LIVRE heads to the ballot: Rui Tavares steps aside in leadership race
Between 10 and 12 July, LIVRE picks its leadership. Founder Rui Tavares gives up the top spot, clearing the way for a new pair of spokespeople.
LIVRE is about to turn a page. Between 10 and 12 July, party members vote in an internal ballot to choose their leadership — and the headline is who won’t be in the usual seat.
Rui Tavares, the party’s founder and public face since day one, announced on 26 June that he’s giving up the top spot on the list for the Contact Group, the body that steers LIVRE. Instead of first place, he’s taking third — a move that in practice opens the door to a new generation of leaders without the party losing its compass.
Who steps up
The list aligned with the current leadership will now be headed by Isabel Mendes Lopes, until now co-spokesperson, and Jorge Pinto, both MPs. It’s a negotiated handover, not a rupture: the goal is a fresh face for the project while keeping the political line that fuelled the party’s recent growth.
The vote won’t be a stroll, though. Two rival candidacies, opposed to Tavares’ direction, guarantee internal debate and a little suspense until the result is known.
Why it matters
In a fragmented parliament born from the 2025 election, with a minority government in charge, every party on the left counts in the voting arithmetic. How LIVRE reorganises could shape alliances and priorities in the months ahead, from housing to the environment — areas where it has staked out clear positions.
For now, the image is of a founder who’d rather pull strings from backstage than cling to the spotlight. Whether the membership agrees with the script is the open question.
See also: Portugal’s cost of living in 2026. More on the party at the official LIVRE site.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons