Socialist Party (Portugal) should not be confused with Portuguese Socialist Party.
Country: | Portugal |
Socialist Party | |
Native Name: | Partido Socialista |
Abbreviation: | PS |
President: | Carlos César |
Secretary General: | Pedro Nuno Santos |
Founder: | Mário Soares |
Headquarters: | Largo do Rato 2, 1269–143 Lisbon |
Newspaper: | Acção Socialista |
Predecessor: | Acção Socialista Portuguesa |
Youth Wing: | Socialist Youth |
Student Wing: | Estudantes Socialistas |
Wing1 Title: | Women's wing |
Wing1: | National Department of the Socialist Women |
Membership: | 81,171[1] |
Ideology: | Social democracy |
Membership Year: | 2022 |
Position: | Centre-left |
National: | FRS (1980–1982) |
European: | Party of European Socialists |
Europarl: | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats |
Affiliation1 Title: | Trade union affiliation |
Affiliation1: | General Union of Workers |
Anthem: | Portuguese: A Internacional[2] (The Internationale) |
Seats1 Title: | Assembly of the Republic |
Seats2 Title: | European Parliament |
Seats3 Title: | Regional Parliaments |
Seats4 Title: | Local government (Mayors) |
Seats5 Title: | Local government (Parishes) |
The Socialist Party (Portuguese: Partido Socialista, pronounced as /pt/, PS) is a social-democratic[3] [4] political party in Portugal. It was founded on 19 April 1973 in the German city of Bad Münstereifel by militants who were at the time with the Portuguese Socialist Action (Portuguese: Acção Socialista Portuguesa). The PS is a member of the Socialist International, Progressive Alliance and Party of European Socialists, and has eight members in the European Parliament within the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats group during the 10th European Parliament.
The party won the 1976 general election and formed the first constitutional government after the 1974 revolution, with Mário Soares as Prime Minister. However, the government was unstable and fell in 1978. The PS lost the 1979 election, but returned to power in 1983, forming, with the Social Democratic Party, a Central Bloc coalition. It lasted two years and in 1985, the party was defeated and went back to opposition, remaining there for 10 years and losing the two following general elections. Under António Guterres, the party won the 1995 general election and returned to power, lasting until 2002, upon the resignation of Guterres. The party made a comeback and won a historic absolute majority in the 2005 general election under the leadership of José Sócrates. By 2011, the economic crisis led the party to lose the 2011 snap election and the party returned to the opposition. Despite losing the 2015 election, the party formed an agreement with the Left Bloc and the Unitary Democratic Coalition and managed to appoint António Costa as Prime Minister. Costa remained in office for 9 years, until 2024, and won the two following elections, the last one, in 2022, with an absolute majority. After Costa's resignation, the party narrowly lost the 2024 election, thus, returning to opposition.
A party of the centre-left,[5] [6] the PS is one of the two major parties in Portuguese politics, its rival being the Social Democratic Party (PSD), a centre-right, conservative party. The current leader, Pedro Nuno Santos, was elected in December 2023.
The Portuguese Socialist Action (ASP) was founded in November 1964, in Geneva, Switzerland, by Mário Soares, Manuel Tito de Morais and Francisco Ramos da Costa. The ASP was founded in exile by several Socialist members as political organizations during Salazar's Estado Novo regime were forbidden. In 1964, Mário Soares was elected leader of the ASP and the core principles and values of the ASP were approved.[7]
Inspired by May 68 events,[8] the Socialist Party (PS) was created at a conference of the Portuguese Socialist Action (ASP) on 19 April 1973, in Bad Münstereifel in West Germany:
|- style="background-color:#E9E9E9"! align="center" colspan=2 style="width: 60px"|Option! align="center" style="width: 50px"|Votes! align="center" style="width: 50px"|%|-|| align=left | In favour of a party| align=right | 20| align=right | 74.1|-|| align=left | Against a party| align=right | 7| align=right | 25.9|-|- style="background-color:#E9E9E9"| colspan=2 style="text-align:left;" | Turnout| align=right | 27| align=right | |-| colspan="4" align=left|Source:[9] |}
The twenty-seven delegates decided to found a party of socialism and political freedom, making an explicit reference to a classless society and with Marxism as a source of principal inspiration. However, seven delegates voted against the idea of creating a party, including Mário Soares' wife Maria Barroso.
