Social Democratic Party (Portugal)

The Social Democratic Party (Portuguese: Partido Social Democrata, pronounced [pɐɾˈtiðu susiˈal dɨmuˈkɾatɐ]; PSD) is a liberal-conservative[4][5][6] political party in Portugal that is currently the country's ruling party. Commonly known by its colloquial initials PSD, on ballot papers its initials appear as its official form PPD/PSD, with the first three letters coming from the party's original name, the Democratic People's Party (Partido Popular Democrático, PPD). A party of the centre-right,[7][8][9] the PSD is one of the two major parties in Portuguese politics, its rival being the Socialist Party (PS) on the centre-left.

Social Democratic Party
Partido Social Democrata
AbbreviationPPD/PSD[1]
PresidentLuís Montenegro
Secretary-GeneralHugo Soares
FounderFrancisco Sá Carneiro
Founded6 May 1974; 50 years ago (1974-05-06)
Legalized17 January 1975; 49 years ago (1975-01-17)[1]
HeadquartersRua de S. Caetano à Lapa, 9,
1249-087 Lisboa
NewspaperPovo Livre
Youth wingSocial Democratic Youth
Women's wingSocial Democratic Women
Workers wingSocial Democratic Workers
Membership (2024)Increase 90,422[2]
IdeologyLiberal conservatism
Political positionCentre-right
National affiliationAD (1979–1983)
AP/PàF (2014–2015)
AD (2024–present)
European affiliationEuropean People's Party
European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party
International affiliationCentrist Democrat International
Colours  Orange
Anthem
"Paz, Pão, Povo e Liberdade"[3]
"Peace, Bread, People and Freedom"
Assembly of the Republic
78 / 230
European
Parliament
6 / 21
Regional
parliaments
42 / 104
Local government
(Mayors)
114 / 308
Local government
(Parishes)
1,204 / 3,066
Election symbol
Party flag
Flag of the Social Democratic Party
Website
psd.pt

The PSD was founded in 1974, two weeks after the Carnation Revolution. In 1976, the party adopted its current name. In 1979, the PSD allied with centre-right parties to form the Democratic Alliance and won that year's election. One year later, the party's founder and then Prime Minister, Francisco Sá Carneiro died in a plane crash. After the 1983 general election, the party formed a grand coalition with the Socialist Party, known as the Central Bloc, before winning the 1985 general election under new leader Aníbal Cavaco Silva, who shifted the party to the right. Cavaco Silva served as Prime Minister for ten years, instituting major economic liberalisation and winning two landslide victories. After he stepped down, the PSD lost the 1995 election. The party was returned to power under José Manuel Durão Barroso in 2002, but was defeated in the 2005 election. The party was able to return to power after the 2011 elections and four years later was able to win a plurality in the 2015 legislative election, winning 107 seats in the Assembly of the Republic in alliance with the CDS – People's Party, but being unable to form a minority government and went back to the opposition. Nine years later, in 2024, the party returned to power as a minority government, under a rebranded Democratic Alliance coalition, alongside CDS–PP and the People's Monarchist Party (PPM). The party elected its current leader, Luís Montenegro, on 28 May 2022. Since the 2024 election, Montenegro has been the incumbent Prime Minister of Portugal.

Originally a social democratic party, the PSD became the main centre-right, conservative party in Portugal.[7] The PSD is a member of the European People's Party and the Centrist Democrat International. Until 1996, the PSD belonged to the European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party and Liberal International.[7] The party publishes the weekly Povo Livre (Free People) newspaper.

History

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Foundation

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Francisco Sá Carneiro (1934–1980), PSD founder and Prime Minister (1980).

The Social Democratic Party was born on 6 May 1974, when Francisco Sá Carneiro, Francisco Pinto Balsemão and Joaquim Magalhães Mota publicly announced the formation of what was then called the PPD, the Democratic People's Party (Portuguese: Partido Popular Democrático). On 15 May, the party's first headquarters were inaugurated in Largo do Rato, Lisbon. This was followed, on 24 June, by the formation of the first Political Committee, consisting of Francisco Sá Carneiro, Francisco Pinto Balsemão, Joaquim Magalhães Mota, Barbosa de Melo, Mota Pinto, Montalvão Machado, Miguel Veiga, Ferreira Júnior, António Carlos Lima, António Salazar Silva, Jorge Correia da Cunha, Jorge Figueiredo Dias and Jorge Sá Borges.

