A snap general election
is to be held in Portugal on 10th March next year. The dissolution of the government following the
resignation of Prime Minister António Costa is
expected in mid-January. Meanwhile Mr. Costa will remain in a caretaker
position.
President
Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa has called for the election because of Mr. Costas’s sudden resignation amid a
corruption scandal. The speaker of parliament said on Friday that parliament
would “continue to scrutinise” the Socialist government until it is
dissolved.
Mr. Costa, prime
minister since November 2015, resigned because of a major investigation into his
administration’s handling of concessions for lithium mining and a hydrogen
project. The Portuguese Prosecutor’s Office has been investigating Mr. Costa
and several members of his cabinet for alleged crimes of active and passive
corruption, prevarication, and influence pedalling.
Mr. Costa
announced his resignation on Tuesday this week in a televised statement just
hours after prosecutors detained his chief of staff over the corruption
allegations.
“The duties of
the prime minister are not compatible with any suspicion of my integrity,” he
told to a televised press conference. “In these circumstances, I have presented
my resignation to the President of the Republic.”
When the prime
minister met with the president to inform him of his decision he said his
conscience was clear, but that he would not stand for another term as prime
minister or leader of Portugal’s Socialist Party.
He said that he
totally trusts the justice system and has promised to collaborate with it over
the scandal. “I want to say eye to eye to the Portuguese that my conscience is
clear of any illicit or censured act,” he said.
In accepting Mr.
Costa’s resignation, President de Sousa summoned the various political parties
for consultations. Observers had expected the president to call not only for
the dissolution of government, but to propose a date for a new general election,
which he has now done rather than accept any proposal for replacement Socialist
leader. .
This crisis
comes at a particularly awkward time as parliament is due to vote on Portugal’s
2024 budget later this month.
In addition to
Mr. Costa’s chief of staff, Vitor Escaria, four other people, including a
business consultant, have been detained, according to the prosecutor’s
office. They are due to appear shortly before a judge.
About 140
detectives reportedly searched many residential and government premises,
including that of Mr. Costa and the infrastructure and environment minister,
João Galamba, as well as municipal offices in Sines.
With the “green
transition” in mind, the European Union wants to reduce its imports on lithium
and other raw materials from China, Africa and South America. Europe’s
increasing demand for electric cars is highlighting Portugal’s valuable lithium
reserves in the north of the country and a huge green hydrogen project in the
historic coastal town of Sines in the district of Setubal south of Lisbon. The
projects have been highly controversial and provoked environmental protests.
This developing story will be
updated.
1 comment:
Costa should have been thrown out long, long, ago but misinformed and poor Portuguese keep voting this guy in; it's as if he's the man who chose to eat the pig and the ham?
On a lighter note, though, yeah it's good we portuguesitos embrace our Arabic heritage of FADO. Fado reflects our Portugee melancholic, sad Arabic and gypsy origins we hold so dear and tight to our hearts! Ahhhhh...i loved walking dwon Rua Joao Pessoa and listening to the gypsies singing and dancing to the arabic fado as i gulped down a bifana, and slurped a Sumol ferociously since i only had 1 meal a day at the sopas dos pobres. Those were good times and good memories in my poor country of portugal. Thankfully, i moved on to bigger and better things but the Fado, ahhhhh the sad, sad portgee fado still remains in my little hart :(
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