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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Sam Jones in Madrid

Portugal’s ruling Socialist party on course to win snap general election

Antonio Costa
Election was triggered after long-running deal between Costa’s (pictured) minority Socialist government and its allies Communist party and Left Bloc broke downs Photograph: Pedro Nunes/Reuters

Portugal’s ruling Socialist party is on course to win the country’s snap general election and could even secure a surprise outright majority, according to three exit polls released on Sunday evening.

The Socialists, led by prime minister António Costa, are projected to win between 37% and 42.5% of the vote, taking between 100 and 118 seats in Portugal’s 230-seat parliament.

The polls, published by the three main television channels – SIC, RTP and TVI – put the centre-right Social Democrats (PSD) in second place on 26.7% to 35%, while the far-right Chega and the libertarian Liberal Initiative party appear to be vying for third place, with each expected to take between 4% and 8.5% of the vote.

Sunday’s election was triggered in December after the long-running deal between Costa’s minority Socialist government and its allies in the Portuguese Communist party and the Left Bloc broke down during negotiations over the 2022 budget.

The unlikely alliance – known as the geringonça, or improvised solution – finally collapsed when the Communists and Left Bloc joined rightwing parties in rejecting the budget bill after weeks of tense negotiations.

The election, held two years ahead of schedule, will delay the approval of a spending programme to use €45bn (£38bn) of EU recovery funds to kickstart the economy amid the lingering Covid pandemic.

Costa, who has served as prime minister since 2015, had accused his erstwhile geringonça partners of behaving irresponsibly by voting against his budget and is hoping to be able to govern alone if re-elected.

Despite the seemingly unstable nature of his minority government, Costa has won plaudits for turning around Portugal’s post-crisis economy, reversing unpopular austerity measures and overseeing one of the most successful Covid vaccination programmes in Europe.

“Everyone is realising how important this election is, and how important it is that there’s a solid victory that will give the country stability and generate the consensus and national unity that is fundamental for us to turn the page on this pandemic,” Costa told a rally in Porto on Friday.

Recent polls had suggested that the PSD were creeping ahead of the Socialists and that the race would be a narrow one.

The Portuguese prime minister, Antonio Costa (centre), during a rally in Lisbon
The Portuguese prime minister, António Costa (centre), during a rally in Lisbon. Photograph: Horacio Villalobos#Corbis/Getty Images

The Socialists have pledged to increase the minimum wage in western Europe’s poorest country from €705 (£582) a month to €900, while the PSD has promised to cut taxes on corporate profits and personal income.

As he cast his vote on Sunday, Costa said he was “confident and serene” about the election results.

Rui Rio, who leads the PSD, said he hoped people would get out and vote despite the pandemic: “Given the uncertainty of the results, we would expect more people to vote, but we also have the pandemic that may lead some to be afraid.”

Participation, however, appeared to be up on the last general election. At 4pm, turnout stood at 45.7%, compared with 38.7% in 2019.

According to pre-election polls, the Chega party, led by the combative former TV football pundit André Ventura, was garnering more and more support and could overtake the Left Bloc to become the third largest force in parliament. Chega’s anti-Roma rhetoric, attacks on benefits recipients and lambasting of what it sees as a corrupt elite have begun to strike a chord with many voters.

After winning a seat in the 2019 general election – taking 1.3% of the vote – the party secured 11.9% in last year’s presidential election.

Chega could emulate the example of Spain’s far-right Vox party, which has been the third biggest party in congress since November 2019. Not only has Vox proved pivotal in the formation of three regional governments in Spain, it has also dragged the country’s conservative People’s party further to the right.

On Saturday, Vox’s leader, Santiago Abascal, hosted a meeting in Madrid of fellow European far-right politicians including France’s Marine Le Pen and Viktor Orbán of Hungary.

“We are the ones who defend Europe,” Abascal told the event. “We will not allow the hammer-and-sickle flag to fly, nor the crescent moon flag, nor the dark flag of the globalist elites.”

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