Portuguese Prime
Minister Jose Socrates announced Wednesday that he is stepping down from
his
post and that the country will have new parliamentary elections.
Portuguese Prime
Minister Jose Socrates announced Wednesday that he is stepping down from his
post and that the country will have new parliamentary elections. The decision
was made after the parliament rejected the fourth Stability and Growth Pact
measures.
HTML clipboardFile photo taken on Nov.
20, 2010 shows Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates during the NATO Summit in
Lisbon. Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates announced on March 23, 2011 that
he is stepping down from his post and that the country will have new
parliamentary elections. The decision was made after the parliament rejected the
fourth Stability and Growth Pact measures. (Xinhua/Wu Wei)
Conceived to reduce the
public spending by 0.8 percent of the GDP, the new pact includes unpopular
measures like the reduction of the benefits for retired people, cutting 175
million euros on the central government transferences to municipalities and the
reduction of subsidies on prescription drugs. The measures, previously
negotiated with the European Commission and the European Central Bank, have the
goal of reducing the public deficit from 4.6 percent this year to 3 percent in
2012.
All the opposition
parties -- left and right wing -- united to defeat the measures. Only the
Socialist Party voted to maintain the Stability and Growth Pact.
The election date will be
decided by the president. The Portuguese law establishes that the voting should
take place in at least 55 days, and the new government will be inaugurated in
around three months.