List of prime ministers of Portugal
Constitution |
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The prime minister of the Portuguese Republic (Portuguese: primeiro-ministro da República Portuguesa) is the head of the Government of Portugal. The officeholder coordinates the actions of all ministers, represents the Government as a whole, reports their actions and is accountable to the Assembly of the Republic, in addition to keeping the president of the Republic informed.
There is no limit to the number of mandates as prime minister. They are appointed by the president of the Republic, after the legislative elections and after an audience with every leader of a party represented at the Assembly. It is usual for the leader of the party which receives a plurality of votes in the elections to be named prime minister.
The official residence of the prime minister is a mansion next to São Bento Palace, which, in confusion, is also often called "São Bento Palace", although many prime ministers did not live in the palace during their full mandate.
History[edit]
The origins of present office of prime minister of Portugal fall back to the beginning of the Portuguese monarchy in the 12th century. Typically, a senior official of the king of Portugal prevailed over the others, ensuring the coordination of the administration of the kingdom as a kind of prime minister. Throughout history, the prominent position fell successively on the Mayor of the Palace (Portuguese Mordomo-Mor), on the Chancellor (Chancellor-Mor), on the King's Private Secretary (Escrivão da Puridade) and on the Secretary of State (Secretário de Estado).
In 1736, three offices of secretary of state were created, with the Secretary of State of the Internal Affairs of the Kingdom (Secretário de Estado dos Negócios Interiores do Reino) occupying a prominent position over the others.
Since the 1820 Liberal Revolution of Porto, liberalism and parliamentarism were installed in the country. In the first liberal period, there were three to six secretaries of state with equal position in the hierarchy, but with the Secretary the Internal Affairs of the Kingdom (usually known by Minister of the Kingdom) continuing to occupy a prominent position. Occasionally there was a Minister Assistant to the Dispatch (Ministro Assistante ao Despacho), a coordinator of all secretaries of state, and with a post similar to that of a prime minister. After a brief absolutistic restoration, the second liberalism started. With the beginning of the Constitutional Monarchy, the office of President of the Council of Ministers (President do Conselho de Ministros) was created. The presidents of the council were clearly the heads of government of the kingdom, holding the executive power that absolute monarchs had, but were restricted by the controlling power of the National Congress.
With the advent of the Republic in the 5 October 1910 revolution, the head of government was renamed President of the Ministry (Presidente do Ministério). During this period the heads of government were under the strong power of the parliament and often fell due to parliamentary turmoils and social instability.
With the 28 May 1926 coup d'état, and eventually, after the formation of the Estado Novo quasi-fascist dictatorial regime of António de Oliveira Salazar, the prime minister was again named President of the Council of Ministers, and was nominally the most important figure in the country. First Salazar and then Marcello Caetano occupied this post for almost 42 years.
With the Carnation Revolution came the prime minister, which replaced the president of the council.
Prime ministers[edit]
The official numbering of the prime ministers starts with the first president of the Council of Ministers of the constitutional monarchy. A second column is added after the establishment of the Republic, numbering the prime ministers from there to the present day. Another column is added for the numbering inside the three regimes: First Republic, the Second Republic and Third Republic, with a fourth column in the Second Republic to mark the numbering of prime ministers since the 1926 revolution that established the National Dictatorship and since the replacement of the National Dictatorship with the Salazarist Estado Novo. In the Third Republic, a fourth column is also used to distinguish the prime ministers of the provisional governments that existed during the period immediately following the Carnation Revolution of 1974 from the prime ministers that assumed office after the entry into force of Portugal's current democratic Constitution adopted 1976.
At the right hand side, a column indicates the official numbering of the Constitutional Governments. The numbering of the Constitutional Governments is not the same as the numbering of prime ministers since the Constitution because, whenever elections for a new parliament take place, a new constitutional government is installed, even if the prime minister remains the same; however, there is also a change of constitutional government when the prime minister is replaced, even if in mid-parliament. So, because some prime ministers managed to remain in office after fresh elections (thus serving as prime ministers under more than one parliament), there are more constitutional governments than there are prime ministers.
The colors indicate the political affiliation of each prime minister.
