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Portugal elects Socialist as president by landslide, but far right grows

Antonio José Seguro won nearly 67% of votes to secure the presidency, while far-right candidate André Ventura increased support to about 33%, reflecting rising far-right influence.

  • On Feb 8, Moderate Socialist António José Seguro secured a landslide victory and five-year presidential term, defeating far-right André Ventura in Portugal's runoff.
  • Seen as a mediator and defender of democratic values, Seguro received backing from prominent conservatives after the first round, amid worries about Ventura's populist tendencies.
  • With nearly 70 per cent counted, two exit polls placed Seguro at 67-73 percent and Ventura at 27-33 percent, with ballots in Lisbon and Porto counted late.
  • Though largely ceremonial, Portugal's presidency can dissolve parliament and block legislation; the new president will succeed Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa in early March, while Prime Minister Luís Montenegro declined to endorse either candidate.
  • Yet Ventura's showing highlights his 34 percent, up from Chega's 22.8 percent in last year's general election, marking the first extreme-right run-off and growing far-right influence in Portugal and Europe.
Insights by Ground AI

22 Articles

Lean Right

Left-wing candidate António José Seguro will become Portugal's new president after right-wing populist André Ventura lost heavily.

·Stockholm, Sweden
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Lean Left

After a ten-year absence, the progressive António José Seguro is back on the political scene. For the first time in twenty years, Portugal will have a center-left president, a different political color than the center-right prime minister.

·Netherlands
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  • 42% of the sources lean Left
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Euronews broke the news in France on Sunday, February 8, 2026.
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