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Portuguese Communist Party

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File:Grafismo pcp 01.gif
PCP's official symbol, featuring the hammer and sickle and the Portuguese national colors, red and green.

The Portuguese Communist Party (Portuguese: Partido Comunista Português, pron. IPA /pɐɾ.'ti.ðu ku.mu.'niʃ.tɐ puɾ.tu.'ɣeʃ/ or PCP), is a major left-wing political party in Portugal. It is a Marxist-Leninist party and its organization is based upon democratic centralism. The Party also considers itself to be patriotic and internationalist [1].

The Party was founded in 1921 as the Portuguese section of the Communist International (Comintern). Made illegal after a coup in the late 1920s, the PCP played a major role in the opposition to the following dictatorial regime [2] led, for many years, by António de Oliveira Salazar. During the five decades long dictature, the party was constantly suppressed by the political police, the PIDE, which forced his members to live in clandestine status, under the threat of being arrested, tortured or murdered. After the bloodless Carnation Revolution, in 1974, that overthrown the 48 years long regime, the 36 members of its Central Committee had, in the aggregate, experienced more than 300 years in jail.

In the following years, the PCP was one of the most influential forces involved in the revolutionary process, being very popular among the working class, however, it became less influential after the fall of the Socialist bloc in eastern Europe. However, it still enjoys popularity in some sectors of Portuguese society, particularly in the rural areas of the Alentejo and Ribatejo, and also in the heavily industrialized areas around Lisbon and Setúbal, where it holds the leadership of several municipalities. It also has a major influence within the largest Portuguese trade union federation, the General Confederation of the Portuguese Workers.

The Party publishes the weekly Avante!, founded in 1931. Its youth organization is the Portuguese Communist Youth, a member of the World Federation of Democratic Youth.

Principles and internal organization

Fundamental principles

The first article of the Portuguese Communist Party's statutes define the Party as: [3]

  • The political party of the proletariat, the party of the working class and of all Portuguese workers.
  • The PCP is the vanguard of the working class and of all working people. The Party's vanguard role results from its class nature and its close and indestructible liaison with the masses, mobilizing them and winning their support.
  • The PCP organizes in its ranks the industrial and office workers, small and medium farmers, intellectuals and technical workers, small and medium shopkeepers and industrialists, who fight for democracy and for Socialism.
  • The Portuguese Communist Party is the legitimate pursuer of the Portuguese people's best traditions of struggle and of their progressive and revolutionary achievements throughout their history.

The following articles define the Party's ideological guidelines[4]:

  • The Portuguese Communist Party takes Marxism-Leninism as its theoretical basis, which is a materialist and dialectic conception of the world and a scientific tool of social analysis. These principles guide the Party's action and enable it to systematically answer new challenges and realities. However, this may not be assumed as a dogma, but instead these instruments should be constantly renewed.
  • The Portuguese Communist Party educates its members and carries out its activity in the spirit of loyalty to the cause of the Portuguese working class and in the defense of national interests.

The main principle that guides the Party's internal structure, being a Leninist party, is Democratic centralism. This implies that[5]:

  • All party organs are elected from bottom to top and may be dismissed by those who elected them, if needed;
  • The members who have tasks in any structure of the Party are responsible to both lower and upper levels, being obliged to report the activities to both and to give consideration to their opinions and criticisms.
  • Lower-level structures must respect the decisions of the upper structures;
  • Every member is free to give his opinion during the discussion and the structures must take in account the contribution of every member;
  • Every member must obey the decisions achieved by consensus or by a majority;
  • Every member must work along with his own structure;
  • The Party does not recognize the possible existence of organized factions inside the party.

(source: Program and statutes of the Portuguese Communist Party (in English))

Internal organization

The structure and internal organization of the Portuguese Communist Party are defined by its statutes. The most recent statutes were approved in the seventeenth congress, held in 2004. The upper organs of the Portuguese Communist Party at a national scale are the Congress, the Central Committee (CC), and the Central Commission of Control.

The supreme organ of the Party is its Congress, which is summoned by the outgoing CC and held every four years. The Congress is composed of delegates elected by the respective lower organs proportionally to each organ's membership size. The congress approves its theses after a wide discussion period inside the organizations and may also change the Party's program and statutes. All the decisions of the Congress are made by the delegates voting. With the exception of the voting for the CC, which a recent Portuguese law requires to be secret, all voting, including the approval of the theses, are conducted by a show of hands. The theses, after approval, guide all the Party's political actions and stances until the next Congress.

