Portugal returns to the UN Security Council
Portugal was elected a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council for 2027-2028, in a vote that left Germany out.
It is not every day that Portugal steps onto one of the most coveted stages in global diplomacy. The country was elected a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council for the 2027-2028 term, and it did so with numbers that speak for themselves: 134 votes, the best result in the Western European group, ahead of Austria and handing Germany a rare defeat.
What it means
The Security Council is the UN body that decides on peace and war: sanctions, peacekeeping missions, responses to crises. It has five permanent members with veto power and ten rotating ones, elected for two years. Portugal takes its seat from January 2027, with a say in major international decisions.
It had been there before, but returning with such an emphatic vote is a vote of confidence in the country’s diplomatic work. At a time when the world is wrestling with open conflicts, from Ukraine to the Middle East, having a seat at the table is no small thing.
Why it matters
For a country Portugal’s size, influence rests on credibility, not might. A Council seat creates room to mediate, propose and be heard — and pushes issues dear to Portuguese diplomacy, such as the oceans and language, closer to the centre of the debate.
See also: US-Iran talks keep the world on edge and the Venezuela earthquake that hit Portuguese nationals. Official details on the body are on the UN Security Council site.
Image: Wikimedia Commons