Portugal’s far-right seduces youth, 50 years on from dictatorship

Portugal’s far-right Chega party made historic gains in the country’s national elections held in early March. Taking 18% of the vote, the party sought to seduce Portugal’s youth, in a year which marks 50 years since Portugal overthrew its dictatorship.

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André Ventura, the leader of Portugal’s far-right party is popping red balloons with darts, under a sign which reads “Socialism explodes in Portugal”. He is celebrating the gains made by his political party “Chega” (“enough” in Portuguese), at Futurallia, Portugal’s biggest student fair.  

Chega came third in the snap elections held in early March, surging from 12 to 50 seats. The rise of the far-right comes as the country marks fifty years since the right-wing military dictatorship led by Antonio Salazar was overthrown. 

A crowd of young people aged between 15 and 18 years old are cheering André Ventura on. This moment is being recorded and will later be shared on the party’s social media accounts – namely TikTok – where the party and its politicians have amassed a large following. Ventura boasts over 280,000 followers on TikTok, while the Conservative Prime Minister Luis Montenegro doesn’t have an account*.

18-year old Tiago watches on, his face hidden behind a mask of André Ventura, “it’s funny that they even thought of handing out masks. I know Ventura isn’t the perfect candidate, but he’s trying to change things, and that’s why I voted for him.” 

Besides him, 19-year old Joaqim who voted for the centre-right Democatic Alliance party which won March’s elections. He may not be a Chega supporter, but he still wanted to catch a glimpse of the action, “I am originally from the Cape Verde, I think that André Ventura focuses too much on immigration but I think he wants to make changes for the youth.”

Young people in Portugal face two major problems, according to political scientist António Costa Pinto, “they are dealing with a very low average wage and an economy that cannot absorb educated young people. Emigration is in many cases the only alternative for this skilled labor.” Young men “aged between 18-34 years old with lower levels of education voted for Chega in the highest numbers”, adds Costa Pinto. 

Banking on “negative perceptions of immigration”

Once his show of darts is over, André Ventura heads for the exit of the student fair. His every move is calculated as he stops to take selfies with fans. But there’s one thing that he can’t control: his opponents.

“You are fascists”, shout a group of young people at the edge of the crowd. “Chega, Chega, Chega”, reply his supporters. 

16-year old Inez watches on, “I would never vote for him. Portugal had a dictatorship under Salazar, so it’s frightening to see this today. I don’t feel safe around these people.” Her friend Raquel, worries about her future, “I see a lot of teenagers in this crowd, but one day they’ll be able to vote.”

A hate group according to NGOs

According to anti-discrimination organisations, Chega represents a threat to minorities, with the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism labelling the party a hate group

“Chega is a form of propaganda because they wash away the racist ideas. People usually say they are voting against the system because they are tired of politicians. But it’s a vote in support of racism and discrimination, which stands against minorities”, 20-year old Lou, an activist for the NGO SOS Racismo tells Euronews.

In 2020, André Ventura told a politician to “go back to her country”. He was targeting Joacine Katar Moreira, who is originally from Portuguese Guinea and had proposed a law for the restitution of art work to former colonies. Ventura has targeted the Portuguese Roma community, claiming its members are “addicted” to welfare. During the COVID-19 pandemic he also called for a separate isolation policy for the community.

Young Chega activists

25-year old Ricardo Reis waits outside the Chega party’s headquarters, located a few hundred metres away from the Portuguese Parliament. Wearing a sleek suit, Reis may work in the tech industry, but he spends his spare time campaigning for the party’s youth wing.

The young activist does not mince his words, using the term “parasite” to refer to immigrants who receive benefits from the Portuguese state, “we are experiencing a new wave of immigration, where you don’t see families coming for a better life or trying to integrate themselves.” Reis insists that the party is “not racist”, all members are welcome but “what matters is that the person works and contributes to society.”

This rhetoric mimics the words and slogans used by many far-right parties across Europe. In Portugal’s case, a new wave of immigration has become the movement’s focus, while others would say its scapegoat. 

“In the last five years Portugal has experienced a new wave of immigration from South Asia, which marks a change from the historic immigration from former Portuguese colonies like Mozambique and Angola. This immigration may be essential to the economy, but a negative perception of immigration related to insecurity has allowed Chega to make gains”, explains Professor Costa Pinto. The southern Portuguese region of the Algarve which has a tourism-based economy and “relies on a migrant workforce”, voted for Chega in the highest numbers. 

“Young people join us in secret”

25-year old Rita Maria Matias who defines herself as an ‘anti-feminist’ and stands against abortion was reelected to the Portuguese Parliament last month. Hailing from a political family, her father Manuel Matias, was the leader of Portugal’s defunct anti-abortion party Pro Vida. 

“We have lots of young people coming to us in secret, some have created tensions in their families in order to join the party. There are a lot of scars in Portugal but I’m not responsible for an authoritarian period during which I wasn’t living,” Matias tells Euronews. In 2021, the party adopted the slogan “God, country, family and work”, strikingly similar to Portuguese dictator António de Oliveira Salazar’s “God, country, family” motto.