The main organ between the congresses is the Central Committee, which is elected in the congresses under a proposal of the retiring CC. This proposal may only be made after a long period of hearing the lower structures in order to include in it the names they propose. The CC may not change the orientation present in the congress' theses. The main task of the CC is to define the guidelines of the Party's political work and decide the immediate tasks of the Party, assuring that the lower structures comply with those decisions. The CC elects, from its members, its Political Bureau, its Secretariat and also the Central Commission of Control. This last must assure the compliance between the Party's activities and the statutes, and control the Party's finances. The CC may, or may not, elect the Party's General Secretary from its members.

The intermediate organs of the Party are, by rule, the organs that coordinate an organization of district, municipality and parish levels, but organizations at a neighborhood or professional class level also exist. The main organ of an intermediate part of the party's structure is the Assembly. The Assembly works as a small Congress for the organization members. The Assembly elects the regional or municipal committees, which are responsible for applying the theses of the Assembly to the organization's work.

The base level organ of the Party is the cell. The cell is defined as being the link between the Party and the working class and the masses. A cell is composed of a minimum of three Party members and exists at a work place or neighborhood level. The cell may elect its own secretariat, which has the responsibility of discussing and putting into practice the Party's guidelines. The cell must ensure the recruitment of new members, promote the reading of the Avante! and the other publications, ensure that the members pay their quota and keep the upper structures aware of the cell's political work.

The history of the Portuguese Communist Party

The origins and foundation of the Party

File:Capa de o comunista pt.jpg
Front page of O Comunista's edition of 13 July 1923

Template:Inote The Portuguese Communist Party was founded on 6 March 1921.

At the end of World War I, in 1918, Portugal fell into a serious economic crisis, in part due to the Portuguese military intervention in the war. The military involvement led to an abrupt rise in inflation and unemployment. The Portuguese working classes responded to the deterioration in their living standards with a vast wave of strikes. Supported by an emerging Labour movement, the workers achieved some of their objectives, such as the historic victory of an eight-hour working day[6].

In September of 1919, the working class movement founded the first Portuguese Labour Union Confederation, Confederação Geral do Trabalho (General Confederation of Labour) that saw a steady increase to 100,000 members in a few months. But the feeling of political powerlessness, due to the lack of a coherent political strategy among the Portuguese working classes, plus the growing popularity of the Bolshevik revolution in Russia in 1917, led to the foundation of the Portuguese Maximalist Federation (Federação Maximalista Portuguesa or FMP) in 1919. The goal of FMP was to promote socialist and revolutionary ideas and to organize and develop the worker movement. The FMP started publishing the weekly Bandeira Vermelha (Red Flag) which became a popular newspaper among the Portuguese working classes[7].

After some time, members of the FMP started to feel the need for a "revolutionary vanguard" among Portuguese workers. After several meetings at various Labor Union offices, and with the aid of the Comintern, this desire culminated in the foundation of the Portuguese Communist Party as the Portuguese Section of the Communist International (Comintern), in 1921.

Unlike virtually all other European communist parties, the PCP was not formed after a split of a Social Democratic or Socialist Party, but from the ranks of Anarcho-Syndicalism and revolutionary syndicalism. Both of these groups, at the time, were the most active factions of the Portuguese labour movement[8].

The Party opened its first headquarters in the Arco do Marquês do Alegrete Street in Lisbon. In the same year, 1921, it also opened the communist centers of Porto, Évora and Beja. Seven months after its creation, the first issue of O Comunista (The Communist), the first newspaper of the Party, was published.

The first congress of the Party took place in Lisbon in November 1923, with Carlos Rates leading the Party. The theses had previously been published in O Comunista and discussed by all the local organizations. The congress was attended by about a hundred members of the Party and asserted its solidarity with Socialism in the Soviet Union and the need for a strong struggle for similar policies in Portugal; it also stated that a Fascist uprising in Portugal was a serious threat to the Party and to the country[9].

Outlawing of the Party and the long clandestine struggle

File:Bento gonçalves pt.gif
Bento Gonçalves (1902–42) General Secretary elected in 1929
File:Liberdade para alvaro cunhal.gif
Postcard demanding freedom for Álvaro Cunhal and all the political prisoners

After the military coup of May 28, 1926, the Party was outlawed, and had to operate in secrecy. By coincidence, the coup was carried out on the eve of the second congress, forcing the suspension of the tasks. In 1927 the Party's Main Office was closed. The party was first reorganized in 1929 under Bento Gonçalves. Adapting the Party to its new illegal status, the reorganization created a net of clandestine cells to avoid a wave of detentions[10].