The Povo Livre publication was founded, its first issue being published on 13 July 1974, led by its first two directors, Manuel Alegria and Rui Machete. The PPD's first major meeting was held in the Pavilhão dos Desportos, Lisbon, on 25 October, and a month later the party's first official congress took place.

On 17 January 1975, 6300 signatures were sent to the Supreme Court so that the party could be approved as a legitimate political entity, which happened a mere eight days later.

In 1975, the PPD applied unsuccessfully to join the Socialist International,[10] with its membership attempt vetoed by the Socialist Party.[11]

Alberto João Jardim was the co-founder of the Madeiran branch of the PSD, and governed the autonomous archipelago for decades, running as a member of the party.

Democratic Alliance governments

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The Democratic People's Party participated in a number of coalition governments in Portugal between 1974 and 1976, following the Carnation Revolution. This is seen as a transitional period in Portuguese politics, in which political institutions were built and took time to stabilize. In 1976, the party adopted its current name. In 1979, the PSD formed an electoral alliance, known as the Democratic Alliance (AD), with the Democratic and Social Centre (now called the People's Party, CDS-PP) and a couple of smaller right-wing parties. The AD won the parliamentary elections towards the end of 1979, and the PSD leader, Francisco Sá Carneiro, became Prime Minister. The PSD would be part of all governments until 1995. The AD increased its parliamentary majority in new elections called for 1980, but was devastated by the death of Sá Caneiro in an air crash on 4 December 1980. Francisco Pinto Balsemão took over the leadership of both the Social Democratic Party and the Democratic Alliance, as well as the Prime Ministership, but lacking Sá Carneiro's charisma, he was unable to rally popular support.

The Democratic Alliance was dissolved in 1983, and in parliamentary elections that year, the PSD lost to the Socialist Party (PS). Falling short of a majority, however, the Socialists formed a grand coalition, known as the Central Bloc, with the PSD. Many right-wingers in the PSD, including Aníbal Cavaco Silva, opposed participation in the PS-led government, and so, when Cavaco Silva was elected leader of the party on 2 June 1985, the coalition was doomed.

Cavaco Silva governments (1985–1995)

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Aníbal Cavaco Silva, Prime Minister 1985–1995, meeting US President Ronald Reagan in 1988.

The PSD won a plurality (but not a majority) in the general election of 1985, and Cavaco Silva became Prime Minister. Economic liberalization and tax cuts ushered in several years of economic growth. After a motion of no confidence was approved, early elections were called for July 1987, which resulted in a landslide victory for the PSD, who captured 50.2 percent of the popular vote and 148 of the 250 parliamentary seats – the first time that any political party in Portugal had mustered an absolute majority in a free election. While the PSD had been very popular going into the election, the size of its victory far exceeded the party's most optimistic projections. A strong economy, growing above 7 percent in 1988, ushered a big convergence between Portugal and other EU countries.

The PSD won a historic third term in the 1991 election, with a slightly higher vote share than four years earlier, 50.6 percent. However, the early 1990s recession hit Portugal in 1993 and high levels of unemployment adding to this fiscal adjustments, eroded the popularity of the Cavaco Silva's government. The anti-tolls riots in 25 de Abril Bridge in June 1994 and the violent response from security forces, further undermined Cavaco Silva's position.[12] In early 1995, Cavaco Silva announced he would not run for a fourth term as Prime Minister.[13]

Post-Cavaco Silva

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After Cavaco Silva stepped down as leader in January 1995, in the following month, in the PSD congress, the party elected Fernando Nogueira as leader. The PSD lost the 1995 election to the PS. In 1996, Cavaco Silva ran for the presidency of the republic, but he failed to defeat former Lisbon Mayor Jorge Sampaio. Sampaio won 53.9 percent to Cavaco's 46.1 percent. The party, for the first time in 16 years, was out of government. In 1996, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa was elected party leader, and held that post until 1999. At the time, the party reviewed its membership database, resulting in a correction from 183,000 in 1996 to 77,000 in 1999.[14] Rebelo de Sousa resigned in April 1999 and shortly after, José Manuel Durão Barroso was elected party leader. The party was again defeated in the 1999 elections. The party, however, made a big comeback in the 2001 local elections by winning several cities, like Lisbon, Porto and Sintra, from the PS and, some, against all odds and predictions.[15] This PSD result led the then Prime Minister António Guterres (PS) to resign and the country was led to snap general elections in March 2002.[16]

First PSD/CDS coalition government (2002–2005)

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Durão Barroso, Prime Minister 2002–2004, in a press briefing with Tony Blair, George W. Bush and José Maria Aznar in 2003.

