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1st Legislature of the Third Portuguese Republic

1st Legislature of the Third Portuguese Republic
Constituent 2nd Legislature
Overview
Legislative bodyAssembly of the Republic
Meeting placePalace of Saint Benedict
Term3 June 1976 (1976-06-03) – 12 November 1980 (1980-11-12)
Election25 April 1976
2 December 1979
GovernmentI Constitutional Government
II Constitutional Government
III Constitutional Government
IV Constitutional Government
V Constitutional Government
VI Constitutional Government
Websiteparlamento.pt
Deputies (1976–1979)
Members263
PresidentVasco da Gama Fernandes (PS) (1976–1978)
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS) (1978–1979)
First Vice-PresidentAntónio Arnault (PS)
Second Vice-PresidentNuno Rodrigues dos Santos (PPD)
Third Vice-PresidentAntónio Martins Canaverde (CDS)
Fourth Vice-PresidentJosé Vitoriano (PCP)
Deputies (1979–1980)
Members250
PresidentLeonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD)
First Vice-PresidentNuno Rodrigues dos Santos (PPD/PSD)
Second Vice-PresidentAntónio Arnault (PS)
Third Vice-PresidentJosé Vitoriano (PCP)
Fourth Vice-PresidentAntónio Martins Canaverde (CDS)

The 1st Legislature of the Third Portuguese Republic (Portuguese: I Legislatura da Terceira República Portuguesa) ran from 3 June 1976 to 12 November 1980.[1] The composition of the Assembly of the Republic, the legislative body of Portugal, was determined by the results of the 1976 legislative election, held on 25 April 1976.

This was the only legislature where the composition changed mid-term due to another election, when the 1979 legislative election, held on 2 December 1979, was called.

Election

The 1st Portuguese legislative election was held on 25 April 1976. In the election, the Socialist Party (PS) won the most seats and formed a minority government. Between January and August 1978, the PS formed a majority coalition government with the Democratic and Social Center (CDS).[2]

Party Assembly of the Republic
Votes % Seats +/−
PS 1,912,921 34.89 107 –9
PPD 1,335,381 24.35 73 –8
CDS 876,007 15.98 42 +26
PCP 788,830 14.39 40 +10
UDP 91,690 1.67 1 ±0
Other/blank/invalid 478,632 8.73 0 –6
Total 5,483,461 100.00 263 +13

The 2nd Portuguese legislative election was held on 2 December 1979. In the election, the Democratic Alliance (AD), a coalition composed by the Social Democratic Party (PPD/PSD), the Democratic and Social Center (CDS) and the People's Monarchist Party (PPM) won a majority of the seats and the three parties formed a majority coalition government.[2]

Party Assembly of the Republic
Votes % Seats +/−
AD 2,719,208 45.26 128 +13
PS 1,642,136 27.33 74 –33
APU 1,129,322 18.80 47 +7
UDP 130,842 2.18 1 ±0
Other/blank/invalid 385,945 6.43 0 ±0
Total 6,007,453 100.00 250 –13

Composition

1976–1979

Party Parliamentary group leader Elected 1976 Before 1979
Seats % Seats %
PS Francisco Salgado Zenha (Porto) 107 40.7 102 38.8
PPD Francisco Sá Carneiro (Porto) (1976)
Afonso Moura Guedes (Lisbon) (1976–1977)
António Barbosa de Melo (Coimbra) (1977–1978)
Joaquim Magalhães Mota (Lisbon) (1978)
José Menéres Pimentel (Lisbon) (1978–1979)
Francisco Sá Carneiro (Porto) (1979–1980)
73 27.7 36 13.7
CDS Adelino Amaro da Costa (Porto) (1976–1978)
Narana Coissoró (Lisbon) (1978–1980)
42 16.0 41 15.6
PCP Carlos Brito (Faro) 40 15.2 40 15.2
UDP Acácio Barreiros (Lisbon) 1 0.4 1 0.4
ASDI António Sousa Franco (Lisbon) 0 0.0 37 14.0
Independent Carmelinda Pereira (Lisbon)
António Aires Rodrigues (Leiria)
José Justiniano Pinto (Setúbal)
António Lopes Cardoso (Beja)
Reinaldo Rodrigues (Aveiro)
Carlos Galvão de Melo (Viseu)
0 0.0 6 2.3
 Total 263 100.0 263 100.0

Changes

1979–1980

Party Parliamentary group leader Elected 1979 Dissolution
Seats % Seats %
PPD/PSD Pedro Roseta (Castelo Branco) 80 32.0 75 30.0
PS Francisco Salgado Zenha (Porto) 74 29.6 74 29.6
PCP Carlos Brito (Faro) 44 17.6 44 17.6
CDS Narana Coissoró (Lisbon) 43 17.2 43 17.2
PPM Augusto Ferreira do Amaral (Lisbon) 5 2.0 5 2.0
MDP/CDE José Tengarrinha (Lisbon) 3 1.2 3 1.2
UDP Mário Tomé (Lisbon) 1 0.4 1 0.4
DR Francisco Sousa Tavares (Évora)
José Medeiros Ferreira (Lisbon)
Armando Adão Silva (Lisbon)
Nuno Maria Matos (Lisbon)
Pelágio Madureira (Porto)
0 0.0 5 2.0
 Total 250 100.0 250 100.0

Changes

Election for President of the Assembly of the Republic

To be elected, a candidate needs to reach a minimum of 132 votes. Vasco da Gama Fernandes, from the Socialist Party, was easily elected:

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
1st Ballot → 29 July 1976
Required majority → 132 out of 263
Vasco da Gama Fernandes (PS)
215 / 263
checkY
Against
4 / 263
Blank ballots
0 / 263
Invalid ballots
0 / 263
Absentees
44 / 263
Sources:[4]

At the end of each parlimentary session, the regiment called for a new election to elect the President. As such, a new ballot was held in the beginning of the second session, where Vasco da Gama Fernandes was re-elected.

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
1st Ballot → 25 October 1977
Required majority → 132 out of 263
Vasco da Gama Fernandes (PS)
143 / 263
checkY
Against
0 / 263
Blank ballots
41 / 263
Invalid ballots
4 / 263
Absentees
35 / 263
Sources:[4]

At the beginning of the third session, Vasco da Gama Fernandes decided not to run again for President. As such, the Socialist Party appointed Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos as the new candidate. He was elected.

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
1st Ballot → 30 October 1978
Required majority → 132 out of 263
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
134 / 263
checkY
Against
84 / 263
Blank ballots
1 / 263
Invalid ballots
3 / 263
Abstentions
8 / 250
Absentees
33 / 263
Sources:[4]

After the 1979 elections, the Social Democratic Party proposed Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida as a candidate, who ran against the incumbent President, Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos. Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida was elected.

Election of the President of the Assembly of the Republic
Ballot → 8 January 1980
Required majority → 126 out of 250
Leonardo Ribeiro de Almeida (PPD/PSD)
129 / 250
checkY
Teófilo Carvalho dos Santos (PS)
119 / 250
☒N
Blank ballots
1 / 250
Invalid ballots
0 / 250
Absentees
1 / 250
Sources: [4]

References

  1. ^ "As legislaturas da Assembleia da República". parlamento.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
  2. ^ a b Official Results — National Election Commission
  3. ^ Almeida, São José (9 September 2018). "De condicionais a ASDI". PÚBLICO (in Portuguese). Retrieved 15 February 2025.
  4. ^ a b c d "ELEIÇÕES DOS PRESIDENTES DA ASSEMBLEIA DA REPÚBLICA (1976-2024)". participacao.parlamento.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.