‘The
Algarve is Chega’s kingdom’: resort city’s voters tempted by far-right party
Chega
supporters in Albufeira hope party can use Sunday’s local elections as
springboard for nationwide takeover
Catarina
Fernandes Martins in Albufeira
Sat 11
Oct 2025 03.00 EDT
The road
into Albufeira is thronged with billboards. Some, such as the faded one on a
roundabout leading to the centre of the southern Portuguese resort city, offer
sun-bleached glimpses of enticing real estate, golden beaches and vibrant
nightlife. Others that have sprung up before Sunday’s local elections peddle
promises of a different kind.
By far
the most numerous are those belonging to the far-right Chega party. Its
political posters feature one-line grievances about the state of public health,
education and housing and tell passing drivers that all these problems will be
solved once Chega is in charge.
There is
a good chance that disillusioned Albufeirans – in a city that has voted for the
centre-right PSD for more than two decades – will help give Chega a historic
night on Sunday. After leapfrogging the socialists to take second place in
May’s general election, Chega now hopes to leverage local-level frustrations to
gain dozens of municipalities across the country and position itself for the
same in the next general election.
The
Algarve sits at the very centre of the far-right’s strategy. Chega’s leader,
André Ventura, a former football pundit and columnist who left the PSD to found
the new party just six years ago, has called the region the “party’s
stronghold” and the starting point of Portugal’s “conquest” by the far right.
A recent
poll for the Portuguese daily Diário de Notícias put Ventura’s party in the
lead for the national vote for the first time. Its cocktail of populist
policies, among them stricter controls on migration and chemical castration for
paedophiles, have grabbed the attention of voters who are sick of a series of
corruption scandals that have dogged the two main parties over recent years.
Some believe Ventura may be on the fast track to becoming prime minister.
“If in
two months there’s a new political scandal and new snap elections, Chega would
likely win the general elections,” said António Costa Pinto, a political
scientist at Lisbon University’s Institute of Social Sciences.
Chega
voters in the Algarve argue that the party needs to use Sunday’s elections as a
springboard for a nationwide takeover. Daniel Vicente, a 30-year-old barman
from Albufeira, said: “I sincerely hope Chega wins. The Algarve is collapsing …
Well, Portugal is collapsing.”
Housing
prices are Vicente’s biggest concern. The Algarve, which faces the same
consequences of overtourism as other parts of Europe, has the second highest
housing costs in Portugal after Lisbon. Rental prices in Albufeira have risen
by more than 16% in the last year alone.
Vicente,
repeating several of Chega’s talking points and misinformation, pointed the
finger at the low-wage migrants who had come to the region.
“Migrants
who come here have everything going for them,” he said. “They share two-bedroom
flats with 10 people. They pay little rent so they have money left. I don’t
know what kind of support they receive but they must be receiving some support
because they open up their own stores and you wonder how they did it.
“I have
to pay €800 (£696) for a flat and for everything else on a little more than the
minimum wage [€870 a month]. No one gives me anything, and I don’t have enough
money in the bank to ask for a loan to buy a house.”
That
resentment was Chega’s breeding ground. The party’s meteoric rise, boosted by
three snap elections in the last three years and massively disproportionate
media coverage, mostly lies in Ventura’s capacity to tap into people’s
unexplored anger and use it to disrupt the political conversation.
Miguel
Carvalho, a journalist and author of the book Por Dentro do Chega (Inside
Chega), said: “In 2019, Ventura went to places where politicians hadn’t been in
years. He listened to people; he was their shoulder to cry on. And he promised
he would shout for them whenever he could.
“When he
started making these statements, which people were ashamed to make in public,
and when the media gave these statements a microphone and made Chega seem much
bigger than it was, people started thinking they were also entitled to talk
like that. They felt represented and Chega grew.”
He said
the party was “based around Ventura and it runs on his intuition. That was why
it grew so much, so fast.”
Gone were
the days when Ventura had to chase Santiago Abascal, the leader of Spain’s
far-right Vox party, or Italy’s Matteo Salvini for a selfie, Carvalho said.
“Now he’s the one who is invited. He travels to Spain and Hungary often.
Bolsonaro supporters idolise him. Now he is their star.”
The stark
contrast between the Algarve’s image of a seaside paradise and the realities of
daily life for many of its residents has made it a perfect target for Chega and
an ideal laboratory for Portugal’s rapidly shifting politics. Albufeira has a
population of 40,000 and attracts about half a million visitors annually.
“Most of
the economy is based on low wages, tourism, and migration associated with
tourism,” said Costa Pinto. “These issues make people very sensitive to Chega’s
message.”
Near the
popular Praia da Oura beach, three tuk-tuk drivers waiting for passengers spoke
affectionately about how Ventura had been the first politician to care about
them.
“Ventura
puts the Portuguese people first,” said Filipe Serrão, 50, who prides himself
on having been one of the very first Chega activists in Albufeira.
Rodney
Sudário, 38, a Brazilian driver who has been in Portugal for 18 years, said he
would cast his ballot for Chega. He was not bothered by Ventura’s demonisation
of migrants because he thinks the problems lie with those “from non-Christian
cultures” – something that his colleague Tiago Filipe, 29, agreed with.
“Chega is
not against migrants, only those who don’t want to work,” Filipe said. “All
migrants coming from south-east Asia are unqualified. And Muslims only want
subsidies. They want to take over Europe – Islamise it.”
Not
everyone agrees. A few metres from the tuk-tuks’ parking spot, an Indian man
who has been working in Albufeira for 10 years shook his head. He worried that
a Chega win would make “everything more difficult” for him and others like him.
“It’s
puzzling to me how the Portuguese, who have emigrated everywhere, are against
migration now,” he said. “It wasn’t like this before, but Chega talks and talks
and promises everything – impossible things. If Ventura wins and ends up
kicking all the migrants out, where will he find the people to work at
restaurants and in agriculture?” the man said.
For some,
however, Sunday can’t come soon enough. “If Chega wins, we’ll take our flags
and go in tuk-tuks parading around,” Filipe said. “It’s going to be a party.
The Algarve is Chega’s kingdom. The rest of the country will follow.”

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