUS 1,015 40.4 34.4 7.8 10.1 6.3 1.0 6.0
16–21 Feb Marktest 804 35.9 30.9 9.5 10.6 6.8 6.3 5.0
10–13 Feb Aximage 600 32.4 26.3 10.7 9.2 8.3 13.1 6.1
4–9 Feb Eurosondagem 1,025 38.1 26.9 13.6 8.4 8.3 4.7 11.2
2–5 Feb Aximage 600 33.8 24.8 12.1 8.6 8.7 12.0 9.0
19–23 Jan Marktest 803 40.5 29.2 10.2 5.5 8.5 6.1 11.3
7–12 Jan Eurosondagem 1,010 38.0 27.4 12.1 9.3 8.4 4.8 10.6
6–11 Jan Aximage 600 33.4 26.5 11.7 10.0 8.2 10.2 6.9
2010
7–10 Dec Aximage 600 32.5 24.4 12.0 10.5 7.7 12.9 8.1
25 Nov–Dec 1 Eurosondagem 1,031 38.5 26.9 12.7 9.2 7.7 5.0 11.6
17–19 Nov Marktest 808 41.7 25.6 12.1 8.0 6.5 6.1 16.1
3–6 Nov Aximage 600 35.2 27.3 10.3 8.8 7.8 10.6 7.9
29 Oct–Nov 3 Eurosondagem 1,030 38.8 27.5 12.5 8.4 8.0 4.8 11.3
20–24 Oct Marktest 806 42.9 23.7 12.5 8.8 6.0 6.1 19.2
12–16 Oct Aximage 600 35.3 25.4 9.7 10.8 6.0 12.8 9.9
27 September 2009 Election Results 5,681,258 36.6
97 seats
29.1
81 seats
10.4
21 seats
9.8
16 seats
7.9
15 seats
6.2
0 seats
7.5

Results

Anti-incumbency led to the defeat of the ruling party, even more than polls predicted. Pedro Passos Coelho of the Social Democratic Party is the Prime Minister-designate.

 Summary of the 5 June 2011 Assembly of the Republic election results
Parties Votes % ±pp swing MPs MPs %/
votes %
2009 2011 ± % ±
Social Democratic 2,159,18138.66Increase9.681108Increase2746.96Increase11.71.21
Socialist 1,566,34728.05Decrease8.59774Decrease2332.17Decrease10.01.15
People's 653,88811.71Increase1.32124Increase310.43Increase1.30.89
Unitary Democratic Coalition[A] 441,1477.90Increase0.01516Increase16.96Increase0.40.88
Left Bloc 288,9235.17Decrease4.6168Decrease83.48Decrease3.50.67
Workers' Communist Party 62,6101.12Increase0.200Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Party for Animals and Nature 57,9951.04 N/A N/A0 N/A0.00 N/A0.0
Earth Party 22,7050.41Increase0.300Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Hope for Portugal Movement 21,9420.39Decrease0.100Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
National Renovator Party 17,5480.31Increase0.100Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Portuguese Labour Party 16,8950.30Increase0.200Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
People's Monarchist Party 14,6870.26Decrease0.000Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
New Democracy 11,8060.21Decrease0.200Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Portugal Pro-Life 8,2090.15Steady0.000Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Workers Party of Socialist Unity 4,5720.08Steady0.000Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Democratic Party of the Atlantic 4,5690.08 N/A N/A0 N/A0.00 N/A0.0
Humanist Party 3,5880.06 N/A N/A0 N/A0.00 N/A0.0
Total valid 5,357,037 95.92 Decrease1.0 230 230 Steady0 100.00 Steady0.0
Blank ballots 148,6182.66Increase0.9
Invalid ballots 79,3991.42Increase0.1
Total (turnout 58.03%) 5,585,054 100.00 Decrease1.7
A Portuguese Communist Party (14 MPs) and "The Greens" (2 MPs) ran in coalition.[30]
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições
Vote share
PPD/PSD
 
