9
faces to watch in Portugal’s election
An
interesting array of candidates for prime minister.
By PAUL AMES
9/28/15, 5:30 AM CET /
http://www.politico.eu/article/portugal-elections-2015-campaign-nine-faces-to-watch/
LISBON — The
issues may not be sexy, but the candidates for prime minister of
Portugal are turning heads here.
On October 4, the
Portuguese cast their ballots among 16 parties whose leaders include
Europe’s “hottest” prime minister, a former avant-guard theater
actress and a pregnant psychologist with a tendency for appearing
naked in magazines.
Polls predict a
close race but most put the governing center-right coalition ahead
with around 38 percent of the vote, while the Socialists are expected
to garner 33 percent, according to a survey late last week by
Intercampus for the daily Público newspaper, TVI television and TSF
radio.
If the polls are
right, neither side is expected to win an outright majority.
That is raising
fears of a weak government unable to push through reforms need to
bolster the economy that has only recently begun to recover from
years of recession.
Even more scary for
international creditors: the Socialists could be tempted to share
power with smaller parties further to the left who advocate rebellion
from economic mores of the European Union.
Here are the
candidates putting some pep into Portugal’s vote:
Pedro Passos Coelho
Pedro Passos Coelho
has been Portugal’s prime minister since 2011. He is Europe’s
hottest (as in looking) elected leader, according to
hottestheadsofstate.com.
The smooth-talking
head of the Social Democratic Party (PSD) — which is center-right
despite the name — was once married to a singer from a girl’s
band dubbed Portugal’s answer to the Spice Girls.
A 51-year-old
economist, Passos Coelho is reportedly a tuneful crooner himself who
likes to serenade house guests with renditions of Lisbon’s bluesy
fado music.
His second wife is a
physiotherapist from the West African nation of Guinea Bissau,
currently battling cancer.
Passos Coelho has a
cautious, low-key approach to politics. He’s kept the country on an
austerity course, winning plaudits from Brussels for bringing down
budget deficits and reforms that have led the country into modest
growth after a long recession. He is loathed by the left for public
spending cuts, tax hikes and privatizations.
Still, polls give
him a chance of becoming the second leader of a bailed out euro-zone
country to secure re-election, following Greece’s Alexis Tsipras
last week.
António Costa
Hoping to unseat him
is Socialist Party (PS) leader António Costa.
The two men have
contrasting styles. Costa is a bullish, in-your-face politician who
thrives on the stump, sleeves rolled up, thumping the tub.
His headstrong
approach can lead him into trouble: He recently fired off an
insulting and vaguely threatening late-night text to a critical
journalist.
Costa easily won the
only head-to-head TV debate with a number-crunching Passos Coelho,
but the party’s poll rating has been slipping as the election
approaches.
If Costa can turn
the ratings around, the 54-year-old lawyer could be considered
Europe’s first prime minister of color — his father was a writer
from India. Yet race is not a factor in the campaign and is rarely
mentioned in the media.
Costa is an
experienced administrator, serving as justice minister and for seven
years as a popular mayor of Lisbon.
Since taking the
party leadership last year, he’s shifted the Socialists to the
left, but Costa is firmly rooted in Europe’s center-left mainstream
— more likely to ally with French President François Hollande and
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi than launch a solo act à la
Tsipras.
Traditional PS
moderation would be tested, however, if Costa teams up with the far
left to secure a parliamentary majority.
Catarina Martins and
Mariana Mortágua
Among his options
would be a deal with the Left Bloc (BE), a radical party in the mold
of Syriza and Spain’s Podemos.
The party’s run by
a six-member committee rather than a single leader, but 41-year-old
actress Catarina Martins serves as spokesperson. She’s had a good
campaign pushing polls ratings up to 8 percent — perhaps enough to
give it a kingmaker role.
Martins shares the
limelight with 29-year-old lawmaker Mariana Mortágua who rose to
prominence by making Portugal’s financial elite squirm under her
questioning during a parliamentary inquiry into last year’s
collapse of the Espírito Santo banking empire. Mortágua has
revolutionary pedigree; her father was a bank-robbing, hijacking
opponent of Portugal’s dictatorship in the 1960s.
Behind their
jeans-and-sneakers image, Martins and Mortágua are tough political
operators with a mission to overturn the economic order.
The Bloc has
youthful appeal, but it’s been weakened by high-profile splits and
its association with Syriza’s flirtation with Grexit this summer.
