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1980 Portuguese legislative election

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1980 Portuguese legislative election

← 1979 5 October 1980 1983 →

250 seats to the Portuguese Assembly
125 seats needed for a majority
Registered7,179,023 Decrease1.0%
Turnout6,026,395 (83.9%)
Increase1.0 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Francisco Sá Carneiro Mário Soares Álvaro Cunhal
Party PSD PS PCP
Alliance AD FRS APU
Leader since 29 April 1979[a] 19 April 1973[b] 1979
Leader's seat Lisbon[1] Lisbon[2] Lisbon
Last election 128 seats, 45.3% 74 seats, 27.3%1 47 seats, 18.8%
Seats won 134 74 41
Seat change Increase 6 Steady 0 Decrease 6
Popular vote 2,868,076 1,673,279 1,009,505
Percentage 47.6% 27.8% 16.8%
Swing Increase 2.3 pp Increase 0.5 pp Decrease 2.0 pp

Results by district or autonomous region
PSD ran alone in the Azores and Madeira.
PS ran alone in the Azores, Madeira, Europe and Rest of the World.

Prime Minister before election

Francisco Sá Carneiro
PSD

Elected Prime Minister

Francisco Sá Carneiro
PSD

The Portuguese legislative election of 1980 took place on 5 October. In January 1980, the Democratic Alliance, which had won the previous election, on 2 December 1979, entered office with Francisco Sá Carneiro leading the government. However, this election was an extraordinary election, and so, in 1980, another election was held.

Electoral system

The Assembly of the Republic has 250 members elected to four-year terms. Governments do not require absolute majority support of the Assembly to hold office, as even if the number of opposers of government is larger than that of the supporters, the number of opposers still needs to be equal or greater than 126 (absolute majority) for both the Government's Programme to be rejected or for a motion of no confidence to be approved.[3]

The number of seats assigned to each district depends on the district magnitude.[4] The use of the d'Hondt method makes for a higher effective threshold than certain other allocation methods such as the Hare quota or Sainte-Laguë method, which are more generous to small parties.[5]

Parties

The major parties involved and the respective leaders:

The leader of the Democratic Alliance, Francisco Sá Carneiro, member of the Social Democratic Party was nominated Prime-Minister.

Campaign period

Party slogans

Party or alliance Original slogan English translation Refs
AD « Garantir o progresso. » "Ensure progress." [6]
FRS « Um governo para todos. A sua segurança. » "A government for all. Your safety." [7]
bgcolor="Template:Unitary Democratic Coalition/meta/color"| APU « Vota APU, para a vitória de Abril » "Vote APU, for the victory of April" [8]
UDP « Abril de novo pela força do povo » "April again by the strength of the people" [9]

National summary of votes and seats

e • d Summary of the 5 October 1980 Assembly of the Republic elections results
Parties Votes % ± Seats MPs %/
votes %
1979 1980 ± % ±
Democratic Alliance[A] 2,706,667 44.91 Increase2.4 121 126 Increase5 50.40 Increase2.0 1.12
bgcolor="Template:Social Democratic Party (Portugal)/meta/color" | Social Democratic[B] 147,644 2.45 Increase0.1 7 8 Increase1 3.20 Increase0.4 1.31
bgcolor="Template:Democratic and Social Centre – People's Party/meta/color" | Democratic and Social Centre[B] 13,765 0.23 Decrease0.2 0 0 Steady0 0.00 Steady0.0 0.0
Total Democratic Alliance 2,868,076 47.59 Increase2.3 128 134 Increase6 53.60 Increase2.4 1.13
Republican and Socialist Front[C] 1,606,198 26.65 71 28.40 1.07
bgcolor="Template:Socialist Party (Portugal)/meta/color" | Socialist[D] 67,081 1.11 74 3 1.20 1.08
Total Republican and Socialist Front 1,673,279 27.76 Increase0.41 741 74 Steady01 29.60 Steady0.01 1.07
United People Alliance[E] 1,009,505 16.75 Decrease2.0 47 41 Decrease6 16.40 Decrease2.4 0.98
People's Democratic Union 83,204 1.38 Decrease0.8 1 1 Steady0 0.40 Steady0.0 0.29
colspan="2" style="width: 10px" bgcolor="Template:Workers Party of Socialist Unity/meta/color" | Workers Party of Socialist Unity 83,095 1.38 Increase1.2 0 0 Steady0 0.00 Steady0.0 0.0
Revolutionary Socialist 60,496 1.00 Increase0.4 0 0 Steady0 0.00 Steady0.0 0.0
Labour 39,408 0.65 0 0.00 0.0
colspan="2" style="width: 10px" bgcolor="Template:Communist Party of the Portuguese Workers / Reorganizative Movement of the Party of the Proletariat/meta/color" | Workers' Communist Party 35,409 0.59 Decrease0.3 0 0 Steady0 0.00 Steady0.0 0.0
PDC / MIRN/PDP / FN 23,819 0.40 0 0.00 0.0
colspan="2" style="width: 10px" bgcolor="Template:Democratic Party of the Atlantic/meta/color" | Democratic Party of the Atlantic 8,529 0.14 0 0.00 0.0
OCMLP 3,913 0.06 Increase0.0 0 0 Steady0 0.00 Steady0.0 0.0
Total valid 5,888,733 97.72 Increase0.4 250 250 Steady0 100.00 Steady0
Blank ballots 34,552 0.57 Decrease0.1
Invalid ballots 103,140 1.71 Decrease0.3
Total (turnout 83.94%) 6,026,395 100.00 Increase1.0
A Alliance formed by the Social Democratic Party (74 seats), the Democratic and Social Centre (46 seats) and
the People's Monarchist Party (6 seats).
B Social Democratic Party and Democratic and Social Centre electoral list only in Azores and Madeira.
C Alliance formed by the Socialist Party (63 seats), the Leftwing Union for the Socialist Democracy (4 seats)
and the Independent Social-Democratic Action (4 seats).
D Socialist Party electoral list only in Azores and Madeira.
E Portuguese Communist Party (39 MPs) and Portuguese Democratic Movement (2 MPs) ran in coalition.[10]
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições

1 Republican and Socialist Front results are compared to the combined totals of the Socialist Party in the 1979 election.

Vote share
AD
44.91%
FRS
26.65%
APU
16.75%
PSD
2.45%
UDP
1.38%
POUS
1.38%
PS
1.11%
PSR
1.00%
AOC
0.65%
PCTP/MRPP
0.59%
Others
0.83%
Blank/Invalid
2.28%
Parliamentary seats
AD
50.40%
FRS
28.40%
APU
16.40%
PSD
3.20%
PS
1.20%
UDP
0.40%

Distribution by constituency

e • d Results of the 1980 election of the Portuguese Assembly of the Republic
by constituency
Constituency % S % S % S % S % S % S Total
S
AD FRS APU PSD PS UDP
Azores 3.1 - style="background:Template:Social Democratic Party (Portugal)/meta/color; color:white;"|57.0 4 27.3 1 1.3 - 5
Aveiro 58.8 10 27.1 4 6.8 1 15
Beja 22.4 1 21.1 1 47.1 3 1.3 - 5
Braga 54.9 9 29.3 5 8.4 1 0.9 - 15
Bragança 65.3 3 21.3 1 4.8 - 1.0 - 4
Castelo Branco 51.0 4 30.3 2 10.5 - 0.7 - 6
Coimbra 46.1 6 35.9 5 9.9 1 0.8 - 12
EvoraÉvora 29.2 1 18.7 1 45.7 3 0.9 - 5
Faro 37.2 4 34.7 4 16.7 1 1.9 - 9
Guarda 60.6 4 26.3 1 5.0 - 0.7 - 5
Leiria 59.8 7 22.7 3 9.7 1 1.0 - 11
Lisbon 41.6 25 28.1 17 23.1 13 1.7 1 56
Madeira 2.9 - style="background:Template:Social Democratic Party (Portugal)/meta/color; color:white;"|63.6 4 16.5 1 4.5 - 5
Portalegre 33.4 2 32.4 1 26.1 1 0.7 - 4
Porto 46.6 19 34.3 14 11.9 5 1.4 - 38
Santarém 42.1 6 30.4 4 19.0 2 1.2 - 12
Setúbal 24.1 4 23.5 4 44.0 9 2.8 - 17
Viana do Castelo 59.2 5 22.8 1 10.0 - 0.7 - 6
Vila Real 62.1 5 22.8 1 5.1 - 0.8 - 6
Viseu 66.8 8 20.9 2 5.0 - 0.6 - 10
Europe 49.6 1 15.2 - 25.4 1 1.4 - 2
Rest of the World 85.5 2 2.6 - 4.0 - 0.4 - 2
Total 44.9 126 26.7 71 16.8 41 2.5 8 1.1 3 1.4 1 250
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições

Maps

Notes

  1. ^ As leader of the Social Democratic Party (PSD).
  2. ^ As leader of the Socialist Party (PS).

References

  1. ^ Diário da Républica, 3 de Novembro de 1980 - Lista de candidatos eleitos[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Fundação Mário Soares
  3. ^ "Constitution of the Portuguese Republic" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2019-12-29.
  4. ^ "Effective threshold in electoral systems". Trinity College, Dublin. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  5. ^ Gallaher, Michael (1992). "Comparing Proportional Representation Electoral Systems: Quotas, Thresholds, Paradoxes and Majorities"
  6. ^ "Comunicação Política em eleições legislativas em Portugal: uma análise a partir dos cartazes eleitorais (1975-2009)" (PDF). Francisco Teixeira (in Portuguese). Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  7. ^ "ELEIÇÕES LEGISLATIVAS DE 1980 – FRENTE REPUBLICANA E SOCIALISTA (PS + ASDI + UEDS)". EPHEMERA (in Portuguese). Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  8. ^ "ELEIÇÕES LEGISLATIVAS DE 1980 – APU". EPHEMERA (in Portuguese). Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  9. ^ "UDP – 1980". EPHEMERA (in Portuguese). Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  10. ^ "Electoral results - Assembly of the Republic". Archived from the original on 2012-07-16. Retrieved 2012-09-02.

See also