For other people named António Costa, see António Costa (disambiguation).
This name uses Portuguese naming customs. The first or maternal family name is Santos and the second or paternal family name is Costa.
His Excellency António Costa GCIH
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119th Prime Minister of Portugal
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Incumbent
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Assumed office 26 November 2015 |
President |
Aníbal Cavaco Silva Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
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Preceded by |
Pedro Passos Coelho
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Secretary-General of the Socialist Party
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Incumbent
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Assumed office 22 November 2014 |
President |
Carlos César
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Preceded by |
António José Seguro
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Leader of the Opposition |
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In office 22 November 2014 – 26 November 2015 |
Prime Minister |
Pedro Passos Coelho
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Preceded by |
António José Seguro
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Succeeded by |
Pedro Passos Coelho
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Mayor of Lisbon |
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In office 1 August 2007 – 6 April 2015 |
Preceded by |
Marina Ferreira (Acting)
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Succeeded by |
Fernando Medina
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Minister of the Internal Administration |
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In office 12 March 2005 – 17 May 2007 |
Prime Minister |
José Sócrates
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Preceded by |
Daniel Sanches |
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Succeeded by |
Rui Pereira
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Minister of Justice |
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In office 25 October 1999 – 6 April 2002 |
Prime Minister |
António Guterres
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Preceded by |
José Vera Jardim |
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Succeeded by |
Celeste Cardona |
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Minister of Parliamentary Affairs |
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In office 25 November 1997 – 25 October 1999 |
Prime Minister |
António Guterres
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Preceded by |
Manuel Dias Loureiro |
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Succeeded by |
Luís Marques Mendes
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Deputy Secretary of State for Parliamentary Affairs |
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In office 28 October 1995 – 25 November 1997 |
Prime Minister |
António Guterres
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Preceded by |
Luís Filipe Menezes
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Succeeded by |
José Magalhães |
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Personal details |
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Born |
António Luís Santos da Costa (1961-07-17) 17 July 1961 (age 57) Lisbon, Portugal
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Political party |
Socialist Party
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Spouse(s) |
Fernanda Tadeu (m. 1987)
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Relations |
Ricardo Costa (brother)
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Children |
2 |
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Parents |
Orlando da Costa Maria Antónia Palla |
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Residence |
São Bento Mansion
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Alma mater |
University of Lisbon
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Signature |
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Website |
Official website
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António Luís Santos da Costa GCIH (born 17 July 1961) is a Portuguese lawyer and politician serving as the 119th and current Prime Minister of Portugal since 26 November 2015. Previously, he was Minister of Parliamentary Affairs from 1997 to 1999, Minister of Justice from 1999 to 2002, Minister of State and Internal Administration from 2005 to 2007, and Mayor of Lisbon from 2007 to 2015. He was elected as Secretary-General of the Socialist Party in September 2014.[1]
Contents
1 Early life and education
2 Political career
2.1 Mayor of Lisbon, 2007–2015
2.2 Candidate for Prime Minister, 2014–2015
3 Prime Minister of Portugal, 2015–present
4 Personal life
5 Recognition
5.1 Honorary citizenship
5.2 Civil awards and decorations
6 References
7 External links
Early life and education
Costa was born in 1961 in São Sebastião da Pedreira, Lisbon, the son of writer Orlando da Costa.[2] His father was of Goan, Portuguese and French descent. His mother is Maria Antónia Palla, a Portuguese journalist and recognized feminist activist. In 1975, at the age of 14, he was already a member of the Socialist Youth.
Costa graduated from the Faculty of Law of the University of Lisbon in the 1980s, when he first entered politics and was elected as a Socialist deputy to the municipal council. He later practiced law briefly from 1988, before entering politics full-time.[3]
Political career
Costa's first role in a Socialist government was as Minister of Parliamentary Affairs under Prime Minister António Guterres between 1997 and 1999. He was Minister of Justice from 1999 to 2002.[3]
Costa was a Member of the European Parliament for the Socialist Party (PES), heading the list for the 2004 European elections after the dramatic death of top candidate António de Sousa Franco. On 20 July 2004 he was elected as one of the 14 Vice-Presidents of the European Parliament. He also served on the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs.
