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  • 5/19/2025
Minister spraw zagranicznych Portugalii: "nie będzie koalicji" ze skrajnie prawicową partią Chega

W rozmowie z Euronews były minister spraw zagranicznych Portugalii Paulo Rangel potwierdził, że centrowa partia AD, która zwyciężyła w niedzielnych przyspieszonych wyborach, nie będzie dążyć do koalicji ze skrajnie prawicową partią Chega.


CZYTAJ WIĘCEJ : http://pl.euronews.com/2025/05/19/minister-spraw-zagranicznych-portugalii-nie-bedzie-koalicji-ze-skrajnie-prawicowa-partia-c

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00:00W rozmowie z Euronews były minister spraw zagranicznych Portugalii, Paolo Rangler, potwierdził, że centrowa partia AD, która zwyciężyła w niedzielnych wyborach, nie będzie dążyć do koalicji ze skrajnie prawicową partią Czega.
00:17This morning, sir. So you say you're totally available, but are you available or are you willing rather to go into government with Czega, for example, this anti-establishment party who did very, very well last night?
00:29I have to say that it was very clear during all the campaign, and also even last year, it was very clear that AD, the Democratic Alliance, will not make any formal coalition or government coalition with Chege.
00:53This is quite clear, and so we have to negotiate in every dossier. Last year, we could do it with the Socialist Party several times in some very important matters.
01:07Also, in a lot of issues, there was a vote in Parliament where, of course, all the formations, and that includes Chege, could vote for a piece of legislation or a different measure if you want to do it.
01:27And so this is possible, but not to have a coalition in government. So we are open to speak and to talk to everybody in Parliament.
01:36This is not new. It's exactly the doctrine that we have as a doctrine, but also as a practice during the last 11 months.
01:46But now that the party hasn't got a majority, should we be expecting now political gridlock for months in your country?
01:51Well, I don't think so. I think that the results are so clear, giving a mandate to our party to be at the head of government and to develop our own program,
02:06that it would be very, very strange, very weird, I'd say even not politically acceptable, that we could not start a government and have at least our program passed in Parliament.
02:27I think that is, so I don't foresee gridlock or a kind of paralysis in government in the next months.

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