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Passos Coelho demands constitutional rule change in bid for re-election

parliamentCoalition party leader Pedro Passos Coelho wants the constitution to be amended, now that his government has been voted out by the left wing and socialist alliance.

Portugal's redundant prime minister today demanded a change in Portugal’s constitution so he can participate in a snap election early next year.

Having been out of power for a matter of days, Passos Coelho has lashed out at the Socialist Party in a storm of vindictive complaint and called on Portugal's left wing opposition parties to support a move to dissolve parliament and hold another general election in March 2016, or earlier.

The Portuguese constitution, which has served everyone just fine for decades, states that a new general election cannot be held within six months of the last one.

Passos Coelho's coalition received the highest percentage of the country’s vote in the October 4th general election, but had no majority in parliament so was voted out after 11 days in power by a coalition of the socialist and left wing parties.

Pundits say that if there was another election soon, the result would be the same with Pedro Passos Coelho’s coalition winning the highest number of votes, but unable to govern as it would not have enough seats in parliament to pass any laws.

In a sharply worded attack, Passos Coelho revealed a bitter and twisted side to his character, saying today, “If those that want to govern instead of us, don't want to govern fraudulently, they should accept a constitutional revision and allow elections to take place."

Portugal's president, Cavaco Silva, is still going through the chicken entrails before making the decision about who should be the next prime minister, but is clear about one thing; democracy is just fine as long as it does not involve any party that would upset the EC and Portugal's bail-out lenders.

Cavaco Silva also has determined to be as disruptive as possible if he is forced to appoint socialist António Costa as prime minister, by blocking anti-austerity measures. The socialist alliance want to raise wages, rehire public sector workers, and halt privatisations - all of whcih the president will disrupt until he leaves his post early in 2016.

The amendment to the constitution demanded by the embittered Pedro Passos Coelho would need a two-thirds majority vote which he will not get unless the object of his ire, the Socialist Party, votes for his proposed amendment - which it is hardly likely to.

The political stalemate comes at a time when Portugal should be concentrating on its economy which currently is moribund, despite the pre-election hogwash that 'everything is going awfully well.'

GDP growth was zero in the third quarter (see below) and Portugal's creditors have urged whoever is next in charge to please continue to cut government spending, reduce debt levels and make crucial economic reforms, all of which were promised by Pedro Passos Coelho but not delivered.

 

http://s.telegraph.co.uk/graphics/MobileSwitcher/v2/images/1540-14388733961636945080.PNG

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Comments  

+2 #8 nobulls hit 2015-11-17 11:58
Quoting Chip the Duck:
Lose an election so change the rules.

A clear reason not to vote for Coelho, although I now see why he is such a fan of the EU, the masters of "keep voting until we get the desired result".

Someone who's drowning would grasp even a feather trying to keep himself on the surface.
+4 #7 Chip the Duck 2015-11-15 11:15
Lose an election so change the rules.

A clear reason not to vote for Coelho, although I now see why he is such a fan of the EU, the masters of "keep voting until we get the desired result".
-1 #6 Simon 2015-11-14 17:09
Could be time to try a government of technocrats with a 9 month mandate? Could they do any worse?
-4 #5 Maxwell 2015-11-14 16:04
The 35,000 Portuguese in Lambeth alone, not mentioning the tens of thousands elsewhere in the UK are not returning home to Portugal, however dismal the 'property inequality' might be. So the UK must be doing something right.

Note that just this one community support project has set aside half a million for the Portuguese speaking community in Lambeth. As asked before - have the Portuguese done anything remotely similar for english speakers ? Or does Pink Mapping get in the way?

http://www.londoncf.org.uk/news/2015/09/the-portuguese-speaking-community-in-lambeth-a-scoping-study-july-2015.aspx

Often queried by us expats - are the Portuguese 'trained' to consider themselves equivalent to all nations? So many perversely keep comparing themselves or their countries situation to the UK. What about aboriginals, eskimos or as now arriving Syrians, Eritreans, Afghans? Or any of the 200 other nationalities on this planet?

Do the Portuguese claim 'equivalence' to them too? When our first middle eastern english speaking Arabs begin to comment on algarvedailynews will we get the dw types saying "We Portuguese are just like you. The man with many camels gets the best water at the oasis. And if he fancies a goat for supper - or his lovely young wife - its tough luck on the man with the goats."
+2 #4 dw 2015-11-14 15:39
Interesting article here:
Portugal: With anti-austerity deal, left throws out right-wing gov't
https://www.greenleft.org.au/node/60647
-1 #3 dw 2015-11-14 13:25
It really would be sad if Portugal's brightest and best could only aspire to somewhere as dismally unequal before the law as Lambeth property bubble.
-4 #2 Steve.O 2015-11-14 11:08
The Portuguese constitution which has served everyone just fine for decades ...

is actually a load of hogwash as it was borrowed from the French. For the ordinary French their Constitution is not working either.

These 'off the shelf' Constitutions are for idealised Graeco-Roman countries. Not the ones we have today. They are totally predicated on equality before the law - which clearly does not exist, and never has, in these countries.

Not then having this fundamental equality in the society - or indeed any attempt to move towards this - the Constitution can be twisted for so many of its articles to mean anything and everything.

Consider the Business Leaders spokesperson António Saraiva slapping down PS's Costa over raising the minimum wage by just saying "Forget it, don't go there; It won't happen"

So Europe's Coolie economy continues. As does the migration of the brightest and best to Lambeth.
+4 #1 dw 2015-11-14 11:01
And if that doesn't work there could be elections held every week until the electorate give the 'markets' the result they want.

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