The 2015 legislative elections in Portugal: A constitutional analysis
Author(s) -
Maria Manuela Magalhães Silva,
André Pereira Matos
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
global journal of sociology current issues
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2301-2633
DOI - 10.18844/gjs.v7i2.2393
Subject(s) - parliament , presidential system , nomination , legislature , constitution , political science , portuguese , public administration , government (linguistics) , context (archaeology) , politics , law , political economy , sociology , geography , philosophy , linguistics , archaeology
The 1976 Portuguese Constitution implemented a hybrid government system known as semi-presidential. This modality combines characteristics from the two more conventional systems: the presidential and the parliamentarian. In this context, the selection of the Prime-Minister does not directly come from the voters. Instead, it results from the Presidential nomination bearing in consideration the results of the legislative elections. Furthermore, it also lacks the majoritarian support from the National Parliament. Hence, the government becomes an organ political accountable before the President and the Parliament. The current Parliament was elected on October 4, 2015. Yet, the electoral results were striking, as they allowed more than one possibility for the formation of the Portuguese government, including post-electoral partisan agreements, which was an unprecedent situation in the country. The present paper aims to describe the electoral process referred to above, through factual analysis and its constitutional framework.
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