António Ramalho Eanes

President of Portugal from 1976 to 1986 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

António dos Santos Ramalho Eanes GCoITE CvA GColA GCL GColL GCIH GColIH GCCa (born 25 January 1935) is a Portuguese general and politician who was the president of Portugal from 1976 to 1986.

Quick facts President of Portugal, Prime Minister ...
António Ramalho Eanes
Ramalho Eanes in 2019
President of Portugal
In office
14 July 1976  9 March 1986
Prime MinisterMário Soares
Alfredo Nobre da Costa
Carlos Mota Pinto
Maria de Lurdes Pintasilgo
Francisco Sá Carneiro
Francisco Pinto Balsemão
Aníbal Cavaco Silva
Preceded byFrancisco da Costa Gomes
Succeeded byMário Soares
President of the Democratic Renewal Party
In office
19 August 1986  5 August 1987[1]
Vice PresidentHermínio Martinho
Preceded byHermínio Martinho
Succeeded byHermínio Martinho
President of the Revolutionary Council
In office
14 July 1976  30 September 1982
Preceded byFrancisco da Costa Gomes
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Chief of the Armed Forces General Staff
In office
14 July 1976  16 February 1981
Preceded byFrancisco da Costa Gomes
Succeeded byNuno de Melo Egídio
Chief of the Army General Staff
In office
6 December 1975  14 July 1976
Preceded byCarlos Soares Fabião
Succeeded byVasco Rocha Vieira
Chair of Radio and Television of Portugal
In office
28 October 1974  11 March 1975
Preceded byCasimiro Gomes
Succeeded byJoão António de Figueiredo
Member of the Assembly of the Republic
In office
13 August 1987  3 November 1991[2][3]
ConstituencyLisbon
Personal details
BornAntónio dos Santos Ramalho Eanes
(1935-01-25) 25 January 1935 (age 91)
PartyIndependent (1974–1986; 1991–present)
Other political
affiliations
Democratic Renewal Party (1986–1991)
Spouse
(m. 1970)
Children2
Military Academy
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Portugal
Branch/service Portuguese Army
Years of service
1952–1986
RankGeneral
Battles/warsPortuguese Colonial War
Close

Background

Born at Alcains, Castelo Branco, he is the son of Manuel dos Santos Eanes, a general contractor, and Maria do Rosário Ramalho.[4]

Political career

After a long military career in the Portuguese Colonial Wars, Eanes was stationed in Portuguese Angola when the 25 April revolution of 1974 took place. He joined the Movimento das Forças Armadas (MFA or Armed Forces Movement) and after returning to Portugal was made president of RTP (Portuguese public television). In January–February 1975, he emerged as a leader in the "operationals" faction within the Portuguese military that represented the professional interests of the officer corps.[5] Around the same time, he was cultivated by the new US embassy team of Frank Carlucci, appointed in January 1975 by the United States Secretary of State Henry Kissinger at the advice of Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency General Vernon A. Walters with the mission of "getting the communists out of the government and keeping them out"; he joined NATO training programmes following selection by Colonel Robert Schuler and Supreme Allied Commander Europe Alexander Haig, and earned the description of "a boy scout for democracy" from Carlucci's deputy Herbert S. Okun.[6] Eanes then ordered the military counter-coup of 25 November 1975 against the pro-communist radical faction of the MFA, ending that year's "hot summer" (Verão quente).[4][7][8][9][10][11]

President Eanes and First Lady Manuela Eanes with U.S. president Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan at the White House, 1983.

In June 1976 he was elected President of Portugal with the backing of all political parties except the Communists, and simultaneously held the positions of the commander-in-chief of the Portuguese Armed Forces, chief of the Armed Forces General Staff, and head of the Council of the Revolution.[12] He initially entrusted the Socialist Party with forming a minority government.[13] In 1977, he established an independent commission to examine Portugal's economy, and after dismissing the Socialist PM Mário Soares in August 1978 he appointed three successive technocratic cabinets of Alfredo Nobre da Costa, Carlos Mota Pinto and Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo, none of which lasted more than a year.[14] At the end of 1980 he was re-elected, serving until March 1986. After his presidency, he headed the Democratic Renewal Party (Portuguese: Partido Renovador Democrático), and continued to support the Social Democratic Party (PSD) minority government until 1987. He resigned in 1987 after being defeated by PSD in the legislative election.[4][15]

António Ramalho Eanes (left), while president, departs after a state visit to the United States. Secretary of State George Shultz is on the right. (USAF)

He is a member of the Portuguese Council of State, as a former elected president of Portugal.

Eanes is one of the most admired and respected figures in Portuguese public life due to his extreme humility and sense of civic duty. In the words of historian Tom Gallagher, he "had remained a popular figure despite the country's steady drift to the right" and "won the approval of many Portuguese of different persuasions as an honest man who was quite clearly not a member of the political class of Lisbon lawyers or Coimbra University professors which (regardless of the political system in being) had long dominated the country".[16] Eanes once refused the honorary title of Marshal, since he considered the title unnecessary. More recently, in February 2025 he refused a 100,000 euro prize because the Fatherland does not owe anyone anything. Years before Eanes had also refused to receive over one million euro in backpay from his military service. In July of that same year, Eanes suffered a car accident, but was unharmed.[17]

Honours

National

Foreign

Family

He married at the Palace of Queluz on 28 October 1970 to Maria Manuela Duarte Neto Portugal (b. 29 December 1938), who was one of Portugal's most politically active First Ladies. They had two sons, Manuel António (b. 5 May 1972) and Miguel (b. 20 October 1977).

Electoral history

Presidential election, 1976

Eanes campaign posters in Braga, 1976.
More information Candidate, Votes ...
Ballot: 27 June 1976
Candidate Votes %
António Ramalho Eanes2,967,13761.6
Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho792,76016.5
José Pinheiro de Azevedo692,14714.4
Octávio Pato365,5867.6
Blank/Invalid ballots 63,495
Turnout 4,881,12575.47
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[21]
Close

Presidential election, 1980

More information Candidate, Votes ...
Ballot: 7 December 1980
Candidate Votes %
António Ramalho Eanes3,262,52056.4
António Soares Carneiro2,325,48140.2
Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho85,8961.5
Carlos Galvão de Melo48,4680.8
António Pires Veloso45,1320.8
António Aires Rodrigues12,7450.2
Blank/Invalid ballots 60,090
Turnout 5,840,33284.39
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[22]
Close

PRD leadership election, 1986

More information Candidate, Votes ...
Ballot: 29 April 1986
Candidate Votes %
António Ramalho Eanes Voice vote
Turnout 100.0
Source: Results[23]
Close

Legislative election, 1987

More information Party, Candidate ...
Ballot: 19 July 1987
Party Candidate Votes % Seats +/−
PSD Aníbal Cavaco Silva2,850,78450.2148+60
PS Vítor Constâncio1,262,50622.260+3
CDU Álvaro Cunhal689,13712.131–7
PRD António Ramalho Eanes278,5614.97–38
CDS Adriano Moreira251,9874.44–18
Other parties 219,7153.90±0
Blank/Invalid ballots 123,6682.2
Turnout 5,676,35871.57250±0
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[24]
Close

Notes

References

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI