New Democracy Party (Portugal) Explained

Country:Portugal
Abbreviation:PND
New Democracy Party
Native Name:Partido da Nova Democracia
Colorcode:
  1. 1F468B
Leader1 Title:Leaders
Leader1 Name:Manuel Monteiro
Joel Viana
Split:Democratic and Social Centre – People's Party
Ideology:Populism
Euroscepticism[1]
Liberal conservatism
Position:Centre
Headquarters:Lisbon (until 2010)
Funchal (2010–2015)
European:Europeans United for Democracy
Europarl:Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
Colours: Blue
Red

The New Democracy Party (Portuguese: Partido da Nova Democracia, pronounced as /pt/, PND) was a small Portuguese Eurosceptic liberal-conservative political party. In voting ballots, its name appeared only as New Democracy, with the acronym unchanged. The party was founded in 2003. It was, at the time, a new party which resulted from Manuel Monteiro's separation from the Democratic and Social Centre – People's Party. The party was a member of the EUDemocrats. Manuel Monteiro eventually would leave the party in 2009, which was led, since then, by Joel Viana until its dissolution.

The party was considered centrist and was the personal party of Monteiro, and was dominated by him. It campaigned on the theme of political renewal and fighting the Portuguese establishment in favor of a more pluralistic electoral environment, where independents and non-aligned parties would be given a chance to enter politics. It was described as a populist, Eurosceptic and nationalist party that protested the dominance of Portuguese politics by only two parties - the CDS-PP and the PSD. The party was also characterized as moderately conservative, and aimed to become the main rival of the Christian-democratic CDS-PP.

History

The party was found by Monteiro in protests of the policies of the Democratic and Social Centre – People's Party, which became supportive of the European Union and the European integration. The party campaigned on growing disappointment of the CDS-PP.

The presence of the New Democracy Party caused the CDS-PP to face tensions with its coalition partner, the moderate Força Portugal. The CDS-PP also continously pressured João de Deus Pinheiro to not debate Manuel Monteiro, which led Monteiro to accuse main Portuguese parties of discriminating him.

The party run in the 2005 Portuguese legislative election as well as the 2009 Portuguese legislative election, where the leader of the party Manuel Monteiro ran in the Braga constituency. In the 2005 election, the PND won 40,358 votes in total, which amounted to 0.7% of the popular vote.[2]

For the 2009 election, Monteiro left the party to dedicate himself exclusively to the campaign in Braga. However, he only won 21,876 votes, which amounted to almost 0.4% of the popular vote. Monteiro found the result "deeply disappointing" and stated his desire to leave Portugal, especially in the wake of the Socialist Party's victory.[2]

In the 2011 presidential election, the PND's candidate was José Manuel Coelho. He won 4.5% of the vote: greatly surpassing expectations and pre-election polling.

The party's registration was cancelled by the Constitutional Court on 23 September 2015, after the party failed to submit its required annual report in 2011, 2012, and 2013. The party was officially disbanded on 23 September 2015.

One of the members of the party was João Pacheco de Amorim, a prominent journalist who worked for Portuguese newspapers such as O Diabo and Futuro Presente. His brother, Diogo Pacheco de Amorim, founded Chega in 2019. João was one of Chega's candidates in the 2019 Portuguese legislative election.[3]

Ideology

The party was founded as a rival to the CDS–PP, which the leader of the New Democracy Party, Monteiro, considered to have lost its way, stating that "the PP was no longer the CDS". The New Democracy Party ran on the goal of political "renewal" and promised a "new" kind of politics which would make room for independents and non-aligned parties at expense of the Portuguese establishment.[4]

Pedro Cruz, describing the ideology of the PND and Monteiro, wrote: "It wasn't left-wing, but it wasn't right-wing either, it was "centrist", conservative but not too much, popular enough, [Monteiro was] easy to talk to, almost demagogic." Despite being a splinter from the CDS-PP, the party also became home for disaffected liberals and former members of the Social Democratic Party. Cruz however also noted that the New Democracy Party was a "one-man party", dominated by Monteiro.[4]

The party was described as moderately conservative,[5] as well as Eurosceptic and nationalist agenda. It was primairly geared towards populist protest against the deadlock of the political system in Portugal, and ran explcitly against the dominance of PSD and CDS-PP in Portuguese politics.[6]

Election results

Assembly of the Republic

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/-Government
2005Manuel Monteiro40,358 0.7 (#7)New
200921,876 0.4 (#8)
2011Joel Viana 11,8060.2 (#13)

European Parliament

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/-
2004Manuel Monteiro33,833 1.0 (#6)
2014Eduardo Welsh23,082 0.7 (#9)

Presidential elections

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20180507040614/http://www.parties-and-elections.eu/madeira.html. 7 May 2018. 2015. Madeira/Portugal. Nordsieck. Wolfram. Parties and Elections in Europe. dead.
  2. Web site: Manuel Monteiro vê fugir outra vez o lugar no Parlamento . 28 September 2009 . pt . Diário de Notícias.
  3. Web site: Chega, uma direita popular? . July 2023 . pt . Jaime . Roque . Le Monde Diplomatique.
  4. Web site: Porque é que a «DIREITA» não consegue criar um partido novo? . 26 February 2019 . pt . Pedro . Cruz . Sic Notícias.
  5. Book: Lodge, Juliet . The 2004 Elections to the European Parliament . 2005 . 978-0-230-52382-1 . 10.1057/9780230523821 . Palgrave Macmillan Ltd . Leeds . 212–215.
  6. Book: Populismo: teorias e casos . pt . Fortaleza - CE . 2020 . António Costa . Pinto. Fabio . Gentile . 978-65-86311-08-2 . 202.