Majority
āAbsolute majority doesnāt mean absolute powerā (António Costa)

Against all odds, Portugalās centre-left Socialists won a straight parliamentary majority in last week’s general election, securing a strong new mandate for Prime Minister António Costa. It is for the first time the Socialists have won an absolute majority after six years in power. This means the country will have a stable government to oversee the application of the EU pandemic recovery package of 16.6 billion euros.
The striking victory didnāt remain unnoticed abroad as was highlighted in the international press headlines.
āSocialists win surprise outright majority (Guardian)
āAntonio Costa, the shrewd negotiatorā (El PaĆs)
āPrime Minister with few obstacles and more longevityā (El Mundo)
āAntónio Costa builds its legendā (La Vanguardia)
āThe indestructible socialist, who united the leftā (El EspaƱol)
āAntónio Costaās revengeā (Le Monde)
āPortugal promotes the Costa modelā (La Republica)
āAn overwhelming majority, animosity with Chegaā (Folha de SĆ£o Paulo)
Portugalās Socialists win an Outright Majority in Parliament (New York Times)
āAntónio Costaās impressive victoryā (Politico)

The Socialist Party (PS) smashed its former far-left allies, the Left Bloc (BE) and the Communists (PCP) both losing more than half of their seats in parliament. The centre-right fared barely better. The second-largest Social-Democratic Party (PSD) gathered only 30% of the vote (against the Socialistsā around 42%).
The People and Nature party (PAN) lost three of its four MPās and the Christian Democrats (CDS) lost all its five MP’s in parliament, including its leader.Ā
Despite the coronavirus pandemic, turnout was on track to beat 2019ās record low participation of 49%.

But the election results also showed a less pleasant surprise.
The far-right Chega (Enough) emerged as the third-largest parliamentary force, making a big leap from just one MP to 12 in the 230-seat parliament.

Costa ā PM since 2015 – has won plaudits for turning around the countryās 2011-2014 debt crisis, reversing unpopular austerity measures, decreasing the budget deficit, and overseeing one of the most successful Covid vaccination programs in Europe. Still, Portugal remains western Europeās poorest country. His biggest challenge will therefore be to promote economic growth.

The PM declared in his victory speech: āAn absolute majority doesnāt mean absolute power. It doesnāt mean to govern alone but to govern with and for all Portugueseā.
But there is also a warning. The last time the Socialists had an absolute majority was with JosƩ Socrates in 2005 and that administration was marked by corruption and authoritarianism.
Enjoy your week — Tenha uma semana fixe (pic PĆŗblico/Sapo)