No party/independent
Chartist/Chamorro
Chamorro
Septemberist
Regenerator
Historic
Reformist
Regenerator/Historic
Progressist
Liberal Regenerator
Republican
Democratic
National Republican/Sidonist
Republican Liberal
Reconstitution Party
Nationalist Republican
Democratic Leftwing Republican
National Union/People's National Action
Democratic Renewal Party
Socialist
Social Democratic
Democratic and Social Centre
Constitutional Monarchy – Second Liberalism (1834–1910)[edit]
# | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Political party | Government | Monarch | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Pedro de Sousa Holstein (1781–1850) |
24 September 1834 |
4 May 1835 |
Chamorro | 1st Dev. | Maria II (1834–1853) and Fernando II (1837–1853) | |
1834 | |||||||
Portugal's first official prime minister; First Devourism government. | |||||||
2 | Vitório Maria de Sousa Coutinho (1790–1857) |
4 May 1835 |
27 May 1835 |
Chamorro | |||
— | |||||||
3 | João Carlos de Saldanha Oliveira e Daun (1790–1876) |
27 May 1835 |
18 November 1835 |
Independent | 2nd Dev. | ||
— | |||||||
Second Devourism government; Resigned after the auction of estuarine lands of the Tejo and Sado River and for military aid to Spanish Queen Isabella II. | |||||||
4 | José Jorge Loureiro (1791–1860) |
18 November 1835 |
20 April 1836 |
Independent | 3rd Dev. | ||
— | |||||||
Thrid Devourism government; Government fell after failure to pass a budget. | |||||||
5 | António José Severim de Noronha (1792–1860) |
20 April 1836 |
10 September 1836 |
Chamorro | 4th Dev. | ||
Jul.1836 | |||||||
Fourth and last Devourism government; September 1836 Revolution. | |||||||
6 | José da Gama Carneiro e Sousa (1788–1849) |
10 September 1836 |
4 November 1836 |
Septemberist | 1st Set. | ||
— | |||||||
Belenzada attempted coup by Queen Maria II of Portugal to remove the government; Resigned in the aftermath. | |||||||
7 | Bernardo de Sá Nogueira de Figueiredo (1795–1876) |
5 November 1836 |
1 June 1837 |
Septemberist | 2nd Set. | ||
Nov.1836 | |||||||
Local government reform by minister Passos Manuel; Abolition of slavery traffic in Portuguese colonies. | |||||||
8 | António Dias de Oliveira (1804–1863) |
1 June 1837 |
2 August 1837 |
Septemberist | 3rd Set. | ||
— | |||||||
Revolt of the Marshals. | |||||||
— | Bernardo de Sá Nogueira de Figueiredo (1795–1876) |
2 August 1837 |
18 April 1839 |
Septemberist | 4th Set. | ||
1838 | |||||||
Portuguese Constitution of 1838. | |||||||
9 | Rodrigo Pinto Pizarro (1788–1841) |
18 April 1839 |
26 November 1839 |
Septemberist | 5th Set. | ||
— | |||||||
Last fully Septemberist government. | |||||||
10 | José Travassos Valdez (1787–1862) |
26 November 1839 |
9 June 1841 |
Septemberist | 6th Set. | ||
1840 | |||||||
Coalition government; Resume of diplomatic relations with other European powers, including Spain and the Holy See. | |||||||
11 | Joaquim António de Aguiar (1792–1884) |
9 June 1841 |
7 February 1842 |
Septemberist | 7th Set. | ||
— | |||||||
Known as the "Friar-Killer" due to his role in the dissolution of the monasteries in Portugal; Collapse of the Portuguese Constitution of 1838; Resigned after the restoration of the Constitutional Charter of 1826. | |||||||
— | Pedro de Sousa Holstein (1781–1850) |
7 February 1842 |
9 February 1842 |
Independent | G.E. | ||
— | |||||||
3-day "Shrovetide Government"; Beginning of Cabralism. | |||||||
— | António José Severim de Noronha (1792–1860) |
9 February 1842 |
20 May 1846 |
Chartist | 1st R. Cart. | ||
1842, 1845 | |||||||
Known as the "Restoration Government"; Torres Novas revolt; Resigned after the Revolution of Maria da Fonte; Fled to exile in Madrid; End of Cabralism. | |||||||
— | Pedro de Sousa Holstein (1781–1850) |
20 May 1846 |
6 October 1846 |
Chartist | 2nd R. Cart. | ||
— | |||||||
Emboscada palace coup. | |||||||
— | António José Severim de Noronha (1792–1860) |
6 October 1846 |
18 June 1849 |
Chartist | 3rd R. Cart. | ||
1847 | |||||||
Patuleia or Little Civil War that resulted in a Chartist victory; Convention of Gramido. | |||||||
