2019 European Parliament election in Portugal

2019 European Parliament election in Portugal

← 2014 26 May 2019 2024 →

All 21 Portuguese seats to the European Parliament
Turnout30.7% Decrease 3.1 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
High-hevel Conference Dedicated to EU Cohesion Policy Handshake (27796851787) (cropped).jpg
MERCOSUL - Representação Brasileira no Parlamento do Mercosul (22371092998) (cropped).jpg
Marisa Matias, SomosBibliotecas (cropped).png
Leader Pedro Marques Paulo Rangel Marisa Matias
Party PS PSD BE
Alliance S&D EPP GUE/NGL
Last election 8 seats, 31.5% 6 seats (AP)[a] 1 seats, 4.6%
Seats won 9 6 2
Seat change Increase 1 Steady 0 Increase 1
Popular vote 1,104,694 725,399 325,093
Percentage 33.4% 21.9% 9.8%
Swing Increase 1.9 pp [a] Increase 5.3 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
João Ferreira (48951288883) (cropped).jpg
Melo, Nuno-1294 (cropped).jpg
Francisco Guerreiro (GEF - The EP Goes Green).png
Leader João Ferreira Nuno Melo Francisco Guerreiro
Party CDU CDS–PP PAN
Alliance GUE/NGL EPP Greens/EFA
Last election 3 seats, 12.7% 1 seat (AP)[a] 0 seats, 1.7%
Seats won 2 1 1
Seat change Decrease 1 Steady 0 Increase 1
Popular vote 228,045 204,792 168,015
Percentage 6.9% 6.2% 5.1%
Swing Decrease 5.8 pp [a] Increase 3.4 pp

An election was held in Portugal on Sunday, 26 May 2019, to elect the Portuguese delegation to the European Parliament from 2019 to 2024. This was the eighth European Parliament election held in Portugal.

The Socialist Party (PS) was the winner of the election, scoring 33.4 percent of the vote. The party increased their share of the votes by 2 percentage points from the 2014 election, and won an additional seat. It was one of the only three times in Portuguese history where the government party won a European election.

The Social Democratic Party (PSD) achieved its worst results ever as a standalone party, with 21.9 percent of the vote, distancing more than eleven points from the winner. The People's Party (CDS), which ran alongside the PSD in the previous election, as part of the Portugal Alliance, also fell below expectations at 6.2 percent of the vote, only being able to elect their top candidate Nuno Melo.

The Democratic Unity Coalition (CDU) scored their worst result as well, narrowly electing two European Parliament members compared with their former three. On the other hand, the Left Bloc (BE) rebounded to previous support levels, more than doubling its vote share to 9.8 percent and electing a new member.

The big surprise of the elections was the result of People-Animals-Nature (PAN). Headed by civil engineer André Silva, PAN won 5.1 percent of the votes and was able to elect its first ever European Parliament member, over-performing the polls.

Turnout, again, fell to the lowest level ever, with only 30.7 percent of voters casting a ballot. Abstention reached an unprecedented level of 99.04 percent for Portuguese citizens living abroad.[1]


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  1. ^ Europeias. Abstenção de 99% entre os emigrantes, Expresso, 28 May 2019. Retrieved 28 May 2019.