Lisbon: Portugal's president announced on Thursday that he is dissolving parliament and calling a snap election for January 30, following the minority Socialist government's defeat in a key vote on post-pandemic plans to spend billions of euros in European Union funding. The announcement, in a televised address to the nation, was widely expected. President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa had previously said Portugal would go to the ballot box two years ahead of schedule if the government's 2022 state budget proposal was rejected by parliament, which happened last week.
The ballot will elect 230 lawmakers to parliament, where political parties then decide who forms a government. The election comes at a sensitive time for the country of 10.3 million (1.03 crore) people, as it is poised to begin deploying some 45 billion euros (USD 52 billion) in help from the EU to help fire up the economy after the COVID-19 pandemic. Rebelo de Sousa said the Portuguese needed to decide what they want from the next few years, "which are decisive" due to the windfall of funds. "This is the decisive moment for a long-lasting recovery from the greatest pandemic of the past 100 years and the social and economic crisis it caused," he said.
The 2022 spending plan is "an especially important budget at an especially important time", he said. Recent opinion polls suggest the centre-left Socialist Party will win re-election but will again fall short of a parliamentary majority. Given the procedural requirements, a new state budget proposal may not come before parliament until April. That could put the brakes on an economic rebound. As things stand, the COVID-19 pandemic should not disrupt an election, though health authorities have warned about a potential winter resurgence in Europe.
A popular mass vaccination campaign has helped Portugal, for the moment, largely contain COVID-19. The country has on average been reporting fewer than 1,000 new cases a day since mid-September, with daily deaths in single figures. The 2022 state budget forecast GDP growth of 4.8 per cent this year and 5.5 per cent next year, with a jobless rate of around 6.5 per cent, roughly the same as now.