Portugal exam chaos: Chega demands urgent debate as PS wants an apology
Technical failures in Portugal's national exam platform have hit parliament: Chega wants an urgent debate to hold the education minister accountable, and the PS demands an apology from Montenegro.
The IT meltdown in Portugal’s national exams has become a full-blown political row. Chega announced on Monday that it will request an urgent debate in parliament as early as next week, calling the education minister to answer for the failures in the digital exam platform that forced postponements and left schools, students and families scrambling in the middle of exam season.
What went wrong with Portugal’s national exams?
The electronic platform used to sit the exams suffered technical failures that stopped thousands of students from completing them normally, leading to postponements and re-sits at schools across the country. For Chega, these are failures that threaten the stability of the school community — and political responsibility, the party argues, has an address: the Ministry of Education.
What happens to the education minister now?
If the urgent debate goes ahead, the government will have to explain itself to MPs at the Assembleia da República — the formal process can be followed on the parliament’s website. And the pressure isn’t coming from one side only: PS secretary-general José Luís Carneiro had already demanded over the weekend that the prime minister apologise to students and families.
The row promises to spice up a parliamentary week that opened with the AD party retreat in Cascais — and with a sharpened opposition. Between postponed papers, crashed servers and frayed nerves, one thing seems settled: the one that flunked first time round this year was the platform.
Image: Joaomartinho63 / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)