12 | António Bernardo da Costa Cabral (1803–1889) |
18 June 1849 |
26 April 1851 |
Chartist | 4th R. Cart. | ||
— | |||||||
Returned from exile; Resigned due to political and military unrest. | |||||||
— | António José Severim de Noronha (1792–1860) |
26 April 1851 |
1 May 1851 |
Regenerator | 5th R. Cart. | ||
— | |||||||
Military insurrection of 1 May 1851; Beginning of the Regeneration. | |||||||
— | João Carlos de Saldanha Oliveira e Daun
(1790–1876) |
1 May 1851 |
6 June 1856 |
Regenerator | 1st Reg. | ||
1851, 1852 | Pedro V (1853–1861) | ||||||
Death of queen Maria II; Pedro V ascends the throne. | |||||||
13 | Nuno José Severo de Mendonça Rolim de Moura Barreto (1804–1875) |
6 June 1856 |
16 March 1859 |
Historic | 2nd Reg. | ||
1856, 1858 | |||||||
Opening of the first railway line in Portugal on 28 October 1856. | |||||||
— | António José Severim de Noronha (1792–1860) |
16 March 1859 |
1 May 1860 (died) |
Regenerator | 3rd Reg. | ||
1860 | |||||||
Died in office of pneumonia. | |||||||
— | Joaquim António de Aguiar (1792–1884) |
1 May 1860 |
4 July 1860 |
Regenerator | |||
— | |||||||
— | Nuno José Severo de Mendonça Rolim de Moura Barreto (1804–1875) |
4 July 1860 |
17 April 1865 |
Historic | 4th Reg. | ||
1861, 1864 | Luis I (1861–1889) | ||||||
Death of king Pedro V; Luís I ascends the throne. | |||||||
— | Bernardo de Sá Nogueira de Figueiredo (1795–1876) |
17 April 1865 |
4 September 1865 |
Reformist | 5th Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
— | Joaquim António de Aguiar (1792–1884) |
4 September 1865 |
4 January 1868 |
Regenerator (with the Historic Party) | 6th Reg. | ||
1865, 1867 | |||||||
Nicknamed the "Ministry of Fusion"; Forced to resign after the Janeirinha uprising. | |||||||
14 | António José de Ávila (1807–1881) |
4 January 1868 |
22 July 1868 |
Independent (with Reformists) |
7th Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
Repeal of the tax the ignited the Janeirinha uprising; Resigned due to the bad economic situation of the country. | |||||||
— | Bernardo de Sá Nogueira de Figueiredo (1795–1876) |
22 July 1868 |
11 August 1869 |
Reformist | 8th Reg. | ||
1868, 1869 | |||||||
Abolition of slavery in all Portuguese territories. | |||||||
— | Nuno José Severo de Mendonça Rolim de Moura Barreto (1804–1875) |
11 August 1869 |
19 May 1870 |
Historic (with Reformists) |
9th Reg. | ||
Mar.1870 | |||||||
Forced to resign after the "Ajudada" and "Saldanhada" coups, led by the Duke of Saldanha. | |||||||
— | João Carlos de Saldanha Oliveira e Daun (1790–1876) |
19 May 1870 |
29 August 1870 |
Regenerator | 10th Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
Dismissed by King Luis I. | |||||||
— | Bernardo de Sá Nogueira de Figueiredo (1795–1876) |
29 August 1870 |
29 October 1870 |
Reformist | 11th Reg. | ||
Sep.1870 | |||||||
Nominated by King Luis I. | |||||||
— | António José de Ávila (1807–1881) |
29 October 1870 |
13 September 1871 |
Reformist | 12th Reg. | ||
1871 | |||||||
15 | Fontes Pereira de Melo (1819–1887) |
13 September 1871 |
6 March 1877 |
Regenerator | 13th Reg. | ||
1874 | |||||||
Longest serving Prime Minister in the Constitutional Monarchy (3 separate terms) and 2nd longest in Portuguese history; Conducted dynamic industrial and public infrastructure policy; educational reform; start of industrialization process. | |||||||
— | António José de Ávila (1807–1881) |
6 March 1877 |
26 January 1878 |
Reformist | 14th Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
— | Fontes Pereira de Melo (1819–1887) |
26 January 1878 |
29 May 1879 |
Regenerator | 15th Reg. | ||
1878 | |||||||
Resigned due to a financial scandal surrounding the National Overseas Bank. | |||||||
16 | Anselmo José Braamcamp (1817–1885) |
29 May 1879 |
23 March 1881 |
Progressist | 16th Reg. | ||
1879 | |||||||
Government fell after a motion of no confidence was presented. | |||||||
17 | António Rodrigues Sampaio (1806–1882) |
23 March 1881 |
14 November 1881 |
Regenerator | 17th Reg. | ||
1881 | |||||||
— | Fontes Pereira de Melo (1819–1887) |
