Montenegro flies to the World Cup and the opposition boils over
The prime minister went to Toronto for Portugal-Croatia while the country sat under a heat alert. Chega pounced.
Few images split opinion like a head of government in a football stand while, back home, people are being told to stay indoors during the hottest hours. That was exactly the picture Luís Montenegro handed the opposition when he flew to Toronto to watch Portugal beat Croatia in the World Cup round of 16.
The heat backdrop
The trip coincided with a delicate moment: the government declared a state of alert across mainland Portugal from the early hours of Friday 3 July to the night of Monday the 6th, with temperatures reaching 42 degrees inland. The alert mobilises civil-protection resources and urges extra care, especially for the elderly and anyone working in the sun.
The opposition’s line
Chega was the bluntest: if the situation is dramatic, the prime minister should have stayed in Portugal. The point is symbolic rather than operational — nobody claims an alert is managed in person from São Bento — but in politics symbols count, and a leader cheering the national team across the Atlantic while the country swelters is easy ammunition.
The government’s message has been one of confidence: Montenegro insists Portuguese life is improving and rejects what he calls pessimism and inertia. On the trip itself, the usual defence is that backing the team at a World Cup is a matter of state like any other.
The question the opposition will keep asking: where should a prime minister be when the country is on alert?
See also: what this heat alert actually means. Follow the government’s official agenda at portugal.gov.pt.
Image: Wikimedia Commons