Portuguese legislative election, 2002

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Portugal

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Politics and government of
Portugal

The Portuguese legislative election of 2002 took place on March 17. These elections were called after the resignation of the former Prime-Minister, António Guterres after a defeat of the Socialist Party in the local election of 2001. That fact, plus the problematic state of the country's finances were the main arguments of the right-wing parties, which led them to win the election.

After the election, as no Party got an absolute majority, the Social Democrats formed a coalition with the right-wing People's Party. The left-wing Unitarian Democratic Coalition achieved the lowest result ever (as of 2005), finishing in the third place in its traditional strongholds, Évora and Setúbal. The Leftwing Bloc gained one MP. The turnout was the lowest ever, marking a growing separation between the politics and the Portuguese people, mainly due to the image of the politicians as corrupts and the idea that all the parties are the same.

The major parties involved and the respective leaders:

José Manuel Durão Barroso, leader of the Social Democratic Party, was nominated Prime Minister and formed a coalition government with the People's Party.

[edit] National summary of votes and seats

The first and the second most voted parties in each district (Azores and Madeira are not shown)
Enlarge
The first and the second most voted parties in each district (Azores and Madeira are not shown)
Portuguese legislative election, 2002 (March 17)
Logo Party Votes % Change Seats
PSD
2,200,765
40.2%
7.9%
105
PS
2,068,584
37.8%
-6.2%
96
CDS/PP
477,350
08.7%
0.4%
14
CDU
379,870
06.9%
-2.1%
12
BE
149,966
02.7%
0.3%
3
PCTP/MRPP
36,193
00.7%
-
0
MPT
15,540
00.3%
-0.1%
0
PPM
12,398
00.2%
-0.1%
0
PH
11,472
00.2%
-
0
PNR
4,712
00.1%
-
0
POUS
4,316
00.1%
-
0
Blank Ballots
55,121
01.0%
-0.1%
-
Invalid Ballots
52,653
01.0%
-
-
Total
5,473,655
-
-
230
  • Registered Voters: 8,902,713
  • Turnout: 61.48%

Note:

  • CDU is composed by the PCP (Communist) (10 MPs), the PEV (Green) (2 MPs) and the ID (0 MPs)

(source: Portuguese Electoral Commission)

[edit] References

[edit] See also

Elections in Portugal
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