On 25 April 1974, the Carnation Revolution brought down the authoritarian regime of the Estado Novo, established in 1933, and democracy was restored. Mário Soares, the party's General-Secretary, returned to Portugal after being in exile in France and became Minister of Foreign Affairs, and António de Almeida Santos was appointed Minister of Interjurisdictional Coordination in one of the first provisional governments. After the revolution, elections were called for 25 April 1975 and the PS won the 1975 election for the Constituent Assembly and the 1976 elections for the National Assembly, then losing to the Democratic Alliance (AD) in the 1979 legislative election. In 1980, the PS made an electoral alliance, called the Republican and Socialist Front (FRS), between the Independent Social Democrats (ASDI), led by Sousa Franco, and the Left-wing Union for the Socialist Democracy (UEDS), led by Lopes Cardoso. The alliance failed to defeat the AD.They won the 1983 general election but without an absolute majority, and the PS formed a grand coalition with the centre-right Social Democratic Party (PSD), creating a Central Bloc. The new government began negotiations for Portugal to enter the European Economic Community (EEC). In 1985, the Central Block broke down and the PS, at the time led by António de Almeida Santos, lost the 1985 legislative election. Cavaco Silva's PSD won the 1985 elections, and again in 1987 and 1991 with an absolute majority. The PS was in opposition for more than ten years.
In the 1995 legislative election, the PS, then led by the already prominent António Guterres, won a general election for the first time in twelve years, and in the 1999 election failed to obtain what would have been a historic absolute majority for the party by only one MP. In 2001, after a massive defeat in the 2001 local elections, Guterres resigned as prime minister and called for new elections in 2002. The Socialist Party lost the 2002 general election by a small margin to the PSD, who formed a coalition government with the People's Party (CDS–PP). During this time, it has been argued that the Socialist Party moved towards the centre and adopted the Third Way.[10] [11]
In the early 2000s, the party cleaned up its membership database, resulting in a reduction of registered members from 120,000 in 2001 to 77,000 in 2002.[12]
In June 2004, the PS won the 2004 European elections by a landslide, and a few weeks later, Durão Barroso, leader of the PSD and prime minister, resigned to become President of the European Commission. In December 2004, Jorge Sampaio, President of the Republic, called fresh elections for February 2005. These elections resulted in a landslide victory for the PS, winning for the first time since its foundation an absolute majority. José Sócrates, leader of the PS, became Prime Minister of Portugal.
In 2009, after years in power, the PS lost the 2009 European Parliament elections to the PSD. However, they won the general election held on 27 September 2009 but failed to renew the absolute majority they won in the previous general election. The PS later introduced and legislated same-sex marriage. The Eurozone crisis and financial crisis of 2011 hit Portugal very hard, prompting Sócrates' government to impose harsh austerity measures. On 23 March 2011, the entire opposition in Parliament said no to new measures proposed by the government. As a result of this, Sócrates resigned as prime minister and a snap election took place on 5 June 2011. In the elections, the PS suffered a huge setback, with 28.1 percent of the vote, ten points behind the PSD, who formed another coalition government with the CDS–PP. Sócrates resigned as General-Secretary on election night after the PS's worst result since 1987. On 23 July 2011, António José Seguro was elected as Sócrates' successor.
Under the leadership of Seguro, the PS won the 2013 local elections making significant gains over the PSD and the Socialists again won the European elections in May 2014 but this time only just. They won 31.5 percent of the vote against almost 28% of the alliance between the PSD and CDS–PP. The result was considered quite a disappointment to many PS members and supporters and on 27 May António Costa, the then-mayor of Lisbon announced that he would stand for the leadership of the PS.[13] Seguro refused to call a new congress and leadership election and instead called for a primary election, to be held on 28 September, to elect the party's candidate for prime minister in the 2015 general elections.[14] Costa, being endorsed by the left faction of the party and people like Mário Soares, Ana Catarina Mendes and Pedro Nuno Santos, easily defeated Seguro, who was supported by the more moderate and centrist wing of the party, by a 67% to 31% margin.
In the 2015 legislative elections, the PS polled a disappointing second place, capturing just 32 percent of the votes against the 38.6 percent of the PSD/CDS–PP electoral alliance Portugal Ahead. Despite the victory of the PSD/CDS-PP coalition, the centre-left and left-wing parties achieved a clear majority in the Portuguese parliament. After the second Passos Coelho cabinet fell in parliament, with the approval of a no-confidence motion, the PS forged a confidence and supply agreement with Left Bloc and Unitary Democratic Coalition to support a PS minority government. For the first time in Portuguese democracy, the leader of the second most voted political force became prime minister.
In order to avoid bankruptcy due to mounting debt, in 2017, the party, alongside the PSD, the Portuguese Communist Party, BE and the ecologist party PEV, voted in favour of abolishing party fundraising limits, thereby opening all portuguese parties to private political donorship, that they are not obligated to disclose.[15] [16] [17] [18] The new proposal was reluctantly approved by the Portuguese president Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa.[19]
Costa led a very successful first term as prime minister with a growing economy, low unemployment, and deficit cuts. Although he led a more left-leaning PS, Costa started to shift the party back to the centre in 2018, something that a younger and more left-wing faction, led by minister Pedro Nuno Santos, contested.[20] In the 2019 European elections, the PS won a significant victory by achieving 33.4 percent, against the 22 percent of the PSD. The PS also won the October 2019 general election with 36 percent of the votes, against the 28 percent of the PSD, but by a closer margin than expected. The Second Costa cabinet was sworn in on 26 October 2019.