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Matias worked as a campaigner in the party’s youth wing and managed André Ventura’s Tiktok account. “We have a formal communications team which manages Mr. Ventura’s content but then we all are responsible for our own personal accounts, where we try and be as natural as possible”, says Matias.

In 2022, she became the party’s first female politician and its youngest – until 20-year old Madalena Cordeiro overtook was elected last month. 

“We are tired of feeling that in France, in England, in Switzerland, young people have more opportunities than in Portugal”, says the young politician who blames this situation on immigrants “we are being replaced and nobody cares”. 

For Matias, making ties with the rest of Europe’s far-right remains a priority ahead of June’s European elections. Jordan Bardella, head of France’s far-right Rassemblement National for the upcoming European elections “is a friend”, she says with a smile.

As for Chega’s stance on Europe, the party remains cautious, “they do not play Eurosceptic card too much because they know that the European Union is quite popular in Portugal, due to its association with economic development,” says Professor Costa Pinto.

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Portugal: 50 years after the revolution, are the carnations wilting?

25 April, 2024, marks the 50th anniversary of Portugal’s Carnation Revolution. It ended about 41 years of dictatorship and began an era of democracy. The milestone is celebrated as the political landscape shifts, with the centre-right winning recent elections and the far-right gaining ground.

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“In 1974, I was 18 and beginning my university studies in Lisbon. However, on 25 April, I found myself in Porto, seeking the tranquility of family to study. We sensed that something significant was happening, and my mother advised me to stay indoors.” Now 68, Maria Gorete shares her stories with Euronews. We met her on the morning of 22 March in one of the municipal galleries of the Portuguese capital. Her eyes sparkle with a special gleam as she recalls the days of chaos and ecstasy that Portugal experienced during the Carnation Revolution.

When asked about her plans for its 50th anniversary, Maria gets excited: “It’s going to be a memorable day! We have plans to meet 30 former university classmates to celebrate.” “As for me, I’ve kept a bottle of port from 1974. I can’t wait to open it this 25 April,” shares Adozinda, a friend of Maria’s. At the time, she was 15 and living in Angola, a former overseas province of Portugal.

The two women admire the exhibition by photographer Eduardo Gageiro. Among them, a military parade, a Portuguese soldier removing a portrait of the dictator António de Oliveira Salazar from the headquarters of the PIDE (secret police), and young people looking jubilant around a tank. In the vast, silent gallery of the Cordoaria Nacional, an old ropeworks on the banks of the Tagus, we are plunged back into the past, while outside, Lisbon basks in the light and warmth of a spring day.

We are just over a month from the 50th anniversary of the revolution that ended the Salazar dictatorship. António de Oliveira Salazar became Prime Minister of Portugal in 1932. He established a dictatorship by limiting civil liberties, imposing strict censorship, and repressing all political opposition.

Salazar was replaced by Marcelo Caetano in 1968. Caetano attempted to modernise the regime while maintaining its authoritarian structure and continuing the colonial wars in Africa, which led to a coup and the end of the dictatorship in 1974.

By 25 April, 1974, the Portuguese Army, backed by civilians, had grown tired of and outraged by the horrors of the colonial wars in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau. They decided to change course. “We didn’t yet understand what was happening; we only knew that soldiers were being killed, and we were afraid,” explains Maria Gorete. “It wasn’t until 1 May that we finally understood: we were free! What euphoria! Everyone took to the streets to celebrate,” she adds.

The adoption of the Constitution in 1976 laid the foundations for a pluralistic democracy. Since then, the Portuguese political landscape has alternated between governments of the centre-left Socialist Party (PS) and the centre-right Social Democratic Party (PSD).

On 10 March, 2024, the Portuguese people turned another significant page in their history. After eight years of socialist government, the legislative elections saw the centre-right opposition emerge victorious, and the far-right Chega party gain 18% of the vote, up from 7.2% in the previous legislative elections of January, 2022. The party headed by André Ventura has a manifesto based on transphobic and xenophobic stances, among others, with an especially strong opposition to immigration. “We fought this fight so that our children and grandchildren could be free. And now, my grandson, armed with this freedom, chooses to use it to vote for the right. I plan to take him to see this exhibition, to remind him that if he can freely express his choice today, it’s thanks to our struggle,” explains Maria Gorete.

A shift to the right

Vasco Lourenço, now in his 80s, was just 31 in 1974. As a captain in the Portuguese army, he orchestrated the first clandestine meeting aimed at overthrowing the regime. This gathering in Alcáçovas, southern Portugal, took place on 9 September, 1973. It brought together 95 captains, 39 lieutenants, and two officers, marking the first step toward the coup and the revolution. “The values that pushed us, so to speak, and motivated us to revolt on 25 April, 1974, I think those values have remained in Portuguese society, which has allowed us to have 50 years of democracy. But there are no perfect democracies,” he tells me. “I think it’s clear that a party like this [Chega] is not democratic at all. It’s using democratic rules to come to power, but history tells us that if they come to power, they will try to end democracy. And therefore we have to fight them, fight them within democratic rules,” he adds with conviction.