14 November 1881 |
16 February 1886 |
Regenerator | |||
1884 | |||||||
Lifetime terms in the Chamber of Most Worthy Peers; Portuguese Army reforms. | |||||||
18 | José Luciano de Castro (1834–1914) |
16 February 1886 |
14 January 1890 |
Progressist | 18th Reg. | ||
1887, 1889 | Carlos I (1889–1908) | ||||||
Pink Map crisis; Death of king Luís I; Carlos I ascends the throne; 1890 British Ultimatum. | |||||||
19 | António de Serpa Pimentel (1825–1900) |
14 January 1890 |
11 October 1890 |
Regenerator | 19th Reg. | ||
1890 | |||||||
Resigned due to the proposed Anglo-Portuguese Treaty of 1891. | |||||||
20 | João Crisóstomo de Abreu e Sousa (1811–1895) |
11 October 1890 |
18 January 1892 |
Independent | 20th Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
31 January 1891 rebellion in Porto; Signing of the Anglo-Portuguese Treaty of 1891. | |||||||
21 | José Dias Ferreira (1837–1909) |
18 January 1892 |
22 February 1893 |
Independent | 21st Reg. | ||
1892 | |||||||
Crisis of "Rotativism" between Regenerators and Progressives; Formed what was known as the "Party calming government". | |||||||
22 | Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro (1849–1907) |
22 February 1893 |
5 February 1897 |
Regenerator | 22nd Reg. | ||
1894, 1895 | |||||||
Insular autonomy for Azores and Madeira islands; Pharmacies' law; Forest's law. | |||||||
— | José Luciano de Castro (1834–1914) |
5 February 1897 |
26 July 1900 |
Progressist | 23rd Reg. | ||
1897, 1899 | |||||||
Sanitary siege of Porto in 1899 due to bubonic plague. | |||||||
— | Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro (1849–1907) |
26 July 1900 |
20 October 1904 |
Regenerator | 24th Reg. | ||
1900, 1901, 1904 | |||||||
"Ignoble crap" electoral law that prevented the election of opponents of the Regenerators. | |||||||
— | José Luciano de Castro (1834–1914) |
20 October 1904 |
19 March 1906 |
Progressist | 25th Reg. | ||
1905 | |||||||
"Tobacco Issue". | |||||||
— | Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro (1849–1907) |
19 March 1906 |
19 May 1906 |
Regenerator | 26th Reg. | ||
Apr.1906 | |||||||
Police brutality against republicans upon the arrival of Bernardino Machado in Lisbon; Resigned after just 57 days in government. | |||||||
23 | João Franco (1855–1929) |
19 May 1906 |
4 February 1908 |
Liberal Regenerator | 27th Reg. | ||
Aug.1906 | |||||||
Establishment of an authoritarian government; 28 January 1908 Coup; Lisbon Regicide and death of King Carlos I and other royal family members; Manuel II ascends the throne. | |||||||
24 | Francisco Ferreira do Amaral (1844–1923) |
4 February 1908 |
26 December 1908 |
Independent | 28th Reg. | Manuel II (1908–1910) | |
1908 | |||||||
"Government of calm" following the assassination of King Carlos I | |||||||
25 | Artur de Campos Henriques (1853–1922) |
26 December 1908 |
11 April 1909 |
Independent (Regenerator and Progressist) |
29th Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
26 | Sebastião Teles (1847–1921) |
11 April 1909 |
14 May 1909 |
Independent | 30th Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
1909 Benavente earthquake | |||||||
27 | Venceslau de Lima (1858–1919) |
14 May 1909 |
22 December 1909 |
Independent | 31st Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
28 | Francisco da Veiga Beirão (1841–1916) |
22 December 1909 |
26 June 1910 |
Regenerator | 32nd Reg. | ||
— | |||||||
29 | António Teixeira de Sousa (1857–1917) |
26 June 1910 |
5 October 1910 |
Regenerator | 33rd Reg. | ||
1910 | |||||||
5 October 1910 revolution; End of Monarchy; royal family is exiled in the United Kingdom. |
First Republic (1910–1926)[edit]
# | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Political party | Government | President | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | João Pinheiro Chagas (1863–1925) |
4 September 1911 |
13 November 1911 |
Republican | 2nd | Manuel de Arriaga (1911–1915) | |
— | |||||||
31 | Augusto de Vasconcelos (1867–1951) |
13 November 1911 |
16 June 1912 |
Republican | 3rd | ||
— | |||||||
32 | Duarte Leite (1864–1950) |
