In the swings and
roundabouts of public life in Portugal ,
the on-going economic crisis has produced another political one.
If the present
government collapses, which suddenly looks likely, there is no guarantee that
an alternative one will fare any better. The country is in turmoil.
As of today in a
fast changing scenario, President Aníbal Cavaco Silva is challenged
with brokering a deal that will hold the government together and avert the need
for another snap election.
The last Socialist
government of José Sócrates was forced to quit in 2011 when all opposition
parties rejected proposed spending cuts and tax increases as too excessive.
Opposition
parties are levelling the same criticism against the current, highly unpopular
centre-right government of Pedro Passos Coelho. Unlike Soctares’ minority
government, Passos Coelho's coalition looked secure because it had a comfortable
majority in parliament.
Even during last
week’s general strike and anti-austerity demonstrations, there seemed little
likelihood of the government collapsing. But a week is a long time in
politics....
Everything
suddenly changed with the resignation of Paulo Portas, foreign minister and leader
of the coalition’s junior partner, the right-wing CDS-PP party. It came less
than 24 hours after Vitor Gaspar resigned as finance minister. Two other
coalition ministers are reportedly set to follow. Without the coalition, the
government loses its majority.
In a hastily
called TV address to the nation, Passos Coelho (right) vowed to fight on. "With
me, the country will not choose political, economic and social collapse. There
is a lot of work to be done and we have to reap the fruit of what we sowed with
so much effort,” he said.
A new election,
two years earlier than scheduled, may be the only option open. It would almost
certainly return the centre-left Socialists to power, but again probably without
a majority.
The other two
parties – the Communists and the Left Bloc – are unlikely to do any deals with
the Socialists, say analysts, meaning that the next government will again need
CDS-PP support.
Amid all the
disarray, share prices tumbled and bond yields soared. Meanwhile, hanging in
the balance is Portugal ’s
commitment to the terms of its €78 billion bailout. ‘Troika’ representatives
are due to start their next review of the economy in Lisbon on July 15.
The latest
developments fuelled concerns in the national and international press. The
Spanish daily El País said Portugal
was slipping “into the unknown.” The French Le Monde noted that Portugal could
be "facing the failure” of its rigorous economic policies. The Guardian
reported on Wednesday that “World markets have fallen sharply today and
Portuguese government borrowing costs have soared as the political crisis in Lisbon threatens to bring
down its government, inflaming the eurozone crisis again.”
The New York
Times commented: “"Political unrest in the coalition government of
Portugal rekindles tensions growing in many European countries on expenditure
cuts and other austerity measures that are being blamed for a series of
recessions and record unemployment rates in countries like Greece, Spain and
Portugal.”
Among the few
optimistic voices around is that of Jeroen Dijsselbloem, president of the
eurozone’s finance ministers. “I do not expect any problems with Portugal , first because I believe that the
political situation will stabilise, and secondly because the phasing and timing
of Portugal ’s
programme [of EU financial assistance and reforms] is proceeding well,” he said
in response to the latest events.