The March 2 anti-austerity
demonstrations thrust Portugal
into the limelight far beyond Europe in newspapers
as diverse as USA Today and the Times of India, the Jamaica Observer and the Bangkok
Post.
Editors and readers
would have been struck by the scale of the event (hundreds of thousands of
protesters in more than 40 cities). The name of the main organisers had gutsy
appeal: Que se Lixe a Troika (variously
translated as ‘Damn’, ‘Screw’ or ‘F***’ the Troika).
The story was
enlivened because it was a display of ‘people power’ coinciding with a visit to
Lisbon by
representatives of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. Demands that the government must resign and renditions
of the song that echoed the Portuguese revolution of 1974 added an extra edge.
One of the more
searing quotes came from Fabio Carvalho, a filmmaker taking part in the protest
in Lisbon . He
told Reuters: “This government has left the people on bread
and water, selling off state assets for peanuts to pay back debts that were
contracted by corrupt politicians to benefit bankers.”
The opposition
Socialist leader, António José Seguro was succinct in his appraisal: “It
is time to stop austerity, to stop the impoverishment of the Portuguese and Portugal .”
All in all, a
mixture of zestful organisation and heart-felt spontaneity resulted in street
drama full of sound bites and powerful images reflecting social angst - yet
free from the violence that has marred similar protests in other countries in
the Mediterranean region.
But what did it achieve?
The main messages
certainly did not go unnoticed by Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho, his
centre-right government or the Troika lenders who insisted on austerity
measures as a condition for the €78 billion bailout in 2011.
In denouncing the
present government in general and its imposition of severe austerity in particular,
the protesters have added impetus to the Movemento
12 de Março formed by activists in 2011 to “make every citizen a
politician” in the promotion of democracy in this country.
The 2011
demonstrations helped bring about the collapse of the last Socialist government
and there is now renewed determination to oust the present conservative administration.
Declared Armenio
Carlos, Secretary-General of the CGTP, Portugal ’s largest trade union: “Today
it is clear that this government has no political legitimacy, has no moral
legitimacy, has no ethical legitimacy to continue to govern, because any visit
by any minister is followed with protests and demands for the resignation of
the government. The government has become the problem that prevents the
solution.”
Widely condemned
as they are, Passos Coelho and his government have a comfortable majority in
Parliament. National elections are still two years away.
After chairing a
meeting in Brussels of EU finance ministers, Jeroen Dijsselbloem of the Netherlands told reporters that Portugal is “on
track and performing well despite challenging macroeconomic circumstances.”
Furthermore, the Wall Street Journal pointed out: “The
government's commitment to the bailout conditions has encouraged international
investors, enabling Portugal
to sell its bonds in the market and increasing its chances of covering its
financing needs when the bailout program expires in mid-2014.” But, the paper
added, “growing political and social opposition to the austerity measures could
threaten the government’s control of its finances.”
The EU finance ministers have
since agreed in principle to requests by both Portugal
and Ireland
for extensions to the deadlines for repayments of their loans.
Analysts believe the Troika may go along with the requests in order to avert
the growing danger of further political turmoil. We will have to
wait a little longer to find out.
Bloomberg this week quoted the EU’s Economic and
Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn as saying: “I hope we can conclude this
work and give a strong message of confidence” when the ministers meet in Dublin in April.”
The April message
is unlikely to satisfy the anti-austerity, anti-Passos Coelho lobby. Meanwhile, it is far from clear what
alternative economic recovery plan would be better and who would be better
equipped to implement it.
2 comments:
I think the last para sums up the whole problem. Is the opposition Socialist leader António José Seguro the right man to lead Portugal from the darkness into the light? I suspect that when election time comes that Passos Coelho will have emough behind him to start to offer the elctorate some sweeties, e.g. raise the minimum wage, reduce IVA on selected sectors etc In the meantime the current regime, with the exception of Economy Minister Pereira and maybe the fragrate Assunçao Cristas in Agriculture, has become bunker-bound, not seeing that some of the ayusterity measures make no sense either politically or financially e.g the 'guia de transporte' system starting in May which will cost 1.2 billion a year to implement with no discenrible upside apart from more money taken by the GRN in roadside fines.
Can such a 'small' country & economy ever dig their way out of the debt they have created? I feel it is similar to the guy with his credit card at maximum & insufficient income to pay pay the minimum !
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