16 June 1912 |
23 September 1912 |
Republican | 4th | ||
— | |||||||
Royalist attack on Chaves. | |||||||
33 | Afonso Costa (1871–1937) |
9 January 1913 |
9 February 1914 |
Democratic | 5th | ||
— | |||||||
34 | Bernardino Machado (1851–1944) |
9 February 1914 |
12 December 1914 |
Democratic | 6th, 7th | ||
— | |||||||
Portugal in World War I. | |||||||
35 | Victor Hugo de Azevedo Coutinho (1871–1955) |
12 December 1914 |
28 January 1915 |
Democratic | 8th | ||
— | |||||||
36 | Joaquim Pimenta de Castro (1846–1918) |
28 January 1915 |
14 May 1915 |
Independent | 9th | ||
— | |||||||
37 | José de Castro (1868–1929) |
17 May 1915 |
29 November 1915 |
Democratic | 10th, 11th | Teófilo Braga (1915) | |
1915 | |||||||
— | Afonso Costa (1871–1937) |
29 November 1915 |
16 March 1916 |
Democratic | 12th | Bernardino Machado (1915–1917) | |
— | |||||||
Germany declares war on Portugal. | |||||||
38 | António José de Almeida (1866–1929) |
16 March 1916 |
25 April 1917 |
Sacred Union (Evolutionist Party with the Democrats) |
13th | ||
— | |||||||
— | Afonso Costa (1871–1937) |
25 April 1917 |
7 October 1917 |
Democratic | 14th | ||
— | |||||||
Sacred Union government. | |||||||
39 | Sidónio Pais (1872–1918) |
8 December 1917 |
14 December 1918 (died) |
National Republican | 15th, 16th | Sidónio Pais (1918) | |
1918 | |||||||
Known as the President-King; establishment of an authoritarian regime; Spanish flu outbreak; assassinated. | |||||||
40 | João do Canto e Castro (1862–1934) |
14 December 1918 |
23 December 1918 |
National Republican | João do Canto e Castro (1918–1919) | ||
— | |||||||
41 | João Tamagnini Barbosa (1883–1948) |
23 December 1918 |
27 January 1919 |
National Republican | 17th, 18th | ||
— | |||||||
Monarchy of the North. | |||||||
42 | José Relvas (1858–1929) |
27 January 1919 |
30 March 1919 |
Independent | 19th | ||
— | |||||||
43 | Domingos Pereira (1882–1956) |
30 March 1919 |
30 June 1919 |
Independent | 20th | ||
— | |||||||
44 | Alfredo de Sá Cardoso (1864–1950) |
30 June 1919 |
15 January 1920 |
Democratic | 21st | ||
1919 | |||||||
— | Domingos Pereira (1882–1956) |
21 January 1920 |
8 March 1920 |
Independent | 23rd | António José de Almeida (1919–1923) | |
— | |||||||
45 | António Maria Baptista (1866–1920) |
8 March 1920 |
6 June 1920 (died) |
Democratic | 24th | ||
— | |||||||
Died during a meeting of the council of ministers, due to a stroke, after reading an insulting letter. | |||||||
46 | José Ramos Preto (1871–1949) |
6 June 1920 |
26 June 1920 |
Democratic | |||
— | |||||||
Resigned just 12 days after being sworn in due to backlash for increasing salaries of members of ministerial cabinets. | |||||||
47 | António Maria da Silva (1872–1950) |
26 June 1920 |
19 July 1920 |
Democratic (with the Socialists and Populars) |
25th | ||
— | |||||||
48 | António Granjo (1881–1921) |
19 July 1920 |
20 November 1920 |
Republican Liberal (with the Reconstitution Party) |
26th | ||
— | |||||||
49 | Álvaro de Castro (1878–1928) |
20 November 1920 |
30 November 1920 |
Democratic (with Reconstitution Party and Populars) |
27th | ||
— | |||||||
Held office for just 10 days. | |||||||
50 | Liberato Pinto (1880–1949) |
30 November 1920 |
2 March 1921 |
Democratic (with Reconstitution Party and Populars) |
28th | ||
— | |||||||
Social unrest; Calls to take power in a dictatorship. | |||||||
— | Bernardino Machado (1851–1944) |
2 March 1921 |
23 May 1921 |
Democratic (with Reconstitution Party and Populars) |
29th | ||
— | |||||||
Accused of planning a coup to overthrow President António José de Almeida; Forced to resign. | |||||||
51 | Tomé de Barros Queirós (1872–1925) |
23 May 1921 |
30 August 1921 |
Republican Liberal | 30th | ||
— | |||||||
Economic crisis; Request for a loan of 50 million dollars from the United States. | |||||||
— | António Granjo (1881–1921) |
30 August 1921 |
19 October 1921 (Died) |
Republican Liberal | 31st | ||
1921 | |||||||
Bloody Night revolt. Assassination of Prime Minister António Granjo. | |||||||
52 | Manuel Maria Coelho (1857–1943) |