Lourenço proudly hosts us at the April 25 Association, which he presides over. He’s surrounded by hundreds of veterans’ medals. His involvement in the war in Guinea-Bissau in 1969 and the loss of a comrade have made a profound mark on him. “Upon my return, I resolved never to take up arms again. I would have deserted if necessary,” he explains. “But I also felt anger at myself. I realised what I hadn’t understood before leaving: I was the instrument of an illegitimate power in Portugal, a regime of dictatorship, repression. I then decided to use my military status to overthrow this regime.”

While the army was organising to overthrow the dictatorship, less visible figures were spreading anti-regime propaganda among the Portuguese diaspora from abroad. Among them, Arnaldo Silva.

“My rebellion started when I was just 12 or 13 years old. By 1969, I was involved in political struggle against the regime.” His activism led to his arrest on 2 December, 1971. He was 18. “That morning, as I was preparing to go to work, two agents burst in and arrested me,” he recalls. Imprisoned in Caxias, west of Lisbon, he says he was immediately subjected to violence. “The torture endured, the forced sleepless nights, the administered sedatives…” Silva pauses, overwhelmed by emotion, covering his eyes and trying to hold back tears as he describes his detention in a tiny square cell shared with four inmates.

Banned from all political activity in Portugal after his detention, Arnaldo Silva went into exile in France.

In a dimly lit room of the Aljube Museum, a former prison in Lisbon, Arnaldo is joined by José Martins, also a former political prisoner who lived in exile in France. “I think the rise of the far right in Portugal is mainly due to some failures of left-wing governments, which failed to address the concerns of the people,” he estimates. “Those who vote right are often those who were once left and switched sides because the left failed to solve social problems.”

Those social issues were among the priorities of Amnesty International in Portugal during the 2024 electoral campaign. Aware of the significant human rights advancements post-revolution and concerned about their future, the NGO issued a set of recommendations to all political parties. The organisation’s concerns included education, the state of the Portuguese health system, and access to housing.

“The topics that really concern us: the use of migrants and refugees as scapegoats to scare the population and win votes,” specifies Pedro A. Neto, Amnesty International, Portugal’s Executive Director.

Neto notes: “Racism exists. Often, it manifests in very informal ways, in coffee shop discussions or on social media, where people speak ill just for the sake of it. The difference with Chega is that it capitalised on this racism to make it official discourse. It has normalised this kind of discourse, which is completely disrespectful”.

Facing the rise of the far right, historian and professor Ricardo Noronha at the Nova University of Lisbon provides further perspective: “It seems to me that the broad notion of democracy, as a set of individual and collective rights, is not threatened by the fact that the far right secured 18% of the vote in the last elections.”

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The Revolution’s echo among the younger generation

In the lead-up to the anniversary of this historic revolution, the April 25th Governmental Commission is making significant efforts to engage all age groups in this act of remembrance, especially the youth. This challenge is considerable, given that, according to initial polls, 41% of young, less educated men voted for Chega. “We’ve launched campaigns on social media, which are highly followed by young people, such as the one titled #YouCouldNot, listing 13 prohibitions and restrictions before the revolution, like the inability to vote freely or to organise politically,” explains Maria Inácia Rezola, executive commissioner and history professor. These initiatives aim to raise awareness about the freedoms now taken for granted, which were once unattainable.

“Freedom is like health: its importance is only realised when we start to lose it,” remarks Vasco Lourenço. “It’s natural for those born into freedom not to question their state. I often ask if they would accept living without freedom, and the response is unanimously negative. Yet, it’s crucial to remain vigilant since human history is cyclical, and we must not allow freedom to be threatened again. We must learn from history to prevent the youth from being alienated once more,” he asserts.

According to Arnaldo Silva, “the Portuguese youth remains alert and will refuse to let political, economic, or military ambitions override their freedoms and ideals.”

Professor Ricardo Noronha confirms the young generation’s evident interest in this historical period. “When we visit high schools or elementary schools, the students’ enthusiasm is palpable. Contrary to expectations, they remain attentive, ask questions, and share their thoughts, sometimes influenced by familial narratives of the era. This curiosity signifies a healthy engagement,” he observes.

On 25 April, Portuguese unions and protest movements traditionally march to make their voices heard. This year, the momentum began well in advance, driven by the Portuguese youth. In the alleys of Lisbon, during a protest against financial instability, they chant “25 de abril sempre, fascismo nunca mais!” (25 April forever, fascism never again!). With fists raised they hold the symbolic red carnation, the flower placed in gun barrels in 1974 as a symbol of peace. For these young people, the spirit of the revolution seems to still be very much alive.

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