38.66%
PS
 
28.05%
CDS-PP
 
11.71%
CDU
 
7.90%
BE
 
5.17%
PCTP/MRPP
 
1.12%
PAN
 
1.04%
Others/Invalides
 
6.35%

Distribution by constituency

 Results of the 2011 election of the Portuguese Assembly of the Republic
by constituency
Constituency%S%S%S%S%S Total
S
PSD PS CDS–PP CDU BE
Azores 47.2 3 25.7 2 12.1 - 2.5 - 4.4 - 5
Aveiro 44.5 8 25.9 5 12.9 2 4.1 - 5.0 1 16
Beja 23.7 1 29.8 1 7.3 - 25.4 1 5.2 - 3
Braga 40.1 9 32.9 7 10.4 2 4.9 1 4.2 - 19
Bragança 52.1 2 26.1 1 11.1 - 2.6 - 2.3 - 3
Castelo Branco 37.9 2 34.8 2 9.6 - 4.9 - 4.2 - 4
Coimbra 40.1 5 29.2 3 9.9 1 6.2 - 5.8 - 9
EvoraÉvora 27.6 1 29.0 1 8.7 - 22.0 1 4.9 - 3
Faro 37.0 4 23.0 2 12.7 1 8.6 1 8.2 1 9
Guarda 46.3 3 28.3 1 11.2 - 3.6 - 3.4 - 4
Leiria 47.0 6 20.7 3 12.8 1 5.0 - 5.4 - 10
Lisbon 34.1 18 27.5 14 13.8 7 9.6 5 5.7 3 47
Madeira 49.4 4 14.7 1 13.7 1 3.7 - 4.0 - 6
Portalegre 32.5 1 32.4 1 10.2 - 12.8 - 4.5 - 2
Porto 39.2 17 32.0 14 10.0 4 6.2 2 5.1 2 39
Santarém 37.6 5 25.9 3 12.3 1 9.0 1 5.8 - 10
Setúbal 25.2 5 26.9 5 12.1 2 19.6 4 7.1 1 17
Viana do Castelo 43.6 3 26.2 2 13.4 1 4.9 - 4.4 - 6
Vila Real 51.4 3 29.1 2 8.7 - 3.1 - 2.3 - 5
Viseu 48.4 5 26.7 3 12.4 1 2.9 - 2.9 - 9
zEurope 29.2 1 39.6 1 5.5 - 4.4 - 3.3 - 2
zRest of the World 55.1 2 18.0 - 4.1 - 0.8 - 1.1 - 2
Total 38.7 108 28.1 74 11.7 24 7.9 16 5.2 8 230
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições

Government formation

The XIX Constitutional Government of Portugal was formed with the legislative majority of the PSD and CDS-PP. On 6 June, President Aníbal Cavaco Silva called on Pedro Passos Coelho to form a government with "majority support in parliament" and asked for urgency in its formation[31] to "develop immediate measures to propose a governance solution which has a parliamentary majority of support available and consistent."

Given the election result and the impossibility of forming a majority government with parliamentary support from a single party, the Social Democratic Party (PSD) led by Pedro Passos Coelho established an agreement for a majority government,[32] signed on 16 June 2011, with the People's Party, led by Paulo Portas, after a few days of trading.

The XIX Constitutional Government took office on 21 June 2011.[33]

2013 political crisis

On 3 July 2013, Secretary of State for Treasury Maria Luis Albuquerque replaced Vitor Gaspar as the Minister of Finance. As a result, CDS leader Paulo Portas quit citing that the move would offer "mere continuity" as part of the austerity measures for the deficit-cutting plans. In saying that he would not resign, Coelho added: "I will try to clarify and guarantee with the CDS party all the conditions for the stability of the government and to proceed with the strategy of overcoming the nation’s crisis." He added that "you know that this government has a tight-knit majority in the house to support it" and that the text of the resolution indicated that it was "fundamental to change the troika memorandum by renegotiation to finds a way to pay that does not contradict the country’s economic growth."[34]

In the fifth vote of confidence the government faced, as called by Os Verdes, the government was scheduled to win a vote despite being opposed by the Communists, Left Bloc and Socialists (if it failed the government would not be able to have another vote). Despite attempts to form a national unity government, Socialist party whip Carlos Zorrinho said that the move was not with the government but that all parties were available for a possible new government. The motion by Os Verdes was initiated on 14 July 2013 during a state of the nation debate. Coelho said that the vote was "very welcome" and would serve as a vote of confidence.[35]