The PSD made a comeback in 2002 by defeating the PS by 40 to 38 percent margin, however, despite falling short of a majority, the PSD won enough seats to form a coalition with the CDS-PP, and the PSD leader, José Manuel Durão Barroso, became Prime Minister. During his term, Barroso aligned Portugal with the United Kingdom, the United States and Spain in the support for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, hosting a summit in Lajes Field, which divided public opinion.[17]

In the 2004 European Parliament election, the PSD formed an electoral coalition with CDS-PP, the first since 1980, but was soundly defeated by the PS by 45 to 33 percent margin. A few days after the election, Durão Barroso announced his resignation from the office of Prime Minister in order to become President of the European Commission, leaving the way for Pedro Santana Lopes, by then Mayor of Lisbon and a man with whom he was frequently at odds, to become leader of the party and Prime Minister.

Back in opposition (2005–2011)

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In the parliamentary election held on 20 February 2005, Santana Lopes led the PSD to its worst defeat since 1983. With a negative swing of more than 12 percent, the party won only 75 seats, a loss of 30. The rival Socialist Party had won an absolute majority, and remained in government after the 2009 parliamentary election, albeit without an absolute majority, leaving the PSD in opposition.

 
Manuela Ferreira Leite, the first woman to lead a major party in Portuguese democracy and the still only woman to ever lead the PSD.

The PSD-supported candidate Aníbal Cavaco Silva won the Portuguese presidential elections in 2006 and again in 2011. After the 2005 elections, Luís Marques Mendes was elected leader of the party. Internal infighting weakened Marques Mendes and, in September 2007, Marques Mendes was defeated by Luís Filipe Menezes by a 54% to 42% margin. Menezes was also incapable of dealing with his internal opposition and, after just six months in the job, Menezes resigned. On 31 May 2008, Manuela Ferreira Leite became the first female leader of a major Portuguese party. She won 38 percent of the votes, against the 31% of Pedro Passos Coelho and the 30% of Pedro Santana Lopes.

In the European Parliament election held on 7 June 2009, the PSD defeated the governing socialists, capturing 31.7 percent of the popular vote and electing eight MEPs, while the Socialist Party only won 26.5 percent and elected seven MEPs.

Although this was expected to be a "redrawing of the electoral map", the PSD has still defeated later that year, though the PS lost its majority. Pedro Passos Coelho was elected leader in March 2010, with 61 percent of the votes.

Second PSD/CDS coalition government (2011–2015)

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Growing popular disenchantment with the government's handling of the economic crisis coupled with the government's inability to secure the support of other parties to implement the necessary reforms to address the crisis, forced the Socialist Party Prime Minister José Sócrates to resign, leading to a fresh election on 5 June 2011. This resulted in a non-absolute majority for the PSD, leading to a coalition government with the CDS-PP, which served a full term until the 2015 general election. During this term, many austerity policies were put into practice to reduce the budget deficit but, ultimately, created unemployment and a recession that lasted until mid 2013. Since that date, the economy recovered starting to grow between 1 and 2 percent per trimester.

In the 2015 general election, the PSD and CDS-PP ran in a joint coalition, called Portugal Ahead, led by Pedro Passos Coelho and Paulo Portas. The coalition won the elections by a wide margin over the Socialists, capturing 38.6 percent of the votes while the Socialists captured only 32 percent, although the coalition lost 25 MPs and a more than 11 percent of the votes, thus falling well short of an absolute majority. The PSD/CDS-PP coalition was asked by the then President of the Republic, Aníbal Cavaco Silva, to form a government with Passos Coelho as Prime Minister.

Back in opposition (2015–2024)

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Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, party leader between 1996–1999 and President of the Republic since 2016.

The second PSD/CDS government was duly formed and took the oath of office on 30 October 2015, but fell after a no-confidence motion was approved two weeks later. Its 11 days of rule make it the shortest-lived government since Portugal has been a democracy holding free elections. After that, the PSD returned to the opposition benches, and the Socialist Party was able to form an agreement with BE and CDU to support a PS minority government led by António Costa. Pedro Passos Coelho continued as party leader, but a weak opposition strategy led to bad polling numbers for the PSD. All of this culminated with the results of the 2017 local elections. In these elections, the PSD achieved their worst results ever, winning just 98 mayors and 30 percent of the votes. Passos Coelho announced he would not run for another term as PSD leader. On 13 January 2018, Rui Rio defeated Pedro Santana Lopes by a 54 to 46 percent margin and became the new party leader. After 10 years of Cavaco Silva as President of the Republic, the PSD-supported candidate, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, was elected President in 2016, and re-elected in 2021.