19 October 1921 |
5 November 1921 |
Independent | 32nd | ||
— | |||||||
Resigned because of fears of a foreign intervention, due to the social and political chaos, of English, French and Spanish warships. | |||||||
53 | Carlos Maia Pinto (1866–1932) |
5 November 1921 |
16 December 1921 |
Independent | 33rd | ||
— | |||||||
Resigned after just 40 days in office due to lack of legitimacy after the fallout of the Bloody Night revolt. | |||||||
54 | Francisco Cunha Leal (1888–1970) |
16 December 1921 |
7 February 1922 |
Democratic | 34th | ||
— | |||||||
Social and political unrest; Resigned after a small diplomatic clash with the United Kingdom. | |||||||
— | António Maria da Silva (1872–1950) |
7 February 1922 |
15 November 1923 |
Democratic | 35th, 36th, 37th | ||
1922 | |||||||
55 | António Ginestal Machado (1874–1940) |
15 November 1923 |
18 December 1923 |
Nationalist Republican | 38th | Manuel Teixeira Gomes (1923–1925) | |
— | |||||||
10 December 1923 failed coup; Resigned due to the fallout. | |||||||
— | Álvaro de Castro (1878–1928) |
18 December 1923 |
7 July 1924 |
Nationalist Republican (with the Democratics) |
39th | ||
— | |||||||
Conflict between the government and the military aviation; Fights in a duel one of the members of the military aviation revolt; Resigns shortly after. | |||||||
56 | Alfredo Rodrigues Gaspar (1865–1938) |
7 July 1924 |
22 November 1924 |
Democratic | 40th | ||
— | |||||||
57 | José Domingues dos Santos (1885–1958) |
22 November 1924 |
15 February 1925 |
Democratic Leftwing Republican | 41st | ||
— | |||||||
Resigned after a motion of censorship in Parliament was approved. | |||||||
58 | Vitorino Guimarães (1876–1957) |
15 February 1925 |
1 July 1925 |
Democratic | 42nd | ||
— | |||||||
— | António Maria da Silva (1872–1950) |
1 July 1925 |
1 August 1925 |
Democratic | 43rd | ||
— | |||||||
Held office for just 30 days. | |||||||
— | Domingos Pereira (1882–1956) |
1 August 1925 |
18 December 1925 |
Democratic | 44th | ||
— | |||||||
Portuguese Bank Note Crisis, also known as the "Alves dos Reis scandal". | |||||||
— | António Maria da Silva (1872–1950) |
18 December 1925 |
30 May 1926 |
Democratic | 45th | Bernardino Machado (1925–1926) | |
1925 | |||||||
28 May 1926 coup d'état; Fall of the First Republic. |
Second Republic (1926–1974)[edit]
# | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Political party | Government | President | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
59 | José Mendes Cabeçadas (1883–1965) |
30 May 1926 |
19 June 1926 |
None | 1st Dict. | José Mendes Cabeçadas (1926) | |
— | |||||||
28 May 1926 coup d'état; Forced to resign. | |||||||
60 | Manuel Gomes da Costa (1863–1929) |
19 June 1926 |
9 July 1926 |
None | 2nd Dict. | Manuel Gomes da Costa (1926) | |
— | |||||||
9 July 1926 Counter-revolution; Forced to resign and sent to exile in the Azores. | |||||||
61 | Óscar Carmona (1869–1951) |
9 July 1926 |
18 April 1928 |
None | 3rd Dict. | Óscar Carmona (1926–1951) | |
— | |||||||
February 1927 Revolt; Nomination of António de Oliveira Salazar as Finance Minister; Strong austerity and fiscal consolidation. | |||||||
62 | José Vicente de Freitas (1869–1952) |
18 April 1928 |
8 July 1929 |
None | 4th Dict. 5th Dict. | ||
— | |||||||
Resigned due to internal government disagreements over separation of church and state. | |||||||
63 | Artur Ivens Ferraz (1870–1933) |
8 July 1929 |
21 January 1930 |
None | 6th Dict. | ||
— | |||||||
Resigned due to disagreements with Salazar over the future of the regime. | |||||||
64 | Domingos Oliveira (1873–1957) |
21 January 1930 |
5 July 1932 |
National Union | 7th Dict. | ||
— | |||||||
1931 Madeira uprising; 26 August 1931 Revolt. | |||||||
65 | António de Oliveira Salazar (1889–1970) |
5 July 1932 |
25 September 1968 |
National Union | 8th Dict. 9th Dict. 10th Dict. | ||
Francisco Craveiro Lopes (1951–1958) | |||||||
Longest-serving prime minister in Portuguese history; Formation of the Estado Novo; Constitution of 1933; Spanish Civil War; 1936 Naval Revolt; Concordat of 1940 Portuguese neutrality; Marshall Plan; Repression of civil liberties and political freedom; loss of Portuguese India; Portuguese Colonial War; 1962 Academic Crisis; Replaced after suffering a brain hemorrhage. | Américo Tomás (1958–1974) | ||||||
66 | Marcelo Caetano (1906–1980) |
25 September 1968 |
25 April 1974 |
National Union from 1970 People's National Action |
11th Dict. | ||
1969, 1973 | |||||||
Marceloist Spring of 1968–70; 1969 Portugal earthquake; Economic expansion (until 1973), Portuguese Colonial War; 1973 oil crisis; Attempted March 1974 coup "Caldas Resurgence"; Carnation Revolution; Flown under custody to Madeira and, later, went into exile to Brazil; |
Third Republic (1974–)[edit]
# | Portait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Political party | Government | President | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
67 | Adelino da Palma Carlos (1905–1992) |
16 May 1974 |
18 July 1974 |
Independent | Prov. I | António de Spínola (1974) | |
— | |||||||
Lawyer, opponent of the Estado Novo, appointed by Presidential nomination; Led a broad-based cabinet; Resigned due to disagreements with the electoral calendar. | |||||||
68 | Vasco Gonçalves (1921–2005) |
18 July 1974 |
19 September 1975 |
Independent | Prov. II | ||
Prov. III | |||||||
Prov. IV | Francisco da Costa Gomes (1974–1976) | ||||||
Prov. V | |||||||
1975 Cst. | |||||||
Army colonel; Beginning of the decolonization of the Portuguese colonies in Africa; Nationalization of banks and insurance companies after the events of 11 March 1975; Land reform; Introduction of a minimum wage; PREC; Dismissed by President Costa Gomes. | |||||||
69 | José Baptista Pinheiro de Azevedo (1917–1983) |
19 September 1975 |
23 June 1976 |
Independent | Prov. VI | ||
— | |||||||
Admiral; Signature of the declaration of independence of Angola and official end of the Portuguese Colonial War; November 1975 Parliament siege; Coup of 25 November 1975; Approval of the new Constitution. | |||||||
70 | Mário Soares (1924–2017) |
23 July 1976 |
28 August 1978 |
Socialist | I[Min.] | António Ramalho Eanes (1976–1986) | |
II[a] | |||||||
1976 | |||||||
First democratically appointed prime minister; 1976-1978 economic crisis; International Monetary Fund loan; Submission of the candidacy of Portugal to the EEC; Resigned after disagreements with CDS. | |||||||
71 | Alfredo Nobre da Costa (1923–1996) |
28 August 1978 |
22 November 1978 |
Independent | III | ||
— | |||||||
Appointed by Presidential nomination. Resigned after his cabinet failed to gain Parliamentary support. | |||||||
72 | Carlos Mota Pinto (1936–1985) |
22 November 1978 |
1 August 1979 |
Independent | IV | ||
— | |||||||
Appointed by Presidential nomination; Resigned after failure to pass policies in Parliament. | |||||||
73 | Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo (1930–2004) |
1 August 1979 |
3 January 1980 |
Independent | V | ||
— | |||||||
Appointed by Presidential nomination. First and only female Prime Minister of Portugal; Foundation of the NHS (National Health Service). | |||||||
74 | Francisco Sá Carneiro (1934–1980) |
3 January 1980 |
4 December 1980 (died) |
Social Democratic | VI[b] | ||
1979, 1980 | |||||||
First centre-right prime minister since the Revolution; 1980 Azores Islands earthquake; Died in a plane crash. The accident triggered a number of conspiracy theories. | |||||||
75 | Francisco Pinto Balsemão (1937–) |
9 January 1981 |
9 June 1983 |
Social Democratic | VII[b] | ||
VIII[b] | |||||||
— | |||||||
1982 constitutional revision; Abolition of the Council of the Revolution; Creation of the Constitutional Court; First general strike in democracy; Resigned after a poor result in the 1982 local elections. | |||||||
— | Mário Soares (1924–2017) |
9 June 1983 |
6 November 1985 |
Socialist | IX[c] | ||
1983 | |||||||
Central Bloc (PS/PSD) coalition; Portugal's entry to the EEC; Dona Branca scandal; 1983-1985 economic crisis; International Monetary Fund loan; Moimenta-Alcafache train crash; Resigned after the Central Bloc coalition split. | |||||||
76 | Aníbal Cavaco Silva (1939–) |
6 November 1985 |
28 October 1995 |
Social Democratic | X[Min.] | ||
XI | Mário Soares (1986–1996) | ||||||
XII | |||||||
1985, 1987, 1991 | |||||||
3rd longest-serving PM; economic expansion and privatization; First time a single party won an absolute majority since the revolution; 1989 and 1992 constitutional revisions; End of the Cold War; Bicesse Accords; Gulf War; Early 1990s recession; Riots against tolls on 25 April Bridge. | |||||||
77 | António Guterres (1949–) |
28 October 1995 |
6 April 2002 |
Socialist | XIII[Min.] | ||
XIV[Min.] | Jorge Sampaio (1996–2006) | ||||||
1995, 1999 | |||||||
Economic expansion; Expo 98; 1998 Abortion and Regionalisation referendums; 1998 Azores Islands earthquake; Macau handover; East Timor issue; Decriminalization of drug use; Portugal joins the European single currency; Resigned after a disastrous result in the 2001 local elections. | |||||||
78 | José Manuel Barroso (1956–) |
6 April 2002 |
17 July 2004 |
Social Democratic | XV[d] | ||
2002 | |||||||
Prestige disaster; 2003 Portuguese wildfires; Casa Pia child sexual abuse scandal; Iraq War; UEFA Euro 2004; 2004 constitutional revision; Resigned to become President of the European Commission. | |||||||
79 | Pedro Santana Lopes (1956–) |
17 July 2004 |
12 March 2005 |
Social Democratic | XVI[e] | ||
— | |||||||
Mayor of Lisbon (2002–2004, 2005). Replaced José Manuel Barroso as Prime Minister; Resigned due to the dissolution of Parliament by the President. | |||||||
80 | José Sócrates (1957–) |
12 March 2005 |
21 June 2011 |
Socialist | XVII | ||
XVIII[Min.] | Aníbal Cavaco Silva (2006–2016) | ||||||
2005, 2009 | |||||||
First time the Socialist Party won an absolute majority; 2005 constitutional revision; 2005 Portuguese wildfires; 2007 Abortion referendum; Same-sex marriage legislation; 2010–2014 Portuguese financial crisis; Resigned after failure to pass austerity measures in Parliament. | |||||||
81 | Pedro Passos Coelho (1964–) |
21 June 2011 |
26 November 2015 |
Social Democratic | XIX[f] | ||
XX[Min.][g] | |||||||
2011, 2015 | |||||||
2010–2014 Portuguese financial crisis; 2011 Portuguese IMF/ECB bailout; Secret Services and Ongoing espionage scandal; 15 September 2012 mass protests; Won the 2015 election but lost his majority; Defeated in a vote of no confidence and removed from office. | |||||||
82 | António Costa (1961–) |
26 November 2015 |
2 April 2024 |
Socialist | XXI[Min.] | ||
XXII[Min.] | Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa (2016–) | ||||||
XXIII | |||||||
2019, 2022 | |||||||
Formed a parliamentary agreement with BE, PCP and PEV; October 2017 Iberian wildfires; COVID-19 pandemic; 2020 stock market crash and subsequent recession; 2021–2023 inflation surge; Resigned following the Operation Influencer corruption investigation. | |||||||
83 | Luís Montenegro (1973–) |
2 April 2024 |
Incumbent | Social Democratic | XXIV[Min.][h] | ||
2024 | |||||||
Minority government led by the Democratic Alliance coalition. |
Timeline[edit]
See also[edit]
- List of prime ministers of Portugal by time in office
- List of presidents of Portugal
- Politics of Portugal
Notes[edit]
- Min. Minority government
- ^ Socialist Party (PS) and Democratic and Social Centre (CDS) coalition government.
- ^ a b c Democratic Alliance (AD) government, composed by the Social Democratic Party (PSD), Democratic and Social Centre (CDS) and the People's Monarchist Party (PPM).
- ^ Socialist Party (PS) and the Social Democratic Party (PSD) coalition government.
- ^ Social Democratic Party (PSD) and CDS – People's Party (CDS–PP) coalition government.
- ^ Social Democratic Party (PSD) and CDS – People's Party (CDS–PP) coalition government.
- ^ Social Democratic Party (PSD) and CDS – People's Party (CDS–PP) coalition government.
- ^ Portugal Ahead (PàF) government, composed by the Social Democratic Party (PSD) and CDS – People's Party (CDS–PP).
- ^ Democratic Alliance (AD) government, composed by the Social Democratic Party (PSD) and CDS – People's Party (CDS–PP).