References

  1. Assembleia da República - Deputados e Grupos Parlamentares
  2. Assembleia da República - Deputados e Grupos Parlamentares
  3. Assembleia da República - Deputados e Grupos Parlamentares
  4. Assembleia da República - Deputados e Grupos Parlamentares
  5. Assembleia da República - Deputados e Grupos Parlamentares
  6. Taylor, Simon. "Portugal to hold election on 5 June". Europeanvoice.com. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  7. 1 2 "Portugal PM quits after losing austerity vote", Al Jazeera, 23 March 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  8. 1 2 3 Fontevecchia, Agustino (23 March 2011). "Portuguese Parliament Rejects Austerity Plan, PM Socrates Resigns". Forbes. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  9. Neuger, James; Lima, Joao; "Portugal Is Said to Require as Much as $99 Billion in Any European Bailout", Bloomberg, 25 March 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2011
  10. Lima, Joao; Reis, Anabela; "Portugal Pushed Closer to EU Bailout After Socrates Budget Cuts Defeated", Bloomberg, 24 March 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  11. Kansas, Dave; "Portugal’s Government Falls on Budget Dispute, Stocks Rise", Wall Street Journal, 24 March 2011, accessed24 March 2011.
  12. Campos, Rodrigo; "GLOBAL MARKETS-World shares jump; euro up on Portugal optimism", Reuters, 24 March 2011. Accessed 24 March 2011.
  13. Tremlett, Giles; "Portugal in crisis after prime minister resigns over austerity measures", The Guardian, 23 March 2011. Accessed 24 March 2011.
  14. Lewis, Jeffrey T.; MacDonald, Alex; Kowsmann, Patricia; "Portuguese Leaders Scramble to Avoid Bailout", WSJ, 25 March 2011. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  15. Kowsmann, Patricia; MacDonald, Alex; "Portugal Sets Vote as Crisis Deepens", WSJ, 1 April 2011. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  16. Lima, Joao (2011-04-07). "Portugal Set to Start Talks on $107 Billion Bailout as Spain Threat Eases". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2011-05-14.
  17. "Portugal asks EU for bailout - Europe". Al Jazeera English. 6 April 2011. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  18. April 2011 "Finnish election results may spark euro jitters" Check |url= value (help). MarketWatch. 17 April 2011. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  19. "Effective threshold in electoral systems". Trinity College, Dublin. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  20. Gallaher, Michael (1992). "Comparing Proportional Representation Electoral Systems: Quotas, Thresholds, Paradoxes and Majorities"
  21. Neuger, James G. (9 April 2011). "Portugal Told to Make Deeper Deficit Cuts to Gain $116 Billion EU Bailout". Bloomberg. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  22. 1 2 Rastello, Sandrine (20 May 2011). "IMF Board Approves $36.8 Billion Loan to Portugal". Bloomberg.
  23. http://web.archive.org/web/20110427092652/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2011/04/08/bloomberg1376-LJBOD60UQVI901-4F9H2OT20HBBKSVHCTJIRENL72.DTL. Archived from the original on 27 April 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2011. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. Moen, Arild (14 April 2011). "‘True Finns’ Threaten EU Bailout Plans - The Source - WSJ". Blogs.wsj.com. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  25. The Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/finnish-nationalists-challenge-eu-bailouts-in-election-that-has-europe-on-edge/2011/04/15/AFdz4piD_story.html. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  26. Marlene Y. Satter (20 April 2011). "New Finland Government Threatens Portugal Bailout". Advisor One. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  27. "Credit agency raises pressure on Portugal - Business". Al Jazeera English. 5 April 2011. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  28. "José Sócrates demitiu-se", Sol, 23 March 2011. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
  29. Sá, Paula; Coelho, Hugo Filipe; Mangas, Francisco; "Passos esmagador obtém garantia de união interna", Diário de Notícias, 27 March 2010. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  30. Electoral results - Assembly of the Republic
  31. "Cavaco dá luz verde para Passos formar Governo". Público. 6 June 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  32. "Acordo PSD/CDS inclui consulta mútua nas autárquicas de 2013". Expresso. 16 June 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  33. "Governo de Passos Coelho já tomou posse" (in Portuguese). Público. 21 June 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  34. Reis, Anabela; Lima, Joao (3 July 2013). "Portugal's Coalition Splinters on Austerity Fatigue". Bloomberg.
  35. http://theportugalnews.com/news/govt-faces-yet-another-no-confidence-vote/28896

External links

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.