Costa resigned as an MEP on 11 March 2005 to become Minister of State and Internal Administration in the government of José Sócrates following the 2005 national elections.
Mayor of Lisbon, 2007–2015
António Costa resigned all government offices in May 2007 to become his party's candidate for the municipality of Lisbon, Portugal's capital city. He was elected as Lisbon's mayor on 15 July 2007 and reelected in 2009 and 2013, with a bigger majority each time. In April 2015 he resigned his duties as a mayor, while he was already the Secretary General of the Socialist Party and the party's candidate for Prime Minister, so that he could prepare his campaign for the October 2015 general elections.[4]
Candidate for Prime Minister, 2014–2015
In September 2014, the Socialist Party chose Costa as its candidate to be Prime Minister of Portugal in the 2015 national elections; in a ballot to select the party's candidate, gaining nearly 70 percent of the votes, he defeated party leader António José Seguro, who announced his resignation after the result.[5] By April 2015, he stepped down as mayor to focus on his campaign.[6]
During the campaign, Costa pledged to ease back on austerity and give more disposable income back to households.[7] He proposed to boost incomes, hiring and growth in order to cut the budget deficits while scrapping austerity measures and cutting taxes, asserting that would still allow deficits to reduce in line with the Euro convergence criteria.[8] Also, he pledged to roll back a hugely unpopular hike in value added tax on restaurants and reinstate some benefits for civil servants.[6]
Prime Minister of Portugal, 2015–present
On 4 October 2015, the conservative Portugal Ahead coalition that had ruled the country since 2011 came first in the elections winning 38.6% of the vote, while the Socialist Party came second with 32.3%. Passos Coelho was reappointed Prime Minister the following days, but António Costa formed an alliance with the other parties on the left (the Left Bloc, the Portuguese Communist Party and the Ecologist Party "The Greens"), which altogether constitute a majority in Parliament, and toppled the government on 10 November (the People–Animals–Nature party also voted in favour of the motion of rejection presented by the left alliance). After toppling the conservative government, Costa was chosen as the new Prime Minister of Portugal by President Cavaco Silva on 24 November and assumed office on 26 November.[4][9]
Since coming to power, Costa’s government has managed to combine fiscal discipline with measures to support growth, while reversing most of the austerity policies imposed by the previous center-right administration during the 2010-13 debt crisis.[10]
By March 2017, polls put support for Costa's Socialists at 42 percent, up 10 points from their share of the vote in the 2015 election and close to a level that would give them a majority in parliament were the country to vote again.[11] In the 2017 local elections, Costa further consolidated power in Portugal as his party captured a record haul of 158 town halls out of the country’s 308 cities and towns; nationwide, the Socialists’ vote share topped 38 percent, again up from their result in the 2015 parliamentary election.[12]
During his tenure, Portugal experienced its deadliest wildfires ever, firstly in Pedrogão Grande in June 2017 (65 dead) and later across the country in October 2017 (41 dead).[13] In October 2017, the opposition People's Party (CDS) launched a motion of no-confidence in Costa’s government over its failure to prevent the loss of human lives in the lethal Iberian wildfires, the second such disaster in four months; the motion was largely symbolic as the minority Socialist government continued to be backed in parliament by two left-wing parties.[14]
Personal life
António Costa's paternal grandfather, Luís Afonso Maria da Costa, was a Goan Catholic and his father was the writer and poet Orlando da Costa. He also has French descent through his father. His mother is the writer Maria Antónia Palla. His half-brother by his father's second marriage is the journalist Ricardo Costa.
In 1987, Costa married Fernanda Maria Gonçalves Tadeu, a teacher.[3] The couple have a son and a daughter.
Costa is an avid Benfica fan,[15][16] being a frequent attendant to the games as Lisbon mayor, as opposed to Sporting Lisbon's. He also accompanied Benfica to both Europa League finals, in 2013 and 2014.
Recognition
Honorary citizenship
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi presented the Overseas Citizen of India card to Costa and described him as the best of the Indian diaspora across the world.
