Ergue-te explained

Colorcode:
  1. 002147
Rise Up
Native Name:Ergue-te
President:José Pinto Coelho
Headquarters:Lisbon
Youth Wing:Renovator National Youth (Juventude Nacional Renovadora)
Position:Far-right
European:Alliance of European National Movements
Seats1 Title:Assembly of the Republic
Seats2 Title:European Parliament
Seats3 Title:Regional
parliaments
Seats4 Title:Local
Government
Colours:Black, Blue and Red
Country:Portugal
Abbreviation:E

Rise Up (Portuguese: Ergue-te, E), originally the National Renewal Party (PNR) is a Portuguese far-right[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] nationalist political party. Its motto is Nation and Work and one of its goals consists in the appreciation of a Portuguese nationalist spirit. The party results legally from the alteration of statutes approved in the VII Nacional Convention of the old Democratic Renewal Party (PRD) requested on March 17, 2000 and validated by the Constitutional Court on April 12, 2000. This change implicated in the change of name, acronym and logo. Its president is, since June 2005, José Pinto Coelho. In a report published by the North American NGO GPAHE against hate and extremism, Ergue-te was classified, along with ADN and Chega, as a hate and far-right group.[6]

History

In July 10, 2020, wanting to change its public image and undo misconceptions arising from the confusion between the acronyms PNR and PDR - the former Republican Democratic Party, now named National Democratic Alternative -, they changed its name to Ergue-te, with the acronym E, this alteration was accepted and registered by the Constitutional Court following deliberation taken by the National Council of PNR in November 23, 2019.[7]

The party is also described as islamophobe[8] and against Portugal's NATO membership.[9]

Public appearances

E has been involved in many controversies. In 2006, it got involved in the demonstration by security forces agents against the government. The Diário de Notícias article about the participation of the then PNR reads:

"It was total chaos. It had been almost 120 minutes from the set time for the beginning of the parade by the security force agents against the government policies when the organizers arrived at the Marquis of Pombal Square to warn that, after all, there wasn't going to be a demonstration. With the argument that the PSP, GNR, Maritime Police and Foreigners and Border Services agents refused to "parade next to neonazis" (and PNR representatives) that had gathered there to participate. And with fear that there was going to be conflicts between both sides. The decision by the organizers - the Permanent Coordinating Committee of Unions and Associations of Security Forces and Services - enraged the agents of many task forces. The protests increased in tone, confusion arose and, all of a sudden, when they least expected it, the security forces agents passed over the organizer's decision and started their parade. The Coordinating Committee had lost control over the situation. The parade was, indeed, done, until Terreiro do Paço, where the Ministry of Internal Affairs was. There, the agents demanded changes in the health system, retirement and better work conditions. The far-right militants, after having had a stage to talk to the media started to disperse, seeing groups here and there along the parade. But they didn't follow the demonstration behind the police forces."[10]

Controversy

Although in the past the party did not reject connections to so-called neo-Nazi racist movements,[11] it claims to be a target of political persecution. In their youth, some of its former members were convicted for racial discrimination and violent crimes, such as the racially motivated murder of Alcindo Monteiro in Lisbon, after being linked to right-wing armed groups such as the Portuguese Hammerskins. In recent years, however, the party has expelled its members that have connections to these kinds of groups and, as a result, the former Portuguese Hammerskins leader Mário Machado has decided to try to create a new party, the New Social Order.[12]

Election results

In the 2005 legislative elections, the then PNR obtained just under 0.2% of the vote, failing to elect any deputies to Parliament by a wide margin. In the 2009 European election, the party had about 13,000 votes, having 0.37% of the vote, the party had its higher results in the districts of Lisbon and Setúbal. 2015 was the year the party most increased in votes, having received 27,269 votes in the legislative elections. An increase of just over 50% in comparison to 2011.

Since 2019 the right-wing populist Chega seems to be taking votes away from PNR.

Assembly of the Republic

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/-Government
2002align=left António Cruz Rodrigues4,7120.1 (#10)
2005José Pinto Coelho9,3740.2 (#9)0
200911,5030.2 (#12)0
201117,5480.3 (#10)0
201527,2690.5 (#10)0
201917,1260.3 (#13)0
20225,0430.1 (#19)0
20246,0300.1 (#15)0

European Parliament

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/-
2004align=left Paulo Rodrigues8,4050.3 (#11)
2009Humberto Nuno Oliveira13,2140.4 (#12)0
201415,0360.5 (#12)0
2019align=left João Patrocínio16,0140.5 (#13)0
2024align=left 8,4620.2 (#11)0

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. da Costa. José Mourão. 2011. O Partido Nacional Renovador: a novadireita na democracia portuguesa. Análise Social. 46. 201. 765–787. 41494872.
  2. Web site: http://www.opiniaopublica.ufmg.br/emdebate/Artigo_EAnita12.pdf. opiniaopublica.ufmg.br. 2018-11-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305004125/http://www.opiniaopublica.ufmg.br/emdebate/Artigo_EAnita12.pdf. 5 March 2016. dead.
  3. Tostes. Ana Paula. June 2009. Reasons for intolerance in integrated Europe. Dados. 52. 2. 335–376. 10.1590/S0011-52582009000200003. 0011-5258. free.
  4. Rocha. Frederico Pedroso. March 2014. A Direita Radical E As Eleições Europeias Em 2014: Nacionalistas Em Busca De Pontes. Relações Internacionais (R:I). 41. 63–79. 1645-9199.
  5. de. Almeida, Fábio Chang. 2014. A direita radical no Portugual democrático : os rumos após a revolução dos cravos (1974–2012). 10183/114413.
  6. Web site: Portugal: grupos de ódio e extremistas de extrema-direita . 2024-08-18 . Global Project Against Hate and Extremism . en-US.
  7. Web site: PNR muda nome para "Ergue-te" para "refrescar imagem" . 2024-08-18 . Diário de Notícias . pt.
  8. Web site: Observador . PNR faz simulação de decapitações em frente ao Palácio de Belém . 2024-08-18 . Observador . pt-PT . The protest has the name 'Islam, here, no' and a party publication in a social media platform reads: Following another wave of attacks in the European continent, PNR did this Saturday, a protest action against Europe's Islamization (...)..
  9. Web site: O PNR opõe-se à actual Nato – Partido ERGUE-TE . 2024-08-18 . www.partidoergue-te.pt.
  10. Web site: 2008-04-10 . DN Online: PNR quase parou manifestação . 2024-08-18 . web.archive.org.
  11. Actualidades 7 Junho, 2006 Presidente do PNR solidário com Mário Machado
  12. http://observador.pt/2014/05/19/mario-machado-abandona-portugal-hammerskins-atraves-facebook "Observador May 2014