PSD gathers in Anadia with the labour reform hanging over it
The PSD's 43rd Congress opens in Anadia right after its labour package was voted down. What's at stake for Montenegro and the government.
Some party gatherings are all smiles and banners. This one isn’t quite that. The PSD meets this weekend in Anadia, at the Sangalhos National Velodrome, for its 43rd Congress — and it arrives with a fresh headache: the government’s labour reform package was rejected in a first parliamentary vote just days earlier.
Luís Montenegro opens proceedings on Saturday. There’s no leadership fight here — he was re-elected at the end of May as the sole candidate, with close to 95% of the vote, though on one of the lowest turnouts the party has ever seen. Nobody’s challenging the chair. What’s up for grabs is the mood.
Why it matters
Montenegro has been prime minister for two years and party leader for four. A congress held right after a parliamentary defeat is a pulse check: it can show the troops in line, or let the cracks show through. Criticism from senior party figures is already in the air, and Madeira has been pushing loudly for answers of its own.
For anyone in Portugal, the read is simple: how the PSD comes out of this congress — united or scuffed — shapes how much room the government has to legislate in the coming months, from labour to housing. Worth a glance at how it wraps up on Sunday.
Illustrative · Photo: Héctor Berganza / Pexels