Immigration takes centre stage: the new rules and what's at stake
Montenegro's government tightened immigration policy with Chega's support. We explain what changed and both sides' arguments, without taking a side.
Immigration has become the issue that dominates this parliament. Luís Montenegro’s second government has passed new legislation restricting migration policy, backed in parliament by Chega — a fact that says plenty about the political balance of the moment.
Those who back the new rules frame it as management: a country that takes people in should be able to integrate them with decent conditions — housing, services, schools — and clearer rules would bring predictability to the system. Those who criticise it worry about closing doors on people who work, pay taxes and prop up sectors that need labour, from the fields to restaurants.
Why this matters for Portugal
Because immigration isn’t only a Lisbon story. In municipalities like ours, some sectors rely on workers who came from abroad, and communities have grown over the years. Whatever your view, it’s worth following closely — national rules always end up reaching our own street.
We don’t take sides here: our job is to give you the facts and the arguments so you can form your own opinion.
Illustrative · Photo: AXP Photography / Pexels