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Portuguese local elections, 1997

Portuguese local elections, 1997
Portugal
← 1993 14 December 1997 2001 →

All 305 Portuguese municipalities and 4,260 Portuguese Parishes
All 2,021 local government councils
  First party Second party Third party
  António Guterres 2013.jpg Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa - Feira Nacional de Agricultura 2015.png Male portrait placeholder cropped.jpg
Leader António Guterres Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa Carlos Carvalhas
Party PS PSD CDU
Last election 127 mayors, 40.2% 116 mayors, 33.7% 49 mayors, 12.8%
Popular vote 2,206,315 1,886,242 643,956
Percentage 41.3% 35.2% 12.0%
Swing Increase 1.1 pp Increase 1.5 pp Decrease 0.8 pp
Mayors 128 127 41
Mayors +/– Increase 1 Increase 11 Decrease 8
Councillors 879 810 236
Councillors +/– Increase 57 Increase 4 Decrease 10

The Portuguese local elections of 1997 took place on 14 December. The elections consisted of three separate elections in the 305 Portuguese municipalities, the election for the Municipal Chambers, whose winner is elected mayor, another election for the Municipal Assembly and a last one for the lower-level Parish Assembly, whose winner is elected parish president. This last was held separately in the more than 4,200 parishes around the country.

The Socialist Party (PS) maintained as the largest local political force, although only just, winning 128 cities, one more compared to 1993, and increasing their vote share to above 41%. In reality, PS and PSD basically tied in this elections, but the Socialits were able to hold on to big cities like Lisbon, Porto, Sintra and Coimbra. On the other hand, the PS lost some cities to the PSD, particularly Vila Nova de Gaia and Figueira da Foz, the latter won by Pedro Santana Lopes, future Lisbon mayor and Prime Minister.

The Social Democratic Party (PSD) made big gains, winning 11 cities and basically catching up with the Socialists. They also increased their share of vote to 35%. The PSD gained many cities from the PS, such as Bragança, Covilhã, Silves, Tavira and Alcobaça. Although the PSD didn't performed very strongly in the big urban centers, they performed extremely well in many medium and small cities across the country, but that same bad performance in the big urban centers, such as Lisbon and Porto, created criticisms to the leadership of Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa.

The election was quite bad for Democratic Unity Coalition (CDU), as they continued their fall in local politics. The Communist/Green coalition lost 8 cities and decreased their vote share to 12%. The CDU lost many of their bastions to the PS, such as Cuba, Amadora, Vila Franca de Xira and Sesimbra. They also saw a decrease in number of councillors, although here the fall was soft, as they lost just 10 concillors compared to 1993.


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