Civil awards and decorations
Grand-Cross of the Order of Prince Henry, Portugal (1 March 2006)[17]
Grand-Cross of the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit, Norway (25 September 2009)[18]
Third Class of the Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana, Estonia (16 July 2010)[18]
Grand-Cross of the Order for Merits to Lithuania, Lithuania (16 July 2010)[18]
Grand-Cross of the Order of Merit, Chile (31 August 2010)[18]
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Gregory the Great, Holy See (3 September 2010)[18]
Grand-Cross of the Order pro merito Melitensi, Sovereign Military Order of Malta (23 November 2010)[18]
Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta, Poland (18 July 2012)[18]
Commander of the Order of Rio Branco, Brazil (19 May 2014)[18]
Second Class (Grand-Cross) of the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Japan (16 February 2015)[18]
Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland, Poland (16 February 2015)[18]
Grand-Cross of the Order of Charles III, Spain (25 November 2016)[19]
Grand-Cross of the Order of Honour, Greece (21 April 2017)[18]
References
^ António Costa's Biography on the Portuguese Government's official webpage.
^ Then Came A Gandhi, outlookindia.com, retrieved 10 September 2015
^ abc Axel Bugge (October 4, 2015), Portuguese Socialist leader Costa candidate for PM Reuters.
^ ab Agence France-Presse (25 November 2015), Portugal gets Antonio Costa as new PM after election winner only lasted 11 days The Guardian.
^ Andrei Khalip (September 28, 2014), Portugal opposition Socialists choose mayor of Lisbon as candidate for PM in next year's election Reuters.
^ ab Axel Bugge (April 1, 2015), Lisbon Socialist mayor steps down to campaign for Portugal PM Reuters.
^ Axel Bugge (September 18, 2015), Portugal election race still in dead heat, no majority win: poll Reuters.
^ Andrei Khalip (September 17, 2015), Portuguese PM and Socialist opponent clash over austerity as election nears Reuters.
^ Patricia Kowsmann and Matt Moffett (November 24, 2015). "Socialist Leader António Costa Is Named as Portugal's Prime Minister". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
^ Andrei Khalip (April 13, 2018), Portugal government targets budget surplus in 2020, irks allies Reuters.
^ Axel Bugge (March 31, 2017), As Europe left struggles, Portugal's alliance wins over voters and Brussels Reuters.
^ Paul Ames (October 2, 2017), Portugal’s Socialists toast ‘biggest ever’ election win Politico Europe.
^ "Portugal and Spain wildfires: Dozens dead and injured". BBC. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
^ Axel Bugge and Andrei Khalip (October 17, 2017), Portugal's government faces no-confidence vote over forest fires Reuters.
^ http://www.dn.pt/desporto/futebol-nacional/interior/antonio-costa-espera-derbi-com-golos-e-espetaculo-3390523.html
^ http://static.globalnoticias.pt/Storage/JN/2013/big/ng2323608.jpg
^ "Cidadãos Nacionais Agraciados com Ordens Portuguesas". Página Oficial das Ordens Honoríficas Portuguesas. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
^ abcdefghijk "Cidadãos Nacionais Agraciados com Ordens Estrangeiras". Página Oficial das Ordens Honoríficas Portuguesas. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
^ Presidencia del Gobierno: "Real Decreto 577/2016, de 25 de noviembre, por el que se concede la Gran Cruz de la Real y Distinguida Orden Española de Carlos III al Excelentísimo Señor Antonio Luis Santos da Costa, Primer Ministro de la República Portuguesa" (PDF). Boletín Oficial del Estado núm. 286, de 26 de noviembre de 2016 (in Spanish): 82949. ISSN 0212-033X.
