Politics of Madeira
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2020) |
The politics of Madeira, Portugal, takes place in the framework of a semi-presidential representative democracy and of a pluriform multi-party system. The Representative of the Republic exercises some reserve powers on behalf of the President of the Portuguese Republic. Executive power is exercised by the Regional Government. Legislative power is vested in the Legislative Assembly. All government's offices are headquartered in Funchal, Madeira's capital city.[1][2]
History
[edit]In the years immediately after the Carnation Revolution in 1974, a small clandestine far-right independence movement – the Madeira Archipelago Liberation Front (FLAMA) – was created in response to the perceived communist threat in the country's central government and carried out several bomb attacks.[3]
The current Portuguese Constitution, in force since 25 April 1976, granted political and administrative autonomy to the Madeiran and the Azorian archipelagoes and turned the local government throughout the country democratically elected. The first election for the Regional Assembly were held in that year. Jaime Ornelas Camacho was the first President of the Regional Government.
Since the archipelago gained political autonomy from mainland Portugal in 1976, the centre-right Social Democratic Party (PSD) has always been in power, winning 11 absolute majorities in a row over 43 years, and until recently it had always ruled most municipalities. From 1978 to 2015, Alberto João Jardim was the sole President of the Regional Government, winning a total of 9 elections. In 2015, former mayor of Funchal Miguel Albuquerque succeeded him. In 2019, for the first time since 1976, the PSD lost its parliamentary majority and was forced into a governmental coalition with the right-wing Popular Party.[4]
Over the more than forty years of autonomy, a few Catholic priests stood out as some of the main political opposition figures against Alberto João Jardim's long-lasting rule, winning seats in parliament and municipalities for far-left (Communist Party and Popular Democratic Union) and centre-left parties (Socialist Party) and gathering disapproval from the Church local authorities.[5]
Reserve powers
[edit]Legislative branch
[edit]Executive branch
[edit]Local government
[edit]Madeira is divided in 11 municípios (municipalities), with each of these being split into freguesias (civil parishes), which add up to a total of 54.
Municipalities
[edit]Municipality | Population | Mayor | Party | Chair of the Municipal Assembly | Party | Election | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Calheta | 10,867 | Carlos Manuel Teles | PPD/PSD | Manuel Baeta de Castro | PPD/PSD | 2017 | ||
Câmara de Lobos | 33,675 | Pedro Coelho | PPD/PSD | Manuel Pedro Freitas | PPD/PSD | 2017 | ||
Funchal | 104,024 | Miguel Silva Gouveia | PS | Mário Rodrigues | PPD/PSD | 2017 | ||
Machico | 19,981 | Ricardo Franco | PS | João Bosco de Castro | PS | 2017 | ||
Ponta do Sol | 8,593 | Célia Pecegueiro | PS | Simão Santos | PPD/PSD | 2017 | ||
Porto Moniz | 2,342 | Emanuel Câmara | PS | Lino Conceilção | PS | 2017 | ||
Porto Santo | 5,202 | Idalino Vasconcelos | PPD/PSD | Fátima Silva | PPD/PSD | 2017 | ||
Ribeira Brava | 12,435 | Ricardo Nascimento | independent | Rita Abreu | independent | 2017 | ||
Santa Cruz | 45,281 | Filipe Sousa | JPP | Júlia Caré | JPP | 2017 | ||
Santana | 6,711 | Dinarte Fernandes | CDS-PP | Martinho Rodrigues | CDS-PP | 2017 | ||
São Vicente | 5,143 | José António Garcês | independent | Aires Santos | independent | 2017 |
Parishes
[edit]Parishes with more than 10,000 inhabitants
Parish | Municipality | Population | Chair of the Council | Party | Chair of the Assembly | Party | Election | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Santo António | Funchal | 27,437 | Rui Santos | PPD/PSD | Gonçalo Jardim | PS | 2017 | ||
São Martinho | Funchal | 26,464 | Duarte Caldeira | PS | Thomas Dellinger | PS | 2017 | ||
Caniço | Santa Cruz | 23,361 | Milton Teixeira | JPP | Luís Gaspar | JPP | 2017 | ||
Câmara de Lobos | Câmara de Lobos | 17,978 | Celso Bettencourt | PPD/PSD | Sónia Brazão | PPD/PSD | 2017 | ||
Santa Maria Maior | Funchal | 13,387 | Guido Gomes | PS | Juvenal Rodrigues | PS | 2017 | ||
Machico | Machico | 11,249 | Alberto Olim | PS | José Câmara | PS | 2017 | ||
Estreito de Câmara de Lobos | Câmara de Lobos | 10,263 | Gabriel Pereira | PPD/PSD | Fernanda Caldeira | PPD/PSD | 2017 |
Political parties and leaders
[edit]Political party or alliance | Constituent parties | Previous result | Candidate | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes (%) | Seats | |||||
Social Democratic | 39.42 | 21 | Miguel Albuquerque | |||
Socialist | 35.76 | 19 | Paulo Cafôfo | |||
Together for the People | 5.76 | 3 | Élvio Sousa | |||
People's | 5.47 | 3 | Rui Barreto | |||
Unitary Democratic Coalition | Communist | 1.80 | 1 | Edgar Silva | ||
The Greens | – | |||||
Left Bloc | 1.74 | – | Paulino Ascenção | |||
People, Animals, Nature | 1.46 | – | João Henrique de Freitas | |||
Retirees and Pensioneers | 1.23 | – | Rafael Macedo | |||
React, Include, Recycle | 1.22 | – | Roberto Vieira | |||
Labour | 1.00 | – | Raquel Coelho | |||
Alliance | 0.53 | – | Joaquim Sousa | |||
Liberal Initiative | 0.53 | – | Nuno Morna | |||
Enough | 0.43 | – | Miguel Teixeira | |||
Democratic Republican | 0.42 | – | Filipe Rebelo | |||
Workers' Communist | 0.42 | – | Fernanda Calaça | |||
Earth | 0.35 | – | Valter Rodrigues | |||
Rise Up | 0.19 | – | Álvaro Araújo |
Opinion polling
[edit]This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (December 2021) |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Madeira Government". Madeira Web. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- ^ "Economic, social and territorial situation of Portugal" (PDF). European Parliament. pp. 3–4. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- ^ "Conservative Madeirans Are Cool to the Revolutionary Politics of Mainland. Portugal". The New York Times. 20 November 1975. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- ^ Ames, Paul (23 September 2019). "Portugal's Costa gets Madeira boost ahead of election". Politico.eu. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- ^ Garcia, Javier (10 October 1996). "Madeira's rebel priests choose politics to beat inequality". El País. The Independent. Retrieved 9 September 2020.