Jerónimo de Sousa
The other
significant player on the left is Jerónimo de Sousa, general
secretary of the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP).
At 68, he’s the
oldest lead candidate and his class-struggle rhetoric harks back to a
bygone age.
Still, de Sousa
knows what he’s talking about when he denounces poverty in a
country where the minimum wage is just €505 a month. Like many from
poor families during Portugal’s dark days of dictatorship he toiled
as a child laborer, starting in a steel mill at 14.
With piercing eyes
and craggy features, de Sousa personifies Portugal’s determinedly
old school Communists, a party that proudly flies the
hammer-and-sickle flag and advocates nationalization of much of the
economy.
The PCP commands
wide respect even from opponents thanks to its political consistency
and its lead role resisting Portugal’s 48-year dictatorship, which
fell in 1974.
Still it’s been
unable to expand support beyond a loyal core. Running in a coalition
with the Green party, which they long ago co-opted, the Communists
are polling below 10 percent and are struggling to keep third place.
Paulo Portas
Passos Coelho’s
partner in the right-of-center coalition is Paulo Portas, perhaps
Portugal’s canniest politician.
The 52-year-old
bachelor heads the conservative Social and Democratic Center-Popular
Party (CDS-PP) and is Portugal’s longest-serving party leader.
Portas has been
dogged for years by murky rumors linking his name to a series of
scandals. The most notable involves dodgy dealings during the navy’s
purchase of German submarines when he was defense minister in 2004.
But the dirt has never stuck.
In 2013, Portas was
widely ridiculed when he announced his “irrevocable” decision to
resign from the government over economic differences, only to change
his mind three days later. A satirical song entailed “The
irrevocable submarine,” was a modest hit last year for pop singer
Rogério Charraz.
Portas’ teflon
qualities are boosted by consummate political skills. The urbane
former newspaper director is a master of the TV soundbite, but also
has a knack for turning on the common touch. He works tirelessly
hugging, kissing and charming his way through markets and rural fairs
up and down the country.
José Sócrates
José Sócrates is
not a candidate in the election, but he’s the politician everybody
in Portugal is talking about.
The former prime
minister was released this month after spending nine months behind
bars while investigators probed tax fraud, corruption and
money-laundering allegations. He remains under house arrest.
Voted out of power
in 2011, the one-time-Socialist leader denies everything and claims
he’s the victim of a political conspiracy. His release introduces a
wild card into the election campaign.
The PS has been
divided between diehard supporters who proclaim his innocence and
flocked to visit him in jail, and those embarrassed by his
high-flying, pre-jail lifestyle and uneasy over the graft
allegations.
Sócrates’
presence during the TV debate between Costa and Passos Coelho was
such that several Lisbon twitterites got drunk after knocking back
shots every time his name was mentioned.
During his time in
power, Sócrates was another regular on international “hottest
politician” lists. His fans were relieved that the 58-year-old’s
silver fox looks that once drew comparisons with George Clooney
appeared unblemished by his months of incarceration.
Joana Amaral Dias
Joana Amaral Dias,
is a psychologist, TV personality and former lawmaker, who split from
the Left Bloc to form her own party called Act.
It’s one of a
dozen parties struggling to get more than 1 percent of the vote, but
despite the lack of voter interest she’s generated high-profile
media coverage by displaying her heavily pregnant body naked in a
couple of glossy magazine shoots.
Elsewhere on the
fringe is another Left Bloc offshoot with the snappy name of
Free-Time to Move Forward; a Maoist faction who launched its campaign
with the slogan “Death to the Traitors,” and a pensioners’
party running under the acronym PURP. There’s a group demanding
equal rights for animals and another advocating the restoration of
the monarchy which fell in 1910.
If the election
fails to produce a clear winner, Portugal’s President Aníbal
Cavaco Silva will be thrown into the spotlight.
The 76-year-old head
of state, whose role is usually ceremonial, will have to invite one
of the candidates to form a government.
Cavaco Silva is a
former leader of the PSD, but has annoyed Passos Coelho’s
government with his habit of sending controversial laws to the
Constitutional Court, where most were rejected.
His role could be
further complicated by quirks in the voting system which mean the
party with the most votes, may not necessarily win most seats.
Little wonder then,
that Cavaco Silva has been calling on voters to choose a stable
majority government.
Authors:
Paul Ames
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