The Star Early Edition

Ruling party poised to clinch poll in Portugal

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LISBON: The Portuguese voted in a national election yesterday with polls predicting another win for their austerity-minded centre-right government that guided them through an economic crisis, though it could fall short of an outright majority.

Minority government has a dismal history in Portugal and many worry that such an outcome could endanger Portugal’s fledgling economic recovery.

The general election is the first since Portugal exited an internatio­nal bailout last year. The latest polls, released on Friday, gave Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho’s ruling coalition a lead of between five and 12 points over centre-left Socialist opponent Antonio Costa.

But if Passos Coelho, whose government introduced deep spending cuts and the biggest tax hikes in living memory, fails to secure more than the around 38 percent that he has polled in recent days, he will fall short of an absolute majority in the 230-seat parliament.

“I’m confident in the job I’ve done… It’s a day of hope because the next four years will be very different from the past four,” a composed Passos Coelho told reporters after voting on the outskirts of Lisbon, urging people to leave their homes to vote despite poor weather.

Portugal’s economy returned to timid growth last year after a threeyear recession, and growth is now accelerati­ng.

Paulo Portas, deputy prime minister and head of the junior coalition partner CDS, said the Portuguese were voting “with reconquere­d freedom” after leaving behind the demanding bailout programme that imposed painful austerity.

Waiting outside a polling station in a school in central Lisbon, Nuno Bras, a 45-year-old office worker, said he was not happy with the government, but that it was “a better option than to risk undoing the recovery that has only just begun”.

Some analysts do not rule out a last-minute upset for either side. Polling stations opened at 8am and the first exit polls were due around 8pm last night.

Some 15 percent of voters were still undecided as of yesterday, according to opinion polls. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? RENEWED HOPE: A woman casts her ballot at a polling station in Lisbon.
PICTURE: REUTERS RENEWED HOPE: A woman casts her ballot at a polling station in Lisbon.

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