Portuguese legislative election, 1985

Portuguese legislative election, 1985
Portugal
6 October 1985

250 seats to the Portuguese Assembly
125 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Aníbal Cavaco Silva Almeida Santos Hermínio Martinho
Party PSD PS PRD
Leader since 2 June 1985 13 June 1985 (interim) 10 July 1985
Leader's seat Lisbon[1] Porto[2] Lisbon
Last election 75 seats, 27.2% 101 seats, 36.1% New party
Seats won 88 57 45
Seat change Increase 13 Decrease 44
Popular vote 1,732,288 1,204,321 1,038,893
Percentage 29.9% 20.8% 17.90
Swing Increase 2.7% Decrease 15.3% New party

Prime Minister before election

Mário Soares
PS

Elected Prime Minister

Aníbal Cavaco Silva
PSD

Portugal

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Portugal

The Portuguese legislative election of 1985 took place on 6 October. In June of the same year, the former Prime-Minister, Mário Soares, had resigned from the job due to the lack of parliamentary support, the government was composed by a coalition of the two major parties, the center-right Social Democratic and the center-left Socialist, in what was called the Central Bloc, however this was an unstable balance of forces and several members of each party opposed such alliance. The new leader of the Social Democratic Party, Cavaco Silva, elected in May, was among those that never supported such alliance, and short after being elected leader of the party made the coalition fall in July.

A new election was called by the President and the Social Democrats won with a short majority and Cavaco became the Prime-Minister. The election was the first of three consecutive election victories for the Social Democratic Party. Meanwhile, a new party had been founded by supporters of the President Ramalho Eanes, the Democratic Renewal Party, led by Hermínio Martinho that surprisingly gained 45 MPs in the election and became the parliamentary support of the Cavaco's government until 1987, when it removed its support, making Cavaco fall. The Communists and the Socialists lost votes and MPs and the left would only return to the government ten years later, in 1995.

Parties

The major parties involved and the respective leaders:

Aníbal Cavaco Silva, leader of the Social Democratic Party, was nominated Prime Minister for the first time.

Opinion Polling

See also: Exit poll and Opinion poll

The following table shows the opinion polls of voting intention of the Portuguese voters before the election. Those parties that are listed are currently represented in parliament. Included is also the result of the Portuguese general elections in 1983 and 1985 for reference.

Date Released Polling Firm PS PSD CDU CDS PRD Others Lead
6 Oct 1985 Leg. Election 20.8
57 seats
29.9
88 seats
15.5
38 seats
10.0
22 seats
17.9
45 seats
5.9
0 seats
9.1
6 Oct (22:50) RTP1 22.0 – 26.9 26.8 – 29.7 15.0 – 18.1 9.3 – 10.8 14.5 – 16.5 2.8 – 4.8
6 Oct (21:10) RTP1 23.8 – 26.9 28.0 – 29.8 17.3 – 18.1 9.8 – 10.7 11.1 – 14.9 2.9 – 6.0
6 Oct Rádio Comercial 19.0 – 22.0 29.0 – 31.0 14.0 – 16.0 8.0 – 16.0 18.0 – 22.0 9.0 – 10.0
Exit polls
4 Oct Expresso 28.0 – 32.0 27.0 – 31.0 15.0 – 17.0 9.0 – 12.0 8.0 – 11.0 1.0
1985
25 Apr 1983 Leg. Election 36.1
101 seats
27.2
75 seats
18.1
44 seats
12.6
30 seats
Did not exist 6.0
0 seats
8.9

National summary of votes and seats

 Summary of the 6 October 1985 Assembly of the Republic elections results
Parties Votes % ± MPs MPs %/
votes %
1983 1985 ± % ±
Social Democratic 1,732,28829.87Increase2.77588Increase1335.20Increase5.21.18
Socialist 1,204,32120.77Decrease15.310157Decrease4422.80Decrease17.61.10
Democratic Renewal 1,038,89317.92 N/A N/A45 N/A18.00 N/A1.00
United People Alliance[A] 898,28115.49Decrease2.64438Decrease615.20Decrease2.40.98
Democratic and Social Centre 577,5809.96Decrease2.63022Decrease88.80Decrease3.20.88
People's Democratic Union 73,4011.27Increase0.800Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Christian Democratic Party 41,8310.72Increase0.000Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Revolutionary Socialist Party 35,2380.61Increase0.400Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Workers' Communist Party 19,9430.34Decrease0.100Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Workers Party of Socialist Unity 19,0850.33Decrease0.000Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Communist Party (Reconstructed) 12,7490.22Increase0.200Steady00.00Steady0.00.0
Total valid 5,653,610 97.49 Increase0.1 250 250 Steady0 100.00 Steady0.0
Blank ballots 48,7090.84Increase0.1
Invalid ballots 96,6101.67Decrease0.1
Total (turnout 74.16%) 5,798,929 100.00 Decrease3.6
A Portuguese Communist Party (35 MPs) and Portuguese Democratic Movement (3 MPs) ran in coalition.[3]
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições
Vote share
PSD
 
29.87%
PS
 
20.77%
PRD
 
17.92%
APU
 
15.49%
CDS
 
9.96%
UDP
 
1.27%
Others/Invalides
 
4.73%
Parliamentary seats
PSD
 
35.20%
PS
 
22.80%
PRD
 
18.00%
APU
 
15.20%
CDS
 
8.80%

Distribution by constituency

 Results of the 1985 election of the Portuguese Assembly of the Republic
by constituency
Constituency%S%S%S%S%S Total
S
PSD PS PRD APU CDS
Azores 48.3 3 20.1 1 15.2 1 4.4 - 6.5 - 5
Aveiro 38.4 6 23.0 4 13.4 2 6.5 1 13.5 2 15
Beja 13.7 1 20.1 1 11.6 - 44.9 3 2.2 - 5
Braga 32.8 6 21.8 4 16.8 3 8.5 1 24.0 2 17
Bragança 39.2 2 22.7 1 6.9 - 5.3 - 17.1 1 4
Castelo Branco 31.2 3 18.5 1 24.4 2 8.9 - 9.6 - 6
Coimbra 29.5 4 28.5 3 16.9 2 10.1 1 8.6 1 11
EvoraÉvora 19.1 1 14.3 1 15.8 1 41.2 2 3.3 - 4
Faro 28.4 3 22.3 2 20.5 2 15.4 2 6.1 - 9
Guarda 33.6 2 23.3 2 10.9 - 5.2 - 19.5 1 5
Leiria 38.6 5 19.6 2 15.3 2 7.9 1 12.2 1 11
Lisbon 25.6 15 19.8 12 21.3 13 20.1 12 8.1 4 56
Madeira 56.8 4 13.2 1 9.7 - 3.2 - 7.8 - 5
Portalegre 20.9 1 23.7 1 18.9 - 25.2 1 4.9 - 3
Porto 29.3 12 23.6 10 20.5 8 12.1 5 9.8 4 39
Santarém 27.8 4 18.6 2 23.8 3 16.4 2 7.7 1 12
Setúbal 15.4 3 16.5 3 20.4 4 38.2 7 3.8 - 17
Viana do Castelo 33.5 3 18.4 1 16.2 1 8.2 - 16.6 1 6
Vila Real 42.2 3 23.0 2 8.6 - 5.9 - 12.5 1 6
Viseu 37.7 5 20.0 2 10.9 1 5.0 - 19.9 2 10
zEurope 24.3 1 24.2 1 7.1 - 18.8 - 17.3 - 2
zRest of the World 40.5 1 7.8 - 3.3 - 2.6 - 37.9 1 2
Total 29.9 88 20.8 57 17.9 45 15.5 38 10.0 22 250
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições

References

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.