| Social Democratic Party Partido Social Democrata | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Luís Marques Mendes |
| Founded | 1974 |
| Headquarters | Lisbon |
| Political ideology | centre-right (center) Conservatism |
| International affiliation | International Democrat Union |
| Website | http://www.psd.pt/ |
The Social Democratic Party (Portuguese: Partido Social Democrata, pron. IPA: *) is a political party in Portugal. It is commonly known by its initials, PSD.
The party has 75 of 230 seats of the Assembly of the Republic, and has lost the most recent Portuguese legislative election, while governing in coalition with the People's Party. The current leader is Luís Marques Mendes, who was elected in the Congress in Pombal in April.
The party's name can be misleading: although its first official ideology, after its foundation, was centre-left, it is nowdays a party of the centre-right and does not advocate social democracy in any usual sense of the term. The party left the Liberal International in 1996 and their delegates to the European Parliament have, since the late 1990s, sat with the European People's Party, along with the Conservative and Christian Democratic parties of many European countries. Previously, they had sat with the European Liberal, Democrat and Reform Party.
The party publishes the weekly Povo Livre.
The "Povo Livre" publication was founded, its first issue being released on July 13 1974, lead by its first two directors, Manuel Alegria and Rui Machete. PPD's first major meeting was held in "Pavilhão dos Desportos", Lisbon, on October 25, and a month later, the party's first official congress would take place.
On January 17, 1975, 6300 signatures were sent to the Supreme Court so that the party could be approved as a legitimate political entity, which happened a mere 8 days later.
The Democratic Alliance was dissolved in 1983, and in parliamentary elections that year, the Social Democrats lost to the Socialist Party. Falling short of a majority, however, the Socialists formed a grand coalition, known as the Center Bloc, with the Social Democrats. Many right-wingers in the PSD, including Aníbal Cavaco Silva, opposed participation in the Socialist-led government, and so, when Cavaco Silva was elected leader of the party on 2 June 1985, the coalition was doomed.
The Social Democrats won a plurality (but not a majority) in the general election of 1985, and Cavaco Silva became Prime Minister. Economic liberalization and tax cuts ushered in several years of economic growth, and early elections held in 1987 resulted in a landslide victory for the PSD, who captured 50.2 percent of the popular vote and 148 of the 250 parliamentary seats - the first time that any political party had mustered an absolute majority. They won the 1991 election almost as easily, but continuing high levels of unemployment eroded the popularity of the Cavaco Silva government and the PSD lost the 1995 and 1999 elections. They made a comeback in 2002, however; despite falling short of a majority, the PSD won enough seats to form a coalition with the Peoples Party, and the PSD leader, José Manuel Durão Barroso, became Prime Minister. Durão Barroso later resigned his post to become President of the European Commission, leaving the way for Pedro Santana Lopes, a man with whom he was frequently at odds, to become leader of the party and Prime Minister.
In the parliamentary election held on 20 February 2005, Santana Lopes led the PSD to its worst defeat since 1983. With a negative swing of more than 12 percent, the party won only 72 seats, a loss of 30. As the rival Socialist Party won an absolute majority, the PSD appears doomed to remain in opposition until 2009 at the earliest.
The PSD won the Portuguese presidential elections in 2006, with Aníbal Cavaco Silva as the candidate.
Liberal-conservative parties | Political parties in Portugal | International Democrat Union
Partit Socialdemòcrata (Portugal) | Sozialdemokratische Partei Portugals | Parti social-démocrate (Portugal) | Sociaal-Democratische Partij (Portugal) | Partia Socjaldemokratyczna (portugalska) | Partido Social Democrata (Portugal) | Partido Social Democrata
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Social Democratic Party (Portugal)".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world