Far Right’s Success Is a Measure of a Changing
Portugal
Memories of dictatorship are fading. Dissatisfaction
is mounting. It was a ripe moment for the Chega party to appeal to voter
frustrations.
Emma Bubola
By Emma
Bubola
Emma Bubola
reported from Faro, Portugal, and several other towns across the Algarve,
speaking to party officials, tourism workers, farmers and fishermen.
March 21,
2024, 5:04 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/21/world/europe/portugal-chega.html
The
sun-soaked Algarve region on Portugal’s Southern coast is a place where
guitar-strumming backpackers gather by fragrant orange trees and digital nomads
hunt for laid-back vibes. It is not exactly what comes to mind when one
envisions a stronghold of far-right political sentiment.
But it is
in the Algarve region where the anti-establishment Chega party finished first
in national elections this month, both unsettling Portuguese politics and
injecting new anxiety throughout the European establishment. Nationwide, Chega
received 18 percent of the vote.
“It’s a
strong signal for Europe and for the world,” said João Paulo da Silva Graça, a
freshly elected Chega lawmaker, sitting at the party’s new Algarve headquarters
as tourists asked for vegan custard tarts at a bakery downstairs. “Our values
must prevail.”
Chega,
which means “enough” in Portuguese, is the first hard-right party to gain
ground in the political scene in Portugal since 1974 and the end of the
nationalist dictatorship of António de Oliveira Salazar. Its formula for
success mixed promises of greater law and order with tougher immigration
measures and an appeal to economic resentments.
Chega’s
breakthrough has presented Portugal as the latest version of a now familiar
quandary for Europe, where the inroads of hard-right parties have made it
increasingly difficult for mainstream competitors to avoid them.
The leader
of Portugal’s center-right coalition, which won the election, has refused to
ally with Chega, but experts say the result is likely to be an unstable
minority government that may not last long.
Chega
showed once again that taboos that had kept hard-right parties out of power,
foremost the long shadow of a right-wing dictatorship from last century, were
falling. Today the hard right has made gains in Italy, Spain and Germany, among
other places.
Portugal
had been considered the exception. It emerged from the Salazar dictatorship as
a progressive society that supported liberal drug laws and showed little
appetite for the far right. In recent years it became a booming tourist
destination, flush with foreign investment, expatriates and a growing economy.
Even so,
this month more than a million Portuguese cast what many saw as a protest vote
for Chega.
The
Socialist and the mainstream conservative Social Democratic party in recent
decades have presided over a painful financial crisis and tough austerity
period. But even in the country’s recent economic upturn, many have felt left
out, anxious and forgotten.
Huge
numbers of young Portuguese are leaving the country. Many of those who stay
work for low salaries that have not kept up with inflation and left them priced
out of an unaffordable housing market. Public services are under stress.
Chega
campaigned promising higher salaries and better conditions for workers, who the
party said had been impoverished by a greedy elite. It fought against
mixed-gender bathrooms in schools and restitutions for former colonies.
A
corruption investigation into the handling of clean energy projects, which
brought down the Socialist government last year, handed Chega another talking
point with which to attack the ruling class.
The party’s
message struck a chord with many Portuguese who did not vote before and
attracted young voters through powerful social media outreach. It also
resonated with voters in Algarve who had voted reliably for the Socialist Party
in the past.
“Here we
have to work, work, work and we get nothing,” said Pedro Bonanca, a Chega voter
who drives tourists on a boat to the fishing island of Culatra, off the Algarve
coast.
“When I ask
old people why they vote the Socialist Party, the only thing they can say is
that they took us out of the dictatorship,” said Mr. Bonanca, 25. “But I don’t
know about that. It was a long time ago.”
The top of
his Instagram search bar featured André Ventura, the charismatic former soccer
commentator who once trained as a priest before founding Chega in 2019.
In earlier
campaigns, Chega used the slogan “God, Homeland, Family, Work,” similar to the
Salazar dictatorship’s “God, Homeland, Family.” Before the recent election,
Chega promised a mix of social policies that experts described as unrealistic,
including plans to increase the minimum wage and pensions while also cutting
taxes.
“Chega
became a sort of catchall party of all anxieties,” said António Costa Pinto, a
political scientist with the Institute of Social Sciences at the University of
Lisbon.
In the
Algarve region, Chega appealed to underpaid waiters with unstable jobs, priced
out of their hometowns or forced to emigrate. The party’s message resonated
with aging fishermen who had to keep working to make a living. It spoke to
farmers who said that they felt forsaken and that the government had
prioritized watering golf courses despite looming drought.
“If we die,
it’s because of them,” Pedro Cabrita, a farmer, said of the government. “My
vote for Chega is a protest vote,” he said as he gazed anxiously at his orange
grove, which he feared might dry out this summer.
In Olhão,
an impoverished tourist town where Chega won nearly 30 percent of the vote,
José Manuel Fernandes, a fishmonger, wondered why, despite the fact that
Portugal is in the European Union, he could not aspire to the lifestyle of the
German or French tourists around him.
“In the
summer I see couples having a good time here, living in camper vans,” said Mr.
Fernandes, who voted for Chega, as he cleaned a giant cuttlefish. “I have
wanted to go on vacation abroad for 30 years,” he added, “but that moment never
came.”
Economists
say Portugal, which started from a lower economic point when it joined the
European Union in 1986, has made progress but not the kind of productivity
gains needed to catch up to its wealthier European partners. Instead it remains
a relative bargain for European tourists and retirees, while many Portuguese
feel increasingly plundered.
In the
seaside town of Albufeira, as British bachelorette squads in blinking bunny
ears cruised the streets, Tiago Capela Rito, a 30-year-old waiter, closed the
cocktail bar where he worked. Despite working since he was 15, he still lives
with his mother because he cannot afford his own apartment, he said.
He had
never voted before, but he voted for Chega. “Ventura is telling us that we
don’t have to leave the country to survive,” said Mr. Rito, who in the off
season juggles construction and kitchen jobs, “that we can stay here and have a
life.”
Down the
road, Luís Araújo, 61, a waiter who also voted for Chega, said his son, 25,
made more than triple his salary at a restaurant in Dublin.
“Our young
people leave and these guys stay here,” he said of the influx of workers from
Nepal and India who have arrived to fill low-paying jobs.
Though the
numbers of immigrants arriving in Portugal has been smaller than in Italy or
Spain, Mr. Ventura has cast a recent influx of South Asian immigrants as a
threat.
“The
European Union is being demographically replaced by the children of
immigrants,” he said in Parliament in 2022, evoking the “great replacement”
conspiracy theory. “Nobody wants that in 20 years Europe will be mostly made up
by individuals from other continents.”
For some,
Chega’s rise has brought back old fears, especially for members of the Roma
community, one of Mr. Ventura’s early targets.
For some
older Portuguese, too, the specter of the hard right’s revival has been
unsettling.
As he
cleaned his nets from small crabs and cuttlefish, Vitór Silvestre, 67, a
fisherman on Culatra, said he still remembered being fearful to talk to the
cobbler or even friends during the dictatorship years, never knowing who could
be an informant.
“And now we
are voting for the far right again?” he asked.
Tiago Carrasco contributed reporting from
Faro, Portugal.
Emma Bubola
is a Times reporter based in London, covering news across Europe and around the
world. More about Emma Bubola
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário