Gone
is the perception that all politicians are shady. Well, at
least one isn’t. With just over three weeks to go before Portugal’s general
election, the left-wing Lisbon candidate Joana Amaral Dias has
emphasised her belief in transparency.
But
why would she choose to appear on the cover of a glossy magazine in
the nude?
“Why
not?” was her succinct reply.
Stripped
naked but with her dignity deftly intact, the photo shows that
Joana is expecting another child and that her eyes are firmly fixed
on the large number of still undecided voters.
The
40-year-old was making something of a statement about systematic
corruption and the opaque power of the elite. She advocates “a
clear and faithful relationship with voters.”
Far
from being just another pin-up gal, Joana is the daughter of a
psychiatrist and with a Ph.D degree of her own she practices, teaches
and conducts research as a clinical psychologist. She is a prolific
author of scholarly as well as newspaper articles, and has published
a biographical and psychological treatise on historical figures in
Portugal.
As
an independent politician and the mother of a young son, she served
as a member of parliament between 2002 and 2005. Her latest pregnancy
may limit her activities on the campaign trail, but these days there
are alternatives to rushing from soap box to soap box.
When
the now famous photo of Joana in the arms of her boyfriend was
reproduced on her Facebook page, it attracted thousands of ‘likes’
and elicited praise for her courage and candour.
Such
an unprecedented initiative is unlikely to be replicated by Finance
Minister Maria Luís Albuquerque whom Joana accuses along with
Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho of lying through “as many teeth
as they have in their mouths” over the bank scandals.
The
grey-suited brigades from the centrist Social Democrats and Socialists
are fronting up to each other with no sign among the electorate of
any clear party preference. Apathy is such that a large number of
people are undecided which way to vote - or whether to vote at all.
Joana’s
bold stance has chivvied things up in Portugal but it might not work
in other countries. Germans would undoubtedly prefer Angela Merkel to
remain fully clothed. In Britain, the only last-minute hope of
preventing Jeremy Corbyn from securing the Labour Party leadership
may have been for Yvette Cooper or Liz Kendall to disrobe, though this might
have sparked a mass defection to the Tories.
If
Hillary Clinton were to pose in the altogether it might arouse
memories of her husband’s non-political activities in the White
House.
For
now, Joana Amaral Dias’s impressive credentials remain unrivalled,
but the bare fact is that we shall have to wait until 4 October
before we know if she will need to take maternity leave from
parliament.