Meanwhile, in 1938, the Portuguese Communist Party had been expelled from the Communist International. The reason for the expulsion was a sense of distrust inside the Comintern, caused by a sudden breakdown in the Party's activity after a period of strong communist tumult in the country, accusations of alleged embezzlement of money carried out by some important members of the Party and, mainly, the weak internal structure of the Party, dominated by internal wars. The action against the PCP, signed by Georgi Dimitrov, was in part taken due to some persecution against Comintern member parties or persons (like the Communist Party of Poland or Bela Kun) led by Stalin. These series of events would, in part, lead to the end of the Comintern in 1943. The PCP would only re-establish its relations with the Communist movement and the Soviet Union in 1947, after some sporadic contacts made, at first, through the Communist parties of Spain and France and later through Mikhail Suslov[11].

After the 1933 rise of Salazar's dicatorial Estado Novo regime, suppression of the party grew. Many members were arrested, tortured, and executed. Many were sent to the Tarrafal concentration camp in Cape Verde Islands. This included Bento Gonçalves, who would die there. The vast wave of arrests led to a major reorganization in 1940–41, named the "Reorganization of '40". The first congress after such changes was held in 1943 and stated that the Party should unite with all those who also wanted an end to the dictatorship. Another important conclusion was the need to increase the Party's influence inside the Portuguese army. At the time, the Party was able, for the first time, to assure a strong clandestine organization, with a net of clandestine cadres, which would significantly aid the resistance against Salazar's regime[12].

In 1945, with the defeat of the major fascist regimes in World War II, Salazar was forced to fake some democratic changes in order to keep up a good image in the eyes of the West, so, in October of that year, the democratic resistance was authorized to form a platform, which was named Movement of Democratic Unity (Portuguese: Movimento de Unidade Democrática, or MUD). Initially, the MUD was controlled by the moderate opposition, but soon became strongly influenced by the PCP, which controlled its youth wing[13]. In the leadership of the youth wing were several communists, among them Octávio Pato, Salgado Zenha, Mário Soares, Júlio Pomar and Mário Sacramento [14]. This influence led to the MUD being outlawed by the government in 1948, after several waves of suppression.

The fourth congress, held in July 1946, pointed to massive popular struggle as the only way to overthrow the regime, and stated the policies that would help the Party lead that same popular movement. This, along with the consolidation of the clandestine work, was the main conclusion of the congress. A brief report of the conclusions of this congress were published by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. For the first time since the Party had been expelled from the Comintern, the CPSU published information about the PCP, a slight change in the Soviet stance on the Party. At this time, Álvaro Cunhal travelled to Yugoslavia with the aid of Bento de Jesus Caraça in order to improve the relations with the Socialist Bloc. Later, in 1948, he travelled to the Soviet Union in order to speak with Mikhail Suslov, after what the bonds between the PCP and the International Communist Movement were re-established[15]. Soon after returning from the Soviet Union, Cunhal was arrested by Salazar's political police, the PIDE.

The fifth congress, held in September 1957, was the first and the only to be held outside Portugal. In Kiev, Soviet Union, the Party approved its first program and statutes. The congress took, for the first time, an official position on Colonialism, stating that every people had the right of self-determination, and made clear its support of the liberation movements in the Portuguese colonies, such as MPLA in Angola, FRELIMO in Mozambique and PAIGC in Guinea-Bissau. This was the first congress of the Party's history to receive salutations from foreign communist parties.

In January 1960, a group of ten PCP members managed to escape from the high-security prison in Peniche[16]. The escape returned to freedom many top figures of the Party, among them, Álvaro Cunhal, who would be elected in the following year the first Secretary-general in nineteen years. Among the escapees was also Jaime Serra, who would help to organize a secret commando group, the Armed Revolutionary Action (Portuguese: Acção Revolucionária Armada or ARA). The ARA was the armed branch of the PCP that would be responsible in the 1970s for some military action against the dictatorial regime.

