Jorge Pinto

Portuguese politician (born 1987) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eduardo Jorge Costa Pinto (born 20 April 1987) is a Portuguese environmental engineer, politician and member of the Assembly of the Republic, the national legislature of Portugal. A member of the LIVRE party, he has represented Porto since March 2024.

ConstituencyPorto
BornEduardo Jorge Costa Pinto
(1987-04-20) 20 April 1987 (age 38)
Amarante, Portugal
Quick facts Member of the Assembly of the Republic, Constituency ...
Jorge Pinto
Pinto in 2025
Member of the Assembly of the Republic
Assumed office
26 March 2024
ConstituencyPorto
Personal details
BornEduardo Jorge Costa Pinto
(1987-04-20) 20 April 1987 (age 38)
Amarante, Portugal
PartyLIVRE
Alma materUniversity of Minho
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Early life

Pinto was born on 20 April 1987 in Amarante.[1][2] He received a master's degree in environmental engineering the University of Porto in 2010 after producing a thesis titled Rainwater Harvesting Systems Implementation Inside Karunya University Campus for the Karunya University.[1][3] He received a doctorate in social and political philosophy from the University of Minho in 2020 after producing a thesis titled Green republicanism: non-domination for an ecologically sustainable planet.[1][4]

Career

Pinto is an environmental engineer by profession.[1] He has worked abroad since 2008, in Lithuania, India, France, Italy and most recently in Brussels since 2012.[2] He was a research associate at the University of Minho's Centre for Ethics, Politics and Society.[5][6]

Pinto has written a number of books and comic books.[2] The comic book Amadeo, a vida e obra entre Amarante e Paris (2018), about the life of painter Amadeo de Souza Cardoso, was written by Pinto and illustrated by Eduardo Viana.[7] Rendimento Básico Incondicional - Uma defesa da liberdade (2019), which he co-authored, won the 2019 Philosophy Essay Prize from the Portuguese Philosophy Society.[8] Tamem digo - uma história de migrações (2022), written by Pinto and illustrated by Julia da Costa, tells the story of Pinto's grandmother Maria do Carmo and other women who stayed behind during the wave migration to France under fascist rule in Portugal.[9][10] He also wrote the plays Uma História Trágico-Marítima, which received an honourable mention in the 2017 INATEL/Teatro da Trindade awards, and Seis meses.[11]

Between the ages of 18 and 25, Pinto was a member of the Socialist Party but became disillusioned with the party's lack of commitment to progressivism, environmentalism and the European left ideals.[12] He was one of the founders of the LIVRE party and was part of the Contact Group, the party's executive body, from 2014 to 2020.[1][2] At the 2015 legislative election Pinto was placed first on LIVRE's list of candidates in Europe but the party failed to win any seats in the constituency.[13] He was a candidate for LIVRE at the 2019 and 2022 legislative elections in Porto but on each occasion the party failed to win any seats in the constituency.[14][15] He was elected to the Assembly of the Republic at the 2024 legislative election.[16] He was re-elected at the 2025 legislative election.[17][18]

On 1 November 2025, Pinto announced in hometown Amarante that he would contest the 2026 Portuguese presidential election.[19] At the election on 18 January 2026 Pinto came ninth after receiving 0.68% of the votes.[20][21] He subsequently endorsed socialist candidate António José Seguro for the run-off election to be held on 8 February 2026.[22][23]

Electoral history

Legislative elections

More information Year, Party ...
Year Party Constituency Position No. Votes % +/- Status Notes
2015 L/TDA Europe 1 (out of 2) 5th 249
1.82 / 100.00
Not elected
2019 LIVRE Porto 1 (out of 40) 9th 8,952
0.96 / 100.00
Increase0.44 Not elected
2022 1 (out of 40) 9th 11,433
1.16 / 100.00
Increase0.20 Not elected
2024 1 (out of 40) 6th 37,319
3.35 / 100.00
Increase2.19 Elected
2025 1 (out of 40) 5th 47,156
4.30 / 100.00
Increase0.95 Elected
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Presidential election, 2026

More information Candidate, First round ...
Ballot: 18 January and 8 February 2026
Candidate First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
António José Seguro1,755,56331.13,502,61366.8
André Ventura1,327,02123.51,737,95033.2
João Cotrim de Figueiredo903,05716.0
Henrique Gouveia e Melo695,37712.3
Luís Marques Mendes637,44211.3
Catarina Martins116,4072.1
António Filipe92,6441.6
Manuel João Vieira60,9271.1
Jorge Pinto38,5880.7
André Pestana10,8970.2
Humberto Correia4,7730.1
Blank/Invalid ballots 125,840 275,414
Turnout 5,768,53652.395,515,97750.03
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[24][25]
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Works

  • & Viana, Eduardo (2018). Amadeo, a vida e obra entre Amarante e Paris [Amadeo, life and work between Amarante and Paris] (in Portuguese). Porto Salvo, Portugal: Desassossego. ISBN 978-989-8892-15-7.[8]
  • & Viana, Eduardo (2019). Liberdade Incondicional 2049 [Unconditional Freedom 2049] (in Portuguese). Brussels, Belgium: Green European Journal.[8]
  • ; Merrill, Roberto; Bizarro, Sara & Marcelo, Gonçalo (2019). Rendimento Básico Incondicional - Uma defesa da liberdade [Unconditional Basic Income - A defense of freedom] (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: Edições 70. ISBN 978-972-44-2257-2.[2][8]
  • A liberdade dos futuros - ecorrepublicanismo para o século XXI [The freedom of futures - eco-publicanism for the 21st century] (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: Tinta da China. 2021. ISBN 978-989-671-663-9.[2][8]
  • Tamem digo - uma história de migrações [I also say - a story of migrations] (in Portuguese). Amarante, Portugal: Officina Noctua. 2022. ISBN 978-989-33-3602-1.[8]
  • ; Renan, Evandro & Nozomi, Talita (2024). Tempo - em busca da felicidade perdida [Time - in search of lost happiness] (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: Iguana. ISBN 978-989-787-171-9.[8]

References

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