Jump to content

2nd Legislature of the Third Portuguese Republic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2nd Legislature of the Third Portuguese Republic
1st Legislature 3rd Legislature
Overview
Legislative bodyAssembly of the Republic
Meeting placePalace of Saint Benedict
Term13 November 1980 (1980-11-13) – 30 May 1983 (1983-05-30)
Election5 October 1980
GovernmentVI Constitutional Government
VII Constitutional Government
VIII Constitutional Government
Websiteparlamento.pt
Deputies
Members250
PresidentLeonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD) (1980–1981)
Francisco de Oliveira Dias (CDS) (1981–1982)
Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD) (1982–1983)
First Vice-PresidentNuno Rodrigues dos Santos (PPD/PSD) (1980–1981)
Amândio de Azevedo (PPD/PSD) (1981–1983)
Second Vice-PresidentAntónio Arnault (PS) (1980–1981)
Manuel Tito de Morais (PS) (1981–1983)
Third Vice-PresidentAntónio Martins Canaverde (CDS)
Fourth Vice-PresidentJosé Vitoriano (PCP)

The 2nd Legislature of the Third Portuguese Republic (Portuguese: II Legislatura da Terceira República Portuguesa) ran from 13 November 1980 to 30 May 1983.[1] The composition of the Assembly of the Republic, the legislative body of Portugal, was determined by the results of the 1980 legislative election, held on 5 October 1980.

Following a disappointing result of the Democratic Alliance (AD) in the 1982 local elections, Prime Minister Francisco Pinto Balsemão resigned, citing the election results and disagreements with the PPD/PSD coalition partner, the CDS.[2] The Social Democrats proposed several candidates for Prime Minister to President António Ramalho Eanes, but Eanes rejected them[3] and dissolved the Assembly, calling an election for 25 April 1983.[4]

Election

[edit]

The 3rd Portuguese legislative election was held on 5 October 1980. In the election, the Democratic Alliance (AD), a coalition composed by the Social Democratic Party (PPD/PSD), the Democratic and Social Center (CDS) and the People's Monarchist Party (PPM) won a majority of the seats and the three parties formed a majority coalition government.[5]

Party Assembly of the Republic
Votes % Seats +/−
AD 2,868,076 47.59 134 +6
FRS 1,673,279 27.76 74 ±0
APU 1,009,505 16.75 41 –6
UDP 83,204 1.38 1 ±0
Other/blank/invalid 392,361 6.50 0 ±0
Total 6,026,395 100.00 250 ±0

Composition (1980–1983)

[edit]
Party Parliamentary group leader Elected
Seats %
PPD/PSD Pedro Roseta (Castelo Branco) (1980–1981)
Afonso Moura Guedes (Lisbon) (1981–1982)
Manuel Pereira (Coimbra) (1982)
Vítor Crespo (Leiria) (1982–1983)
82 32.8
PS Francisco Salgado Zenha (Porto) 66 26.4
CDS Narana Coissoró (Lisbon) 46 18.4
PCP Carlos Brito (Faro) 39 15.6
PPM Augusto Ferreira do Amaral (Lisbon) 6 2.4
UEDS António Lopes Cardoso (Lisbon) 4 1.6
ASDI António Sousa Franco (Lisbon) 4 1.6
MDP/CDE José Tengarrinha (Lisbon) 2 0.8
UDP Mário Tomé (Lisbon) 1 0.4
 Total 250 100.0

Election for President of the Assembly of the Republic

[edit]

To be elected, a candidate needs to reach a minimum of 126 votes. For the first session of the legislature, two candidates were on the ballot, Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos, from the Socialist Party, and the incumbent Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida, from the Social Democratic Party who was re-elected:

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
1st Ballot → 18 November 1980
Required majority → 126 out of 250
Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD)
124 / 250
checkY
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
102 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
2 / 250
Invalid ballots
3 / 250
Absentees
19 / 250
Sources: [6]

A year later, on October 1981, another ballot was called to elect a new President of the Assembly. There were once again two candidates, Francisco de Oliveira Dias, from the Democratic and Social Center, and Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos, from the Socialist Party. In the first ballot, no one was elected:

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
1st Ballot → 20 October 1981
Required majority → 126 out of 250
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
98 / 250
☒N
Francisco de Oliveira Dias (CDS)
97 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
24 / 250
Invalid ballots
0 / 250
Absentees
31 / 250
Sources: [6]

In the second ballot, Francisco de Oliveira Dias managed to be elected, achieving a majority:

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
2nd Ballot → 22 October 1981
Required majority → 126 out of 250
Francisco de Oliveira Dias (CDS)
128 / 250
checkY
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
108 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
2 / 250
Invalid ballots
2 / 250
Absentees
10 / 250
Sources: [6]

Once again, another year later, in October 1982, another election was held where the Socialist Party nominated Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos and the Social Democratic Party nominated Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida. No candidate was able to be elected for the first 3 ballots:

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
1st Ballot → 21 October 1982
Required majority → 126 out of 250
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
109 / 250
☒N
Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD)
84 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
38 / 250
Invalid ballots
3 / 250
Absentees
16 / 250
Sources: [6]
Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
2nd Ballot → 21 October 1982
Required majority → 126 out of 250
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
108 / 250
☒N
Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD)
86 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
36 / 250
Invalid ballots
3 / 250
Absentees
17 / 250
Sources: [6]
Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
3rd Ballot → 3 November 1982
Required majority → 126 out of 250
Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD)
108 / 250
☒N
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
101 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
7 / 250
Invalid ballots
1 / 250
Absentees
33 / 250
Sources: [6]

Only at the 4th attempt did Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida managed to be elected, due to the lack of people present to vote.

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
4th Ballot → 3 November 1982
Required majority → Majority
Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD)
115 / 250
checkY
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
102 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
5 / 250
Invalid ballots
1 / 250
Absentees
27 / 250
Sources: [6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "As legislaturas da Assembleia da República". parlamento.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
  2. ^ "Demissão Pinto Balsemão", RTP-Antena1, 8 September 2015. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Presidente da República dissolve Assembleia da República, em 1983 ", RTP, 8 September 2015. Retrieved 16 March 2025.
  4. ^ "Quatro anteriores dissoluções resultaram em maiorias absolutas e três em governos de coligação". RTP (in Portuguese). 9 November 2023. Retrieved 16 March 2025.
  5. ^ Official Results — National Election Commission
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "ELEIÇÕES DOS PRESIDENTES DA ASSEMBLEIA DA REPÚBLICA (1976-2024)". participacao.parlamento.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.