Far-left budget revolt pushes Portugal’s
government to the brink
Prime Minister António Costa must make last-minute
concessions to avoid early elections
BY PAUL
AMES
October 25,
2021 3:34 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/far-left-budget-revolt-pushes-portugals-government-to-the-brink/
The
government of Portuguese Prime Minister António Costa was pushed to the brink
of collapse Monday after two hard-left parties announced they would join with
the right in blocking the national budget in a parliament vote Wednesday.
“Portugal
doesn’t need just any budget, it needs a response from the government to the
problems that are piling up,” said Jerónimo de Sousa, leader of the Portuguese
Communist Party (PCP). “Given the commitments and signals so far, the PCP will
vote against this budget.”
Costa now
has to make last-minute concessions to the PCP and the Left Bloc — another
hard-left party that announced its opposition to the budget on Sunday — or face
a defeat that will likely lead to the dissolution of parliament and early
elections. He called an emergency cabinet meeting for Monday night to discuss
the crisis.
“If there’s
no budget, I’ll advance with the process to dissolve parliament,” Portugal’s
president, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, told reporters after the Communists’
decision.
The head of
state said he still hoped the parties would look beyond “very short-term
concerns” and strike a last-minute deal that would maintain political stability
as the country pulls out of the pandemic.
Ministers
said the government was willing to talk up to the last moment to save the
budget and hinted the Socialists could be prepared to make more concessions,
notably by tweaking labor legislation. But they appeared pessimistic a deal
could still be struck.
“We don’t
feel the parties are drawing together at all,” said Duarte Cordeiro, secretary
of state for parliamentary affairs.
“The
government believes an enormous effort has been made. We’ve gone further in
this year’s talks with the Portuguese Communist Party than we ever have
before,” Cordeiro told a news conference.
He pointed
to pledges to raise the minimum wage, increase pensions, introduce free
creches, and roll back labor market liberalization, that go further than the
Socialists’ original project.
“All these
advances will be put in question if the budget is not passed,” Cordeiro warned.
However,
the space for maneuver has narrowed as the Wednesday deadline approaches. “It
seems inevitable that we are entering an early-election phase,” commentator
Helena Garrido told RTP television.
Costa’s
election victory in 2019 left his Socialist Party (PS) just short of an
absolute majority in the 230-seat Assembleia da República, leaving them reliant
on the Communists or Left Bloc to pass legislation.
During
Costa’s first term from 2015-2019, the two hard-left parties backed the
government in a formal pact, nicknamed the geringonça (contraption). Since
then, he has had to negotiate deals on a case-by-case basis.
The
Communists and Left Bloc have both suffered disappointing results in recent
local and presidential elections, pushing them to take a harder line with the
government.
However,
polls suggest they are unlikely to gain from early elections.
Costa’s
Socialists are clearly in front on 39 percent, according to POLITICO’s poll of
polls, up from the 36 percent they achieved in 2019.
The Left
Bloc risks seeing its support drop by almost half to 5 percent and the
Communists are stuck on around 6 percent.
Portugal’s
main center-right opposition force, the Social Democratic Party (PSD), is
hovering around 27 percent, unchanged from the 2019 election.
The PSD
made surprise gains in local elections last month. It captured a number of
major cities, including the capital Lisbon where former European commissioner
Carlos Moedas was elected mayor.
However,
the center right is split. PSD leader Rui Rio is facing his third leadership
challenge since taking over in 2018, this time from Paulo Rangel, a member of
the European Parliament.
One party
that would stand to gain from early elections is the far-right Chega. It’s
polling on 9 percent, up from the 1.3 percent it scored in 2019.
The next
elections were scheduled for October 2023. Costa had been widely expected not
to run for a third term in order to seek a high-powered European job.
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