In October 2020, the PS lost power in the Azores region after the Socialists lost their majority in the region's 2020 October elections. The PS only got 39 percent of the votes, a drop of 7 pp, and 25 seats.[21] The right-wing parties PSD, CDS, PPM, CHEGA, and IL won a majority of one seat over the whole left wing, and a few weeks after the election, they forged a deal that led the PSD to government.[22], the PS is now in opposition in both autonomous regions of the country.
For the 2021 Portuguese presidential election, Costa endorsed the incumbent Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, something that made some party members unsatisfied. Former PS MEP Ana Gomes, a critic of Costa and a member of the left faction of the party, ran for the presidency, declaring herself the candidate of democratic socialism and progressivism, stating that she has been disappointed with the leadership of the party for not having an official candidate.[23] [24] With the support of the left faction of the party and some more moderate members worried about corruption, Gomes finished in a disappointing second place behind de Sousa, who had many endorsements of party leaders like Lisbon's Mayor Fernando Medina, Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues, and Carlos César.The party suffered a setback in the 2021 local elections by losing several cities to the PSD, but, the main defeat was the loss of Lisbon to the PSD candidate, Carlos Moedas, who defeated Fernando Medina by a narrow 34 to 33 percent margin.[25] After the local elections, tensions between the PS and its left-wing allies, BE and CDU, led to the rejection of the 2022 budget which forced the calling of a snap election for January 2022.[26] Despite polls predicting a close race between the PS and PSD, the Socialists won a surprise absolute majority, only the second in their history, with 41 percent of the votes against the 29 percent of the PSD,[27] and winning 120 (52%) of the 230 seats in the Portuguese parliament.
In November 2023, António Costa resigned as Prime Minister and party leader following the Operation Influencer investigation, which investigates suspected corruption activities in the awarding of contracts for the lithium and hydrogen businesses.[28] Following Costa's decision, an early election was called for 10 March 2024.[29] A leadership election was called for 15 and 16 December 2023, which was won by Pedro Nuno Santos with almost 61 percent of the votes.[30]
On the 10 March 2024 election, the Socialist Party was narrowly defeated by the Democratic Alliance (AD), headed by the Social Democratic Party, losing 42 seats and gathering 28 percent of the votes.[31] Three months later, in the 2024 European Parliament elections, the Socialist Party narrowly defeated the AD coalition, by a 32 to 31 percent margin.
The PS is a mainstream centre-left social democratic party with many internal factions, ranging from democratic socialism to social liberalism and centrism. It supports Keynesianism, Europeanism, and progressivism. Like many mainstream social democratic parties, it has previously adopted a Third Way outlook.[10]
Seat share in the Portuguese legislative elections
Colors = id:PS value:rgb(1,0.40,1) legend:Socialist_(PS)
DateFormat = x.yPeriod = from:0 till:60TimeAxis = orientation:verticalScaleMajor = unit:year increment:15 start:0
PlotData = bar:Seats color:claret width:25 mark:(line,white) align:left fontsize:S bar:1975 color:PS from:start till:46.4 text:46.4 bar:1976 color:PS from:start till:40.7 text:40.7 bar:1979 color:PS from:start till:29.6 text:29.6 bar:1980 color:PS from:start till:26.4 text:26.4 bar:1983 color:PS from:start till:37.6 text:37.6 bar:1985 color:PS from:start till:22.8 text:22.8 bar:1987 color:PS from:start till:24.0 text:24.0 bar:1991 color:PS from:start till:31.3 text:31.3 bar:1995 color:PS from:start till:48.7 text:48.7 bar:1999 color:PS from:start till:50.0 text:50.0 bar:2002 color:PS from:start till:41.7 text:41.7 bar:2005 color:PS from:start till:52.6 text:52.6 bar:2009 color:PS from:start till:42.2 text:42.2 bar:2011 color:PS from:start till:32.2 text:32.2 bar:2015 color:PS from:start till:37.4 text:37.4 bar:2019 color:PS from:start till:47.0 text:47.0 bar:2022 color:PS from:start till:52.2 text:52.2 bar:2024 color:PS from:start till:33.9 text:33.9
Election | Leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/- | Government | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1975 | Mário Soares | 2,162,972 | 37.9 (#1) | Constituent assembly | |||
1976 | 1,912,921 | 34.9 (#1) | 9 | Minority | |||
Coalition | |||||||
1979 | 1,642,136 | 27.3 (#2) | 33 | ||||
1980 | Republican and Socialist Front | 8 | |||||
1983 | 2,061,309 | 36.1 (#1) | 28 | Coalition | |||
1985 | António de Almeida Santos | 1,204,321 | 20.8 (#2) | 37 | |||
1987 | Vítor Constâncio | 1,262,506 | 22.2 (#2) | 3 | |||
1991 | Jorge Sampaio | 1,670,758 | 29.1 (#2) | 12 | |||
1995 | António Guterres | 2,583,755 | 43.8 (#1) | 40 | |||
1999 | 2,385,922 | 44.1 (#1) | 3 | ||||
2002 | Eduardo Ferro Rodrigues | 2,068,584 | 37.8 (#2) | 19 | |||
2005 | José Sócrates | 2,588,312 | 45.0 (#1) | 25 | |||
2009 | 2,077,238 | 36.6 (#1) | 24 | ||||
2011 | 1,566,347 | 28.1 (#2) | 23 | ||||
2015 | António Costa | 1,747,685 | 32.3 (#2) | 12 | |||
Minority | |||||||
2019 | 1,903,687 | 36.3 (#1) | 22 | ||||
2022 | 2,302,601 | 41.4 (#1) | 12 | ||||
2024 | Pedro Nuno Santos | 1,812,443 | 28.0 (#2) | 42 |
Election | Candidate | First round | Second round | Result | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||
1976 | Supported António Ramalho Eanes | ||||||
1980 | Supported António Ramalho Eanes | ||||||
1986 | Mário Soares | 1,443,683 | 25.4 (#2) | 3,010,756 | 51.2 (#1) | ||
1991 | 3,459,521 | 70.4 (#1) | bgcolor=lightgrey colspan=2 | ||||
1996 | Jorge Sampaio | 3,035,056 | 53.9 (#1) | bgcolor=lightgrey colspan=2 | |||
2001 | 2,401,015 | 55.6 (#1) | bgcolor=lightgrey colspan=2 | ||||
2006 | Mário Soares | 785,355 | 14.3 (#3) | bgcolor=lightgrey colspan=2 | |||
2011 | Manuel Alegre | 831,838 | 19.7 (#2) | bgcolor=lightgrey colspan=2 | |||
2016 | No candidate | ||||||
2021 | No candidate |
Election | Leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/- | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo | 1,267,672 | 22.5 (#2) | |||
1989 | João Cravinho | 1,184,380 | 28.5 (#2) | 1 | ||
1994 | António Vitorino | 1,061,560 | 34.9 (#1) | 3 | ||
1999 | Mário Soares | 1,493,146 | 43.1 (#1) | 2 | ||
2004 | António Costa | 1,516,001 | 44.5 (#1) | 0 | ||
2009 | Vital Moreira | 946,818 | 26.5 (#2) | 5 | ||
2014 | Francisco Assis | 1,033,158 | 31.5 (#1) | 1 | ||
2019 | Pedro Marques | 1,104,694 | 33.4 (#1) | 1 | ||
2024 | Marta Temido | 1,268,915 | 32.1 (#1) | 1 |
Region | Election | Leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/- | Government | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Azores | 2024 | Vasco Cordeiro | 41,538 | 35.9 (#2) | 2 | |||
Madeira | 2024 | Paulo Cafôfo | 28,981 | 21.3 (#2) | 0 |
19 April 1973 – 29 June 1986
29 June 1986 – 16 January 1989
16 January 1989[32] – 23 February 1992
23 February 1992 – 19 January 2002
19 January 2002 – 27 September 2004
27 September 2004 – 23 July 2011
23 July 2011 – 28 September 2014
22 November 2014 – 7 January 2024
7 January 2024 – present
19 April 1973 – 29 June 1986
29 June 1986 – 14 January 1989
14 January 1989 – 21 February 1992
21 February 1992 – 9 September 2011
9 September 2011 – 29 November 2014
29 November 2014 – present
3 June 1975 – 2 April 1976
29 July 1976 – 29 October 1978
30 October 1978 – 7 January 1980
8 June 1983 – 24 October 1984
31 October 1995 – 4 April 2002
16 March 2005 – 21 June 2011
23 October 2015 – 29 March 2022
29 March 2022 – 25 March 2024
23 July 1976 – 28 August 1978; 9 June 1983 – 6 November 1985
28 October 1995 – 6 April 2002
12 March 2005 – 21 June 2011
26 November 2015 – 2 April 2024
9 November 1996 – 6 November 2012
6 November 2012 – 24 November 2020
9 March 1986 – 9 March 1996
9 March 1996 – 9 March 2006