Single Social Benefit approved: many supports, one payment
PSD, CDS and PS joined forces to create the Single Social Benefit, meet an RRP target and unlock 620 million euros from the EU.
For once, left and right ended up in the same place. Parliament approved the creation of the Single Social Benefit (PSU), a reform that promises to fold several scattered social supports into one payment — something long demanded by people lost in a confusing web of allowances.
What changes
The idea is easy to explain and hard to deliver: instead of trekking from counter to counter to claim separate supports, each with its own rules and deadlines, there will be a mechanism that bundles them together. Less red tape, fewer overlaps, more clarity about who gets what.
The deal between PSD, CDS-PP and PS was more than symbolic. By approving the measure, Portugal meets a target under its Recovery and Resilience Plan and unlocks a 620 million euro payment request from the European Union — money that was waiting on exactly this step.
The noise around it
Not everything is rosy in Parliament. PS leader Carlos César accused the prime minister of leaning politically on Chega, in a climate where every vote is also read as a chess move. Chega leader André Ventura remains the swing vote in many decisions.
See also: Portugal tightens its immigration law and the return to the UN Security Council. The RRP timeline is on the Government portal.
Image: Wikimedia Commons