Luís Neves under pressure: PJ police contractor did private works on minister's estate
Portugal's interior minister hired the builder behind €1.9m in police contracts for private works in Odemira. Chega wants an audit; invoices reach €27,000.
Portugal’s interior minister, Luís Neves, is at the centre of a controversy mixing public contracts, private renovations and a builder he calls a friend. At issue: the man hired for works on the minister’s family estate in Odemira is the same contractor who billed around €1.9 million in contracts with the Polícia Judiciária (PJ) — several signed while Neves ran the criminal police force.
What do we know about the works on Luís Neves’ estate?
Builder João dos Santos Carvalho, of Construbarcelos, carried out the renovations of the PJ’s Guarda and Évora headquarters between 2020 and 2025, some awarded without a tender and at least two signed by Neves himself as national director. The same businessman also did private work on the minister’s property. Known invoices reach €27,000, but the minister has refused to show proof of payment.
How has the minister responded, and what does the opposition want?
Neves confirms the hiring and argues the company holds national security clearance, a requirement for PJ tenders. The far-right Chega party has requested an audit to establish whether all private works were fully invoiced and paid at market rates. The affair caps a rough week for the government on public trust, coming right after the row over how SNS hospital waiting lists are counted; the government’s structure and remits are set out on the official portal.
The essentials remain unanswered: who paid what, when, and at what price. Until receipts appear, the question will not go away — and in the ministry that oversees internal security, the appearance of a conflict of interest weighs as much as the conflict itself.
Image: Agência Lusa / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 3.0)