In order to avoid bankruptcy due to mounting debt, in 2017, the party, alongside the Portuguese Socialist Party, 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.[18][19][20][21] The new proposal was reluctantly approved by the Portuguese president Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa.[22]

During his first year in the leadership, Rio faced big internal opposition and, in January 2019, Rio won a motion of confidence presented by Luís Montenegro. In the EP 2019 elections, the PSD achieved their worst result ever in a national election, winning just 22 percent of the votes. However, the party recovered a lot of ground in the October 2019 general elections, achieving 28 percent of the votes, against the 36 percent of the PS. Nonetheless, Rio's leadership was, once again, challenged and he faced, in a two round leadership contest in January 2020, Luís Montenegro and Miguel Pinto Luz. Rio won the 1st round with 49% of the votes and defeated Luís Montenegro in the 2nd round by 53 to 47 percent margin, thus being re-elected as party leader.

In the Azores 2020 regional elections, the PSD was able to return to power, after 24 years in opposition, by forging a controversial deal with CHEGA, plus CDS, PPM and IL.[23] The PSD won almost 34 percent of the votes, while the PS fell more than 7 pp, compared with 2016, to 39 percent, an unexpected result, and overall the right wing parties had a 1-seat majority over all the left.[24] After 2020, the PSD controls the governments of Portugal's only two autonomous regions.

 
Luís Montenegro, leader since 2022 and Prime Minister since 2024.

The 2021 local elections were quite positive for the PSD, despite not winning the most mayors in the country as a whole.[25] The party, and its led-coalitions, won a combined 32 percent of the votes and were able to win, from the PS, several cities like Coimbra, Funchal and Barcelos. The main gain of the PSD was the victory in Lisbon, where Carlos Moedas defeated, against all odds and predictions, the PS incumbent mayor Fernando Medina.[26] In October 2021, disagreements between the PS and BE-CDU led to the rejection of the 2022 budget and the calling of a snap general election for 30 January 2022.[27] Despite a close race predicted by polls, the PSD suffered a big setback by winning just 29% of the votes and seeing the PS gaining a surprise absolute majority, with 41% of the votes.[28] After the election, PSD leader Rui Rio opened the process to elect a new party leader.[29] On 28 May 2022, Luís Montenegro was elected party leader by a landslide, gathering more than 72 percent of the votes.[30]

Return to power (2024–present)

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Following António Costa's resignation due to an investigation around alleged corruption involving the award of contracts for lithium and hydrogen businesses,[31] a snap election was called for 10 March 2024. For this election, PSD, CDS–PP and PPM decided to contest the election in a joint alliance called Democratic Alliance (AD). On election day, the AD won by a narrow 29 to 28 percent margin over the Socialist Party, and formed a minority government.[32] Three months later, in the 2024 European Parliament elections, the AD coalition was narrowly defeated by the Socialists, 31 to 32 percent.

Ideology

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Historical evolution

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The party was founded based on classical social democracy[7] and was a centre[33][34] to centre-left[35] party. However, it later evolved into a catch-all centre-right party. The party has been described as liberal-conservative,[5][6] conservative,[7][36] or conservative-liberal,[37] with Christian democratic, liberal and economically liberal elements.[35][38][39]

Factions

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The PSD is frequently referred to as a party that is not ideology-based, but rather a power party (partido do poder).[40] It frequently adopts a functional big tent party strategy to win elections.[40] Due to this strategy, which most trace to Cavaco Silva's leadership,[41] the party is made up of many factions, mostly centre-right (including liberal democrats, Christian democrats and neoconservatives) as well as quasi-social-democrats and former communists:

The main faction when the party was created, throughout the party's history rightist politicians joined them to have a greater chance of gaining power and influencing the country's politics (see liberals, conservatives, right-wing populists and neoliberals). They do not follow traditional social democracy, but Portuguese social democracy as defined by Francisco Sá Carneiro's actions and writings, which includes a degree of centrist and leftist populism. They followed a kind of anti-class struggle party/cross-class party strategy. All the other members of the party claim to follow this line. Among its representatives were most of the leaders between Francisco Sá Carneiro and Cavaco Silva, Alberto João Jardim (also a founding member and an anti-neoliberal) and to an extent Luís Filipe Menezes (who called the PSD the "moderate left party")[42] identified himself with a centre-left matrix and a united left strategy and defended a more open party on issues like abortion.[43] José Mendes Bota is another left-wing populist.[44] The Portuguese social-democrats are centered around the Grupo da Boavista (Boavista Group).

Follow traditional social democracy. They share with the Portuguese social democrats their presence at the creation of the party and "a non-Marxist progressivist line".[45] Many of them (former party leader António Sousa Franco, party co-founder Magalhães Mota, writer and feminist Natália Correia) supported the Opções Inadiáveis (Pressing Options) manifesto,[46] and then left to create the Independent Social Democrat Association (Associação Social Democrata Independente, ASDI)[47] and the Social Democrat Movement (Movimento Social Democrata, MSD),[48] forming electoral coalitions (later merging with) the Socialist Party during the 1970s–1980s. Some took part in the Democratic Renovator Party. A later example of a European-style Social democrat leaving the party for the Socialists is activist and politician Helena Roseta. The ones still in the party adapted to its current right-wing outlook or Portuguese social democracy. They today include former communists-turned centre-leftists, like Zita Seabra. Durão Barroso might have moved from Thatcherism to social democracy.[49] Ironically, both Social Democrat factions were represented in the 2008 party elections by Manuela Ferreira Leite, economically neoliberal and socially conservative (often compared to Thatcher).

The other main faction at creation. The PSD was always more successful in the Northern and rural areas of the country. When Sousa Franco and his SPD-inspired social democrats started their break with the rest of the party he referred to a division between "a rural wing, led by Sá Carneiro, and an urban wing, more moderate and truly social democratic, close to the positions of Helmut Schmidt"[50] Due to the electoral influence of ruralism on the PSD's politics they may be seen inside of or influencing most factions.

Due to the Salazarist connotation of the term right-wing[51] and all terms connected (liberal and conservative) after the Carnation Revolution, the little attractiveness of economic liberalism in European politics,[52] no specific liberal or conservative party was formed in post-1974 Portugal, except the experiences of the Catholic Action-monarchist Liberal Party in 1974[53] and the centrist liberal Democratic Renovator Party, so they started working inside the PSD. This strategy of joining "socialism and liberalism under the same hat"[40] was especially successful during Cavaco Silva's leadership, when the party gave up its candidacy to the Socialist International and became member of the Liberal International and European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party and Liberal and Democratic Reformist Group, leaving the international and the European party and group in 1996 to join the Christian Democrat International (today Centrist Democrat International), the European People's Party and the European People's Party-European Democrats. Since then, the liberal-social democrat rift (or even the liberal-conservative-populist-social democrat rift) has plagued the party's cohesion and actions.[54][55] Durão Barroso (a former revolutionary Maoist who switched sides in the 1980s) is sometimes referred to as the most pure liberal of the party.[56] In terms of social liberals, some try to link both social democracy and social liberalism to the PSD,[57] to refer to the early PSD as liberal[58] or partly social liberal[59] party and social liberalism is sometimes identified with the social market economy tradition the party traditionally supported.[60] Even members of the Portuguese Social Liberal Movement admit the traditional and current presence of social liberals (and other liberals) on the PSD.[61]

Some claim the PSD as the party from Christian democracy and social Christianity from the beginning,[62] or having these currents as part of its legacy.[59] Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa is one of the main preachers of Social Christianity inside the PSD. As is Paulo Rangel.[63]

Distinct from radical right-wing populists, the populist centre and centre-left social democrats (like João Jardim and Sá Carneiro), the populist overlappers (like Cavaco Silva), and the Eurosceptic populists of the Democratic and Social Centre–People's Party (CDS-PP). They are social-economic liberal conservative/conservative liberal and moderate culturally religious conservatives and internationalist national conservatives. Their main representative is Pedro Santana Lopes. Though the main right-wing populists were present at the founding of the party (like Santana Lopes), they were clearly right-wing, recruited when their abilities were noticed in educated circles and universities,[64] with minor agreements with Sá Carneiro's philosophy. Frequently as the PSD is a bipartisanship party, right-wing populists from the CDS-PP join the party. Luís Filipe Meneses is frequently described as a populist but he tried to lead the party back to a left line,[65] and does not identify or act like the liberal conservative/conservative liberal populists.

With the post-revolutionary opposition to the right (see above in liberal) no specific conservative party was founded in Portugal; conservatives acted inside the CDS-PP and the PSD. Frequently linked with the neoliberals, pure conservatives are rare in the party as the usual partisan or politician of the party is economically moderate, but socially conservative. One of the rare exceptions of a pure conservative in this party was former party member and MP Vasco Pulido Valente, who is highly elitist and a cultural purist (unlike most of the party's partisans, who have various degrees of populism or meritocracy), highly conservative and traditionalist.[66]

Mostly former communists and leftists who supported the policies of the Bush administration and defend similar views in Portuguese politics. The main example is José Pacheco Pereira[67][68] (though his support of the Bush doctrine on the invasion of Iraq is sometimes challenged.[69] They are frequently referred to as "Cavaco-ists" due to their support of cavacoism's legacy and candidates representative of it, like Cavaco Silva himself and Ferreira Leite, defending the position that they should take a hard stance on the left and its social liberalism).[70]

Neoliberal tendencies were introduced in Portuguese economy by Cavaco Silva, removing socialism from the constitution and finishing the de-collectivization of the economy started with Sá Carneiro. Cavaco (a self-described neo-Keynesian) never employed a totally Reaganite or Thatcherite strategy, maintaining a social democrat matrix and many (right and left-wing) populist and neo-Keynesian policies. Alberto João Jardim described the inconsistent neoliberalism of the PSD as "those Chicago Boys have some funny ideas, but when election time arrives the old Keynesianism is still what counts".[71] Cavaco Silva and Durão Barroso are both sometimes referred to as the closest to neo-liberal leaders of the party.[72] The main pure representative of the streak is Manuela Ferreira Leite, but even she called herself a social democrat and explained "I'm not certainly liberal, I'm also not populist"[73] and lead the social democratic factions during internal party rifts, though she accepts the nickname "Portuguese iron lady" and comparisons to Thatcher if "[it] means [...] an enormous intransigence on values and in principles, of not abdicating from these values and from these principles and of continuing my way independently of the popularity of my actions and the effects on my image".[73] The main group (officially non-partisan) associated with the neoliberal faction of the PSD is the Projecto Farol (Lighthouse Project).[74]

Overlappers

The average PSD voter and partisan since Cavaco Silva's leadership. Cavaco himself, though a self-described Neo-Keynesian, an early member of the party since its centre-left days and a man with social-liberal and centrist populist economic policy tendencies, he is personally a social conservative (opposing same-sex marriage[75] and abortion) and a practicing Catholic.[76] As such, Cavacoism should be considered a "hybrid" or a political syncretism.[77] A similar case is Vasco Graça Moura, who claims to be an economic social democrat but opposes gay people serving in the military and is a self-described "centre-left reactionary".[78] The overlappers are mainly represented in the forums gathered by the District of Oporto section of the party, which during the 2009 European elections tried to gather the ideas of all factions.

Not to be confused with overlappers. Still indecisive between (traditional or Portuguese) social democracy, social liberalism or any other kind of centrism.

Transversalists

Are pragmatic although open to privatization and civil society alternatives to the social state, in speech they move closer to the centre-left origins of the party and are generally proud of them.[79] The main representative of this faction is Pedro Passos Coelho, who claims to be neither left nor right, but that "the real issues are between old and new",[80] though his opponents identified him as a liberal (in the conservative-liberal or neoliberal European sense) since the 2008 party election, though he recalled the many meanings of liberal and recalled the left liberalism of the United States Democratic Party,[81] being even called "PSD's Obama" by supporters. Centrists and transversalists inside the party share the think tank Construir Ideias (Building Ideas), which Passos Coelho founded and leads.[74] They mix (like the closely allied centrists) calls to privatization with others to more social justice, government regulation and arbitration and strategic governmental involvement in the economy. This faction is in constant rift with the more socially right-wing ones (who have been leading the party for a long time) and also with the overlappers whose hybrid approach they refuse, over the future of the party and its future ideological and philosophical alignments.

Election results

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Assembly of the Republic

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Seat share in the Portuguese legislative elections

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/- Government
1975 Francisco Sá Carneiro 1,507,282 26.4 (#2)
81 / 250
Constituent assembly
1976 1,335,381 24.4 (#2)
73 / 263
 8 Opposition
1979 Democratic Alliance
80 / 250
 7 Coalition
1980 Democratic Alliance
82 / 250
 2 Coalition
1983 Carlos Mota Pinto 1,554,804 27.2 (#2)
75 / 250
 7 Coalition[a]
1985 Aníbal Cavaco Silva 1,732,288 29.9 (#1)
88 / 250
 13 Minority[b]
1987 2,850,784 50.2 (#1)
148 / 250
 60 Majority
1991 2,902,351 50.6 (#1)
135 / 230
 13 Majority
1995 Fernando Nogueira 2,014,589 34.1 (#2)
88 / 230
 47 Opposition
1999 José Manuel Durão Barroso 1,750,158 32.3 (#2)
81 / 230
 7 Opposition
2002 2,200,765 40.2 (#1)
105 / 230
 24 Coalition[c]
2005 Pedro Santana Lopes 1,653,425 28.8 (#2)
71 / 230
 34 Opposition
2009 Manuela Ferreira Leite 1,653,665 29.1 (#2)
81 / 230
 10 Opposition
2011 Pedro Passos Coelho 2,159,181 38.7 (#1)
108 / 230
 27 Coalition[d]
2015 Portugal Ahead
89 / 230
 19 Coalition[e]
Opposition
2019 Rui Rio 1,454,283 27.8 (#2)
79 / 230
 10 Opposition
2022 1,618,381 29.1 (#2)
77 / 230
 2 Opposition
2024 Luís Montenegro Democratic Alliance
78 / 230
 1 Coalition[f]

Presidential

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Election Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Votes %
1976 Supported António Ramalho Eanes Won  Y
1980 António Soares Carneiro 2,325,481 40.2 (#2) Lost  N
1986 Diogo Freitas do Amaral 2,629,597 46.3 (#1) 2,872,064 48.8 (#2) Lost  N
1991 Supported Mário Soares Won  Y
1996 Aníbal Cavaco Silva 2,595,131 46.1 (#2) Lost  N
2001 Joaquim Ferreira do Amaral 1,498,948 34.7 (#2) Lost  N
2006 Aníbal Cavaco Silva 2,773,431 50.5 (#1) Won  Y
2011 2,231,956 53.0 (#1) Won  Y
2016 Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa 2,413,956 52.0 (#1) Won  Y
2021 2,531,692 60.7 (#1) Won  Y

European Parliament

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Election Leader Votes % Seats +/- EP Group
1987 Pedro Santana Lopes 2,111,828 37.5 (#1)
10 / 24
LDR
1989 António Capucho 1,358,958 32.8 (#1)
9 / 24
 1
1994 Eurico de Melo 1,046,918 34.4 (#2)
9 / 25
 0 EPP
1999 José Pacheco Pereira 1,078,528 31.1 (#2)
9 / 25
 0 EPP-ED
2004 João de Deus Pinheiro Forward Portugal
7 / 24
 2
2009 Paulo Rangel 1,131,744 31.7 (#1)
8 / 22
 1 EPP
2014 Portugal Alliance
6 / 21
 2
2019 725,399 21.9 (#2)
6 / 21
 0
2024 Sebastião Bugalho Democratic Alliance
6 / 21
 0

Regional Assemblies

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Region Election Leader Votes % Seats +/- Government
Azores 2024 José Manuel Bolieiro PSD/CDS/PPM
23 / 57
 2 Coalition
Madeira 2024 Miguel Albuquerque 49,104 36.1 (#1)
19 / 47
 1 Minority[g]

Organization

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Party leaders

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List of leaders

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Leader[h] From To
1st Francisco Sá Carneiro 24 November 1974 25 May 1975
2nd Emídio Guerreiro 25 May 1975 28 September 1975
Francisco Sá Carneiro (2nd time) 28 September 1975 11 November 1977
3rd António de Sousa Franco 11 November 1977[82] 15 April 1978
4th José Menéres Pimentel 15 April 1978 2 July 1978
Francisco Sá Carneiro (3rd time) 2 July 1978 4 December 1980
5th Francisco Pinto Balsemão 13 December 1980 27 February 1983
6th Nuno Rodrigues dos Santos 27 February 1983 25 March 1984
7th Carlos Mota Pinto 25 March 1984 10 February 1985
8th Rui Machete 10 February 1985 19 May 1985
9th Aníbal Cavaco Silva 19 May 1985 19 February 1995
10th Fernando Nogueira 19 February 1995 31 March 1996
11th Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa 31 March 1996 1 May 1999
12th José Manuel Durão Barroso 2 May 1999 30 June 2004
13th Pedro Santana Lopes 30 June 2004 10 April 2005
14th Luís Marques Mendes 8 April 2005 12 October 2007
15th Luís Filipe Menezes 12 October 2007 20 June 2008
16th Manuela Ferreira Leite 20 June 2008 9 April 2010
17th Pedro Passos Coelho 9 April 2010 16 February 2018
18th Rui Rio 16 February 2018 1 July 2022
19th Luís Montenegro 1 July 2022[83] Incumbent

Graphical timeline

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Luís MontenegroRui RioPedro Passos CoelhoManuela Ferreira LeiteLuís Filipe MenezesLuís Marques MendesPedro Santana LopesJosé Manuel BarrosoMarcelo Rebelo de SousaFernando NogueiraAníbal Cavaco SilvaRui MacheteCarlos Mota PintoNuno Rodrigues dos SantosFrancisco Pinto BalsemãoJosé Menéres PimentelAntónio Sousa FrancoEmídio GuerreiroFrancisco Sá Carneiro

List of secretaries-general (second-in-command)

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National headquarters of the Social Democratic Party in S. Caetano à Lapa street, Estrela, Lisbon.