In 1961 the Colonial War in Africa began, first in Angola, and in the next year in Mozambique and Guinea-Bissau. The war lasted thirteen years and devastated Portuguese society, forcing many thousands of Portuguese citizens, mainly young people, to leave the country, both to seek a better future in countries like France, Germany or Switzerland and to escape conscription. The Party, which had been involved in the formation of the nationalist guerrilla movements, along with the Soviet Union, immediately stated its opposition to the war, and its support for the anti-colonial movements. The war, prompting growing unrest inside Portuguese society, helped lead to the decline of the Salazar regime[17].

In 1962 the "Academic Crisis" occurred. The regime, fearing the growing popularity of democratic ideas among the students, made several student associations and organizations illegal, including the important National Secretariat of Portuguese Students. Most members of this organization were intellectual communist militants that were persecuted and forbidden to continue their university studies[18]. The students, with strong aid from the PCP, responded with demonstrations that culminated on March 24 with a huge student demonstration in Lisbon. The demonstration was brutally suppressed by the police, leading to hundreds of student injuries[19]. Immediately thereafter, the students began a strike against the regime. In 1987, the 24 March was declared the National Day of the Students by the Portuguese Parliament, and is celebrated every year, mainly by university students.

The sixth congress, in 1965, became one of the most important congresses in the Party's history. Álvaro Cunhal, elected General-secretary in 1961, released the report The Path to Victory—The Tasks of the Party in the National and Democratic Revolution which became a document of major influence among the democratic movement. Widely distributed among the clandestine members, it contained eight political goals, such as "the end of the monopolies in the economy", "the need for agrarian reform and redistribution of the land", and "the democratization of access to culture and education" — policies that the Party considered essential to make Portugal a fully democratic country. Nine years later, on April 25, 1974, the Carnation Revolution occurred, putting an end to forty-eight years of resistance and marking the beginning of a new cycle in the Party's life.

The Carnation Revolution of 1974 and the first years of democracy

File:Salazar retirado da sede da PIDE.jpg
The portrait of Salazar being removed from the headquarters of the political police
File:Solidariedade-Africa-MOAMBIQUE01.jpg
Sticker celebrating the independence of Mozambique in June 25 of 1975
File:Cartaz 25 anos abril pcp pt.jpg
APU Poster celebrating the 10th anniversary of the revolution featuring the revolution's symbol, the carnation

Immediately after the revolution, basic democratic rights were re-established in Portugal. On April 27, political prisoners were freed. On April 30, Álvaro Cunhal returned to Lisbon, where he was received by thousands of people. May Day was commemorated for the first time in 48 years, and an estimated half million people gathered in the FNAT Stadium (now May 1st Stadium) in Lisbon to hear the speeches of the Party's leader Álvaro Cunhal and the socialist Mário Soares[20]. On May 17, the Party's newspaper, Avante!, produced the first legal issue in its history.

The following months were marked by radical changes in the country, always closely followed and supported by PCP. A stormy process to give independence to the colonies started with the full support of the Party and, within one year, Guinea-Bissau, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde and São Tomé and Príncipe became independent countries.

Six months after the Revolution, on 20 October 1974, the Party's seventh congress took place. More than a thousand delegates and hundreds of Portuguese and foreign guests attended. The congress set forth important statements that discussed the ongoing revolution in the country. The 36 members of the elected Central Committee had in the aggregate experienced more than 300 years in jail[21]. On January 12, 1975 the Portuguese Communist Party became the first legally recognized party.

The revolutionary process continued. On 11 March 1975, the left-wing military forces defeated a coup attempt by rightists in the military[22]. This resulted in a turn in the revolutionary process to the political left, with the main sectors of the economy, such as the banks, transportation, steel mills, mines and communications companies, being nationalized. This was done under the lead of Vasco Gonçalves, a member of the military wing who supported the Party and who had become prime-minister after the first provisional government resigned. The Party then asserted its complete support for this changes and for the Agrarian Reform process that implemented collectivization of the agricultural sector and the land in a region named the "Zone of Intervention of the Agrarian Reform" or "ZIRA", which included the land south of the Tagus River[23]. The Party took the lead of that process and drove it according to the Party's program, organizing large thousands of peasants into cooperatives. That, combined with the Party's strong clandestine organization and support of the peasants' movement during the preceding years in that region, made the south of Portugal the major stronghold of the PCP. The Party gained more than half of the votes in Beja, Évora and Setúbal in the subsequent elections.

