1976 Portuguese legislative election

1976 Portuguese legislative election

← 1975 25 April 1976 1979 →

263 seats to the Portuguese Assembly
132 seats needed for a majority
Registered6,564,667 Increase5.4%
Turnout5,483,461 (83.5%)
Decrease8.2 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Mário Soares 1975b (cropped).jpg
Francisco Sá Carneiro.jpg
Freitas do Amaral, XV Cimeira Ibero-Americana - Salamanca, Espanha (cropped).jpg
Leader Mário Soares Francisco Sá Carneiro Diogo Freitas do Amaral
Party PS PPD CDS
Leader since 19 April 1973 6 May 1974 19 July 1974
Leader's seat Lisbon Porto Lisbon
Last election 116 seats, 37.9% 81 seats, 26.4% 16 seats, 7.6%
Seats won 107 73 42
Seat change Decrease 9 Decrease 8 Increase 26
Popular vote 1,912,921 1,335,381 876,007
Percentage 34.9% 24.4% 15.9%
Swing Decrease 3.0 pp Decrease 2.0 pp Increase 8.4 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Alvaro Cunhal 1980 (cropped).jpg
Leader Álvaro Cunhal Acácio Barreiros
Party PCP UDP
Leader since 31 March 1961 1976
Leader's seat Lisbon Lisbon
Last election 30 seats, 12.5% 1 seat, 0.8%
Seats won 40 1
Seat change Increase 10 Steady 0
Popular vote 788,830 91,690
Percentage 14.4% 1.7%
Swing Increase 1.9 pp Increase 0.9 pp


Prime Minister before election

Vasco de Almeida e Costa (interim)
Independent

Prime Minister after election

Mário Soares
PS

The 1976 Portuguese legislative election was held on Sunday 25 April, exactly one year after the previous election, and two years after the Carnation Revolution. With a new Constitution approved, the country's main aim was economic recovery and strengthening its democratic institutions. The election renewed all 263 members of the Assembly of the Republic.

The Socialist Party won a plurality of votes, almost 35 percent, and legislative seats, and its leader Mário Soares became the Prime Minister of the 1st Constitutional Government on 23 July 1976. The lack of a socialist majority forced his party to form an unexpected coalition with the Democratic and Social Center, a right-wing party. The nature of this coalition, between a socialist party and a conservative party that voted against the new constitution because of its socialist influences, surprised most Portuguese voters and marked the start of the Socialist Party's right-wing turn that would soon be attacked by all the left due to the new government's measures against left-wing reforms following the Carnation Revolution, mainly concerning agrarian reform, in what was called the PS putting "Socialism in the drawer".[1]

The Social Democratic Party (then known as the Democratic People's Party, PPD) won the second most votes and seats, 24 percent of the votes, but polled 10 points below the PS. The Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) achieved considerable gains that reflected its growing influence, mainly in the south of the country, gaining 14 percent of the votes. The big surprise in the elections was the strong showing of the Democratic and Social Center (CDS), which polled ahead of PCP and gathered 16 percent of the votes. Only 19 years later, in 1995, would the CDS again surpass the PCP in number of votes.

Voter turnout fell to 83.5 percent, compared with the 91.7 percent just a year before.

  1. ^ "Mário Soares e o "socialismo na gaveta"". TSF Rádio Notícias (in Portuguese). 10 January 2017. Retrieved 29 June 2020.