Portugal’s far right on rise as election campaign
begins
Multiple corruption scandals fuel support for populist
Chega party led by André Ventura
Jon Henley
Europe correspondent
@jonhenley
Mon 26 Feb
2024 06.00 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/feb/26/portugal-far-right-rise-election-campaign-chega
Portugal’s
two-week general election campaign has officially begun with centre-right and
centre-left parties leading in the polls, but a far-right populist forecast to
collect almost a fifth of the vote is a further sign of Europe’s nativist
drift.
Chega
(Enough), led by 41-year-old former football commentator André Ventura, could
become kingmaker if the polls prove accurate. His party scored 1.3% of votes in
2019’s election but jumped to 7.3% in 2022 and has since climned by about 19%.
Luís
Montenegro, leader of the conservative Social Democratic party (SDP), launched
his campaign in the northern district of Bragança, saying he was confident of a
“great victory” for the three-party alliance he has formed with two smaller
rightist parties.
Pedro Nuno
Santos, leader of the incumbent Socialist party, told shoppers at a market
outside Porto that his party enjoyed “a relationship of proximity and trust”
with voters and was “focused on a victory that halts the right’s advance”.
However,
with the Socialists favourites to win the most votes but combined rightwing
parties expected to end up with more seats in parliament, many observers’ eyes
were on Ventura – who has long said he will he will not back a rightist
coalition unless he is formally a part of it.
Unlike in
several EU member states from Finland to Italy, the far right has so far failed
to make much impact in Portugal, which in April celebrates half a century since
its 1974 Carnation Revolution ended almost as many years of authoritarian rule.
But the
early 10 March election, called after the surprise resignation of Socialist
prime minister, António Costa, is being held in the shadow of multiple
corruption scandals that have fuelled voter disenchantment and favour the far
right, analysts say.
Costa’s
government collapsed last November amid a corruption investigation that led to
a police search of his official residence and the environment and
infrastructure ministries, as well as the arrest of his chief of staff. He is
not accused of any crime.
In recent
weeks, a Lisbon court has also ruled that a former Socialist prime minister,
José Sócrates, should stand trial over allegations that he pocketed about €34m
(£29m) during his time in power from graft, fraud and money laundering.
The SDP,
which has alternated in power with the Socialists for decades, also faces
corruption allegations, with two prominent SDP politicians recently forced to
resign amid a graft investigation in Madeira.
A housing
crisis, persistent low pay levels and unreliable public health services are
other areas where the records of the two main parties – which polls suggest are
neck-and-neck on 28% and 29% of the vote – are being challenged.
As
elsewhere in Europe, Chega has made the fight against alleged corruption one of
its main themes – “Portugal needs cleaning out”, one of its billboards says –
while also campaigning on immigration, the climate crisis and religious and
cultural differences.
The party
supports the death penalty, chemical castration for repeat rapists and wants
zero tolerance for illegal immigration. It has also said it wants Portugal to
have more freedom from the EU to pursue some bilateral economic ties.
Far-right
populists are in ruling coalitions in Italy and Finland and propping up another
in Sweden. Austria’s FPÖ is on track to win elections expected this autumn,
while Germany’s AfD and France’s National Rally (RN) are at record polling
highs.
Montenegro,
the PSD leader, has so far ruled out any coalition including Chega. Some
analysts are sceptical, however, that after eight years in opposition the
centre-right party will stick to that pledge if it needs Chega’s votes to
secure a majority.
Antonio
Costa Pinto, a political scientist at Lisbon University’s Institute of Social
Sciences, said the “sanitary cordon” around far-right parties “has not worked
for other European democracies, and Portugal will be another example”.
Costa’s
successor at the head of the Socialist party, Nuno Santos, has said he would
not block the formation of a minority government headed by the centre-right
should they finish first but without a working majority.
His party
would hope, as in the past, to forge parliamentary alliances with the
Portuguese Communist party or the Left Bloc to remain in power.
Agence
France-Presse and Associated Press contributed to this report
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