One year after the revolution, the first democratic elections took place to elect the parliament that would write a new Constitution to replace the Constitution of 1933. The Party achieved 12.52% of the voting and elected 30 MPs. In the end, as the Party wanted, the Constitution included several references to "Socialism" and a "Classless Society" and was approved with the opposition of only one party, the right-wing Democratic Social Center (Portuguese: Centro Democrático Social or CDS).

In 1976, after the approval of the Constitution, the second democratic election was carried out and the Party raised its share of the vote to 14.56% and 40 MPs. In that same year the first Avante! Festival took place, and the eighth congress was held in Lisbon from 11–14 November. The congress mainly stated the need to continue the quest for Socialism in Portugal and the need to defend the achievements of the Revolution against what the Party considered to be a political step backward, led by a coalition of the Socialist Party and the right-wing Centro Democrático Social, who opposed the Agrarian Reform process.

In 1979, the Party carried out its ninth congress, which analyzed the state of the post-revolutionary Portugal, right-wing politics and the Party's struggles to nationalize the economy. In December 1979, new elections took place. The Party formed the United People Alliance (Portuguese: Aliança Povo Unido or APU), in coalition with the Portuguese Democratic Movement (Portuguese: Movimento Democrático Português or MDP/CDE), and increased its vote to 18.96% and 47 MPs. The election was won by a centre/right-wing coalition, led by Francisco Sá Carneiro, which immediately initiated policies that the Party considered to be contrary to working-class interests. Despite a setback in a subsequent election in 1980, in which the PCP dropped to 41 seats, the Party achieved several victories in local elections, winning the leadership of dozens of municipalities, in the FEPU coalition. After the sudden death of Sá Carneiro in an aircrash in 1980, the Party achieved 44 MPs and 18.20% of the vote as part of the APU in the 1983 elections. Also in 1983 the Party held the tenth congress that again criticized what it saw as the dangers of right-wing politics.

In 1986, the surprising rise of Mário Soares, who reached the second round in the presidential election, defeating the Party's candidate, Salgado Zenha, made the Party call an extra Congress. The eleventh congress was called with only two weeks' notice, in order to decide whether or not to support Soares against Freitas do Amaral. Soares was supported, and he won by a slight margin. Had he not been supported by the PCP he would have probably lost. In 1987, after the resignation of the government, another election took place. The Party, now in the Unitarian Democratic Coalition (Portuguese: Coligação Democrática Unitária or CDU) with the Ecologist Party "The Greens" (Portuguese: Partido Ecologista "Os Verdes" or PEV) and the Democratic Intervention (Portuguese: Intervenção Democrática or ID), saw an electoral decline to 12.18% and 31 MPs.

The end of the Socialist Bloc and new challenges

File:Pcp manifesto 150 pt.jpg
PCP sticker of 1998: 150 years after the Manifesto, Here We Are!
File:Autocolante cdu pt 02.jpg
PCP sticker: Karl Marx claiming that all the left should vote for the CDU
Funeral of Álvaro Cunhal in Lisbon

In 1988 another congress took place, the twelfth, in which more than 2,000 delegates participated, and which put forth a new program, titled, "Portugal, an Advanced Democracy for the 21st Century."

At the end of the 1980s, the Socialist Bloc of Eastern Europe started to disintegrate and the Party faced one of the biggest crises in its history. With many members leaving, the Party called an extra thirteenth congress for May 1990, in which a huge ideological battle occurred. The majority of the more than 2,000 delegates decided to continue the Party's "revolutionary way to Socialism"—i.e., to retain its Leninist ideology. By so doing, it clashed with what many other communist parties around the world were doing. The congress asserted that socialism in the Soviet Union had failed, but a unique historical experience, several social changes and several achievements by the labour movement had been influenced by the Socialist Bloc. Álvaro Cunhal was re-elected General Secretary, but Carlos Carvalhas was elected Assistant General Secretary.

In the legislative election of 1991 the Party won 8.84% of the national vote and 17 MPs, continuing its electoral decline.

The fourteenth congress took place in 1992 and Carlos Carvalhas was elected the new General Secretary, replacing Álvaro Cunhal. The Congress analyzed the whole new international situation created by the disappearance of the Soviet Union and the defeat of Socialism in Eastern Europe. The Party also traced the guidelines intended to put Cavaco Silva and the right-wing government on its way out, a fact that would happen shortly after. In 1995 the right-wing Social Democratic Party was replaced in the government by the Socialist Party after the October legislative election, in which the Party received 8.61% of the votes.

In December 1996 the fifteenth congress was held, this time in Oporto, with more than 1,600 delegates participating. The congress criticized the right-wing policies of the Socialist government of António Guterres and also debated the future of the Party following the debacle of the Socialist Bloc. In the subsequent local elections the Party continued to decline, but in the legislative election of 1999 the Party increased its voting percentage for the first time in many years. The sixteenth congress was held in December of 2000 and Carlos Carvalhas was re-elected General Secretary. In the legislative election of 2002 the Party achieved its lowest voting result ever, with only 7.0% of the votes.

The most recent Congress, the seventeenth, in November 2004 elected Jerónimo de Sousa, a former metallurgical worker, as the new General Secretary.

In the legislative election of February 2005 the Party increased its share of the vote and is now represented in the parliament by 12 MPs of 230, after receiving about 430,000 votes (7.60%).

Álvaro Cunhal died on June 13, 2005, after several years away from the public eye. Two days later, 250,000 people gathered in Lisbon to attend to his funeral, one of the biggest funerals in Portuguese history.

After the last local election, in 2005, in which the Party regained the presidency of 7 municipalities, the Portuguese Communist Party holds the leadership of 32 (of 308) municipalities, most of them in Alentejo and Setúbal, and helds the leadership of hundreds of civil parishes and local assemblies. The local administration by PCP is usually marked by concern about issues such as preventing privatization of the water supply, funding culture and education, providing access to sports and promoting health, facilitating participatory democracy and preventing corruption [24]. The presence of the Greens in the coalition also keeps an eye on environmental issues such as recycling and water treatment.

The Party's work now follows the program of "Advanced Democracy for the 21st Century". Issues like the decriminalization of abortion, workers rights, the increasing fees for the Health Service and Education, the erosion of the social safety net, low salaries and pensions, imperialism and war, and solidarity with other countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, Cuba and the Basque Country are constant concerns in the Party's agenda [25]. Since 21 April 2005, Portugal has awaited a referendum on abortion decriminalization.

The Party has two members (Ilda Figueiredo and Pedro Guerreiro) elected to the European Parliament after achieving 9.2% of the vote in the European Election of 2004. They sit in the European United Left - Nordic Green Left group.

The Party's electoral results

Results in parliamentary elections

File:Autocolante cdu pt 01.jpg
Early CDU sticker, featuring a bee, intended to be an animal that works every day
CDU sticker: "Mark your calendar and tell your friends: on 13 June, vote CDU for the European Parliament"
File:CDU electoral results.png
CDU results in the parliamentary election of 2005. (Azores and Madeira are not shown)
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CDU results in the local election of 2005. (Azores and Madeira are not shown)
Results in Parliamentary Elections
(year links to election page)
Year Coalition Type of Election Votes garnered Percentage of total votes Mandates
1975
none
Constituent Assembly
709,659
12.5%
30
1976
none
Portuguese Parliament
785,594
14.6%
40
1979
APU
Portuguese Parliament
1,121,374
19.0%
47
1980
APU
Portuguese Parliament
1,000,975
17.0%
41
1983
APU
Portuguese Parliament
1,024,475
18.2%
44
1985
APU
Portuguese Parliament
893,216
15.6%
38
1987
CDU
Portuguese Parliament
685,109
12.2%
31
1991
CDU
Portuguese Parliament
501,840
8.8%
17
1995
CDU
Portuguese Parliament
504,007
8.6%
15
1999
CDU
Portuguese Parliament
483,716
9.0%
17
2002
CDU
Portuguese Parliament
378,640
7.0%
12
2005
CDU
Portuguese Parliament
432,009
7.6%
14

(source: Portuguese Electoral Commission)

Note:

  • In 1991 the overall number of MPs changed from the original 250 to 230.

Results in local elections

Results in Local Elections
(year links to election page)
Year Coalition Type of Election Votes garnered Percentage of total vote Mandates
1976
FEPU
Local
737,586
17.7%
267
1979
APU
Local
1,021,486
20.5%
322
1982
APU
Local
1,061,492
20.7%
325
1985
APU
Local
942,147
19.4%
305
1989
CDU
Local
633,682
12.8%
252
1993
CDU
Local
689,928
12.8%
246
1997
CDU
Local
643,956
12.0%
236
2001
CDU
Local
557,481
10.6%
202
2005
CDU
Local
590,496
11.0%
203

(source: Portuguese Electoral Commission)