Source:[84]

Prime ministers

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Presidents of the Republic

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Symbols

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Logos

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The orange color is dominant in the PSD symbols and flags since 1974 and the logo is characterized by three arrows, inspired in the Three Arrows political symbol from the German Social Democratic Party during the 1930s against Nazism. In the PSD logo, the three arrows represent freedom, equality and solidarity - a traditional social democratic motto, with its roots in the French Revolution.[85]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Central Bloc government (PSPSD).
  2. ^ Confidence & supply gov't: PSD ⇐ (CDSPRD).
  3. ^ Coalition government (PSDCDS–PP).
  4. ^ Coalition government (PSDCDS–PP).
  5. ^ Minority government (2015); Opposition (2015–2019).
  6. ^ Minority Coalition government (PSDCDS–PP).
  7. ^ Confidence & supply gov't: PSD ⇐ (CDS–PP).
  8. ^ Leaders until 31 October 1976 had the title of General-Secretary,[86] which from then on became the title of the second-in-command, with the leader's title being the one of President.

References

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  2. ^ "Pagamento de quotas ao segundo". psd.pt. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  3. ^ "Os hinos que se cantavam nas primeiras eleições".
  4. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2019). "Portugal". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
  5. ^ a b Josep M. Colomer (2008). "Spain and Portugal: Rule by Party Leadership". In Josep M. Colomer (ed.). Comparative European Politics (3rd ed.). Routledge. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-134-07354-2.
  6. ^ a b Oppelland, Torsten (2007). "Das Parteiensystem der Europäischen Union". In Oskar Niedermayer; Richard Stöss; Melanie Haas (eds.). Die Parteiensysteme Westeuropas. Springer-Verlag. p. 373. ISBN 978-3-531-90061-2.
  7. ^ a b c d e Almeida, Dimitri (2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. Taylor & Francis. p. 99. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0.
  8. ^ Freire, André (2007). "The Party System of Portugal". In Oskar Niedermayer; Richard Stöss; Melanie Haas (eds.). Die Parteiensysteme Westeuropas. Springer-Verlag. p. 373. ISBN 978-3-531-90061-2.
  9. ^ Lisi, Marco (2007). "The Importance of Winning Office: The PS and the Struggle for Power". In Anna Bosco; Leonardo Morlino (eds.). Party Change in Southern Europe. Routledge. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-136-76777-7.
  10. ^ Gunther, Richard (1991). "Spain and Portugal". In Gerald Allen Dorfman; Peter J. Duignan (eds.). Politics in Western Europe. Hoover Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-8179-9123-4. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  11. ^ Takis S. Pappas (2001). "In Search of the Center: Conservative Parties, Electoral Competition, and Political Legitimacy in Southern Europe's New Democracies". In Nikiforos P. Diamandouros; Richard Gunther (eds.). Parties, Politics, and Democracy in the New Southern Europe. JHU Press. p. 259. ISBN 978-0-8018-6518-3. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
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  20. ^ Pela calada do Natal aconteceu o saque partidário in Jornal Eco, consulted on August 9, 2022
  21. ^ Partidos sem limites para angariar fundos e com devolução total do IVA in Jornal Público, retrieved on August 9, 2022
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  31. ^ "António Costa demite-se: "Obviamente"". CNN Portugal (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 12 November 2023. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
  32. ^ "Portugal's center-right wins an election but surging populists want a say in the government". Associated Press. 21 March 2024. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
  33. ^ Manuel, Paul Christopher (1996). The Challenges of Democratic Consolidation in Portugal: Political, Economic, and Military Issues, 1976-1991. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-275-94849-8. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
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  39. ^ Hloušek, Vít; Kopeček, Lubomír (2010). "The Liberals; Or, the Curse of the Political Center". Origin, Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties: East-Central and Western Europe Compared. Ashgate Publishing. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-7546-7840-3.
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  86. ^ Líderes, PSD
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