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to António Costa. |
- Biography in the Portuguese Government site
Offices and distinctions |
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Government offices
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Preceded by Luís Filipe Menezes
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Deputy Secretary of State for Parliamentary Affairs 1995–1997
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Succeeded by José Magalhães
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Preceded by Manuel Dias Loureiro
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Minister of Parliamentary Affairs 1997–1999
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Succeeded by Luís Marques Mendes
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Preceded by José Vera Jardim
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Minister of Justice 1999–2002
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Succeeded by Celeste Cardona
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Preceded by Daniel Sanches
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Minister of State Minister of the Internal Administration 2005–2007
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Succeeded by Rui Pereira
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Political offices
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Preceded by Marina Ferreira Acting
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Mayor of Lisbon 2007–2015
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Succeeded by Fernando Medina
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Preceded by Pedro Passos Coelho
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Prime Minister of Portugal 2015–present
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Incumbent
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Party political offices
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Preceded by Maria de Belém Roseira Acting
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Secretary-General of the Socialist Party 2014–present
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Incumbent
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Articles related to António Costa |
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Prime Ministers of the Portuguese Republic
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First Republic |
- Braga
Pinheiro Chagas (1st)
- Vasconcelos
- Leite
Costa (1st)
Machado (1st)
- Azevedo Coutinho
- Pimenta de Castro
- Constitutional Junta
Pinheiro Chagas (2nd)
- J. Castro
Costa (2nd)
- Almeida
Costa (3rd)
- Pais
- Canto e Castro
- Tamagnini Barbosa
- Relvas
Leite Pereira (1st)
Sá Cardoso (1st)
- Fernandes Costa
Sá Cardoso (2nd)
Leite Pereira (2nd)
- Baptista
- Ramos Preto
Silva (1st)
Granjo (1st)
A. Castro (1st)
- Pinto
Machado (2nd)
- Barros Queirós
Granjo (2nd)
- Coelho
- Maia Pinto
- Cunha Leal
Silva (2nd)
- Ginestal Machado
A. Castro (2nd)
- Rodrigues Gaspar
- Domingues dos Santos
- Guimarães
Silva (3rd)
Leite Pereira (3rd)
Silva (4th)
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Second Republic |
- Mendes Cabeçadas
- Gomes da Costa
- Carmona
- Freitas
- Ivens Ferraz
- Oliveira
- Oliveira Salazar
- Caetano
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Third Republic |
- National Salvation Junta
- Palma Carlos
- Gonçalves
- Pinheiro de Azevedo
- Almeida e Costa
Soares (1st)
- Nobre da Costa
- Mota Pinto
- Pintasilgo
- Sá Carneiro
- Freitas do Amaral
- Pinto Balsemão
Soares (2nd)
- Cavaco Silva
- Guterres
- Durão Barroso
- Santana Lopes
- Sócrates
- Passos Coelho
- Costa
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« Constitutional Monarchy |
21st Constitutional Government of Portugal
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Prime Minister |
António Costa |
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Ministers |
Foreign Affairs |
Augusto Santos Silva (2015–)
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Presidency and Administrative Modernisation |
Maria Manuel Leitão Marques (2015–)
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Finance |
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National Defence |
José Alberto Azeredo Lopes (2015–)
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Internal Administration |
Constança Urbano de Sousa (2015–)
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Justice |
Francisca Van Dunem (2015–)
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Adjunct Minister |
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Culture |
João Soares (2015–2016)
Luís Filipe Castro Mendes (2016–)
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Science, Technology and Higher Education |
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Education |
Tiago Brandão Rodrigues (2015–)
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Labour, Solidarity and Social Security |
José António Vieira da Silva (2015–)
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Health |
Adalberto Campos Fernandes (2015–)
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Planning and Infrastructure |
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Economy |
Manuel Caldeira Cabral (2015–)
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Environment |
João Pedro Matos Fernandes (2015–)
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Agriculture, Forestry and Rural Development |
Luís Capoulas Santos (2015–)
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Sea |
Ana Paula Vitorino (2015–)
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Council of State of Portugal
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Current members of the Council of State |
President of the Republic |
Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa (President of the Council)
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President of the Assembly of the Republic |
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Prime Minister |
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President of the Constitutional Court
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Provider of Justice (Ombudsman) |
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Presidents of the Regional Governments
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Vasco Cordeiro (Azores)
Miguel Albuquerque (Madeira)
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Former Presidents of the Republic |
- António Ramalho Eanes
- Jorge Sampaio
- Aníbal Cavaco Silva
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Appointed by the President |
- António Damásio
- Eduardo Lourenço
- Luís Marques Mendes
- António Lobo Xavier
- Leonor Beleza
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Elected by the Assembly
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- Carlos César
- Francisco Louçã
- Domingos Abrantes
- Francisco Pinto Balsemão
- Adriano Moreira
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Authority control
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- WorldCat Identities
- GND: 1056028459
- ISNI: 0000 0000 6859 3683
- LCCN: n2012049726
- SUDOC: 178144991
- VIAF: 99157515
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