Results in European Parliament elections

Results in European Elections
(year links to election page)
Year Coalition Type of Election Votes garnered Percentage of total vote Mandates
1987
CDU
European Parliament
646,640
11.5%
3
1989
CDU
European Parliament
594,961
14.4%
4
1994
CDU
European Parliament
339,283
11.2%
3
1999
CDU
European Parliament
357,575
10.3%
2
2004
CDU
European Parliament
309,406
9.1%
2

(source: Portuguese Electoral Commission)

Note:

Coalitions Info:

Further notes:

  • The Local election results report the voting for the Municipal Chambers only and don't include occasional coalitions in some municipalities, e.g. in Lisbon, between 1989 and 2001. Voting for the Municipal Assemblies and Parish Assemblies is usually higher (11.7% and 12.0%, respectively, in 2005).
  • The number of mandates denotes the number of councillors in Local elections, MPs in Parliamentary elections and MEPs in European Parliament elections.

Results in presidential elections

Results in Presidential Elections
(year links to election page)
Year Candidate supported Votes garnered Percentage of total vote Elected?
1976
Octávio Rodrigues Pato
365,344
7.6%
No
1980
Carlos Alfredo de Brito
withdrew
-
No
1986
Francisco Salgado Zenha
1,185,867
20.6%
No
1991
Carlos Alberto Carvalhas
635,867
12.9%
No
1996
Jerónimo Carvalho de Sousa
withdrew
-
No
2001
António Simões de Abreu
221,886
5.1%
No
2006
Jerónimo Carvalho de Sousa
466,428
8.6%
No

(source: Portuguese Electoral Commission)

Notes:

The media of the Party

File:Avante.gif
Avante!, the weekly newspaper of the Party
File:O militante52005.jpg
O Militante's edition of September of 2005 frontpage
File:Emigracao pcp.PNG
Emigração
File:Pt ue pcp.PNG
Portugal e a UE
File:Comunic logo pcp pt.jpg
Comunic's logo

The Portuguese Communist Party publishes the weekly Avante! (Forward!), widely distributed throughout the country, and also the magazine of theoretical discussion O Militante (The Militant), published each two months.

The Party's press also includes the pamphlet Emigração (Emigration), targeted at the large Portuguese diaspora, and the magazine Portugal e a UE (Portugal and the EU), directed by the Party's members elected in the European Parliament, which presents information related to the European politics and to the European United Left - Nordic Green Left group.

Avante! is the newspaper that was illegally printed and distributed for the longest time in the world: from February 1931 until May 1974[26]. Many times, the newspaper distribution suffered breakdowns due to the suppression by the political police of Party members who helped to distribute the newspaper, or due to the destruction of the clandestine printing offices. Successfully evading official censorship, Avante! was one of the very few Portuguese newspapers that freely reported on events like World War II, the Colonial War in Africa or massive workers' strikes and waves of student protest against the dictatorship. Avante! continues to be printed after more than three decades of democracy and has now a full online edition. The Avante! Festival was named after the newspaper, resembling the Party of L'Humanité in France.

Both Avante! and O Militante are sold in the Party's offices to the members. Buying Avante! is considered one of the members' duties. Avante! is also sold among other newspapers in many news stands around the country.

During the campaign for the Portuguese legislative election of 2005, the Party created a radio broadcast in its website and also a digital forum, being the first Portuguese party to use the internet actively in an electoral campaign. After the last Congress, the statutes were changed and the Party now considers its website as another official media and it is regularly updated.

Usually the Party's largest political campaigns and struggles are supported by massive leaflet distributions and advertising posters in hot spots like train stations, factories, universities, main streets and avenues or markets.

The free television spots that the Portuguese law grants to the parties, either in the campaign time or out of it, are used by PCP to promote initiatives and political campaigns.

Recently, an online radio named Comunic was created. It broadcasts thematic interviews with Party's members, music and propaganda.

The Party also owns a publishing company, Edições Avante! (Avante! Editions) that publishes and sells several books related to the Party's history or to Marxism. Classics of Marxism-Leninism, such as The Communist Manifesto, Capital, On the Jewish Question, or What is to be Done?, several books of Portuguese authors on the history of the Party and the resistance, official documents like the program or the statutes, books from foreign authors, like Ten Days that Shook the World and several other works are present in the Avante! Edition's catalog[27].

The youth organization

JCP logo
JCP logo

The youth organization of PCP is the Portuguese Communist Youth (Portuguese: Juventude Comunista Portuguesa or JCP), founded in November 10, 1979, after the unification of the Communist Students League (Portuguese: União dos Estudantes Comunistas or UEC) and the Young Communist League (Portuguese: União dos Jovens Comunistas or UJC).

The JCP is a member of the World Federation of Democratic Youth, a youth non-governmental organization that congregates several left-wing youth organizations from all the continents. The WFDY holds an international event, named World Festival of Youth and Students, in which the Portuguese Communist Youth uses to participate.

The youth wing follows a structure similar to the Party's, also based on the Leninist principle of Democratic centralism, and both organization smantain a cooperative relationship. JCP is, however, an independent organization.

Mainly composed by students and some working class young people, the JCP has, as its main political concerns, such issues as the promotion of a free and public education for all ages, employment, peace and housing. It also promotes international solidarity brigades for countries like Cuba, Palestine or Venezuela, alone or with other European Communist youth organizations like KNE or SDAJ.

The JCP has its main organizational strength among high-school and university students, with a strong presence among the Students' unions.

Avante! Festival

Avante Party 2005 Poster
Avante Party 2005 Poster
Picture taken from the main stage of Avante Festival in 2001

Every year, in the first weekend of September, the party holds a gigantic festival, the Avante! Festival (Portuguese: Festa do Avante!). After taking place in different locations around Lisbon, like the Lisbon International Fair, Ajuda or Loures, it is now held in Amora, a town near Seixal, on land bought by the Party after a massive fundraising campaign in the early 1990s. The Party considered this campaign to be the only way to avoid the boycott organised by the owners of the previous festival grounds, a boycott that ultimately resulted in the Festival not being held in 1987

The festival attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors. The events themselves consist of a three-day festival of music, with hundreds of Portuguese and international bands and artists across five different stages, ethnography, gastronomy, debates, a books and music fair, theatre (Avanteatro) and sporting events. Several foreign communist parties also participate [28].

Famous artists [29], Portuguese and non-Portuguese, have performed at the Festival, including Chico Buarque, Baden Powell, Ivan Lins, Zeca Afonso, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Holly Near, Johnny Clegg, Charlie Haden, Judy Collins, Richie Havens, Tom Paxton, The Soviet Circus Company, the Kuban Cossacks Choir, Dexys Midnight Runners, The Band, Hevia, Brigada Victor Jara, Adriano Correia de Oliveira, Carlos Paredes, Jorge Palma, Manoel de Oliveira and many others.

The preparation of the party begins right after the end of the previous festival. Hundreds of the Party's members and friends, mostly young people, volunteer for the hard work of building a small town in a few months.

Gallery of posters

Notes and references

  1. ^ Portuguese Communist Party (2005). Program and Statutes of the Portuguese Communist Party. Edições Avante!. ISBN 972-550-307-4
  2. ^ Cunhal, Álvaro (1997). O caminho para o derrubamento do fascismo. Edições Avante!. ISBN 972-550-262-0
  3. ^ Portuguese Communist Party official web site - History Issues section.
  4. ^ Cunhal, Álvaro (1994). Acção Revolucionária, Capitulação e Aventura. Edições Avante!. ISBN 972-550-232-9
  5. ^ Vasconcelos, José Carlos de (dir.). (1982) Revista História (History Magazine) - Number 47
  6. ^ Rosas, Fernando (dir.) (1996). Revista História (History Magazine) - Number 17 (New Series)
  7. ^ Rosas, Fernando (dir.) (1997). Revista História (History Magazine) - Number 28 (New Series)
  8. ^ The relation between the PCP and the MUD explained.
  9. ^ Rosas, Fernando (dir.) (1995). Revista História (History Magazine) - Number 8 (New Series)
  10. ^ The Academic Crisis of 1962.
  11. ^ 40th anniversary of the Academic Crisis of 1962.
  12. ^ Portuguese colonial war.
  13. ^ Conference: The Communist Party from 1940 until 1975 - 9 April 1992.
  14. ^ Timeline of the year of 1974 in Portugal by the CEPP of the Technical University of Lisbon.
  15. ^ Timeline of the year of 1975 in Portugal by the CEPP of the Technical University of Lisbon.
  16. ^ Shorth history of Avante!.
  17. ^ Portuguese Communist Party official web site - Avante! Editions section.
  18. ^ Avante! Festival official website.
  19. ^ List of artists present in the 28 editions of the Avante! Festival.


See also

External links

In Portuguese:

In English: