Manuel Monteiro

Portuguese jurist, professor and former politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Manuel Fernando da Silva Monteiro (Anissó, Vieira do Minho, 1 April 1962) is a Portuguese jurist, professor and former politician.

ConstituencyBraga District
ConstituencyPorto District
Succeeded byPaulo Portas
Quick facts Constituency, President of People's Party ...
Manuel Monteiro
Official portrait as an MEP, 1994
Member of the Assembly of the Republic
Elections: 1985, 1995
In office
27 October 1995  24 October 1999
ConstituencyBraga District
In office
4 November 1985  12 August 1987
ConstituencyPorto District
President of People's Party
In office
22 March 1992  22 March 1998
Preceded byDiogo Freitas do Amaral
Succeeded byPaulo Portas
President of New Democracy Party
In office
2003–2008
Preceded byOffice created
Succeeded byJoel Viana
Personal details
BornManuel Fernando da Silva Monteiro
(1962-04-01) 1 April 1962 (age 63)
PartyCDS - People's Party (1978-2003, 2020-present)
Other political
affiliations
New Democracy Party (2003-2008)
Independent (2008-2020)
Alma materCatholic University of Portugal
Lusíada University
ProfessionJurist
Professor
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Early years

Manuel Monteiro started his political life during his youth. He was elected president of the People's Youth (then called Centrist Youth) in 1986.

Political career

He was the winning candidate of the internal elections of March 1992 in the Democratic and Social Centre, moving the party from the traditional centrist base to the right. His political platform was against a Federal Europe, the Maastricht Treaty and the Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union.

In 1995 he changed the party's name to People's Party.[1] The renamed party won 9% of the popular vote and 15 deputies, at the legislative elections held on 1 October 1995. This represented a partial comeback for the party that had been comprehensively defeated in the elections of 1987 and 1991. Heavy losses in the local elections of 1997, however, led Monteiro to resign.,[2] being succeeded by Paulo Portas,[3] his former friend and protégé.

Manuel Monteiro left People's Party in 2002, following a disagreement with Paulo Portas. In June 2003 he founded the New Democracy Party (PND; Partido da Nova Democracia in Portuguese). This new political force never achieved major electoral successes, and Monteiro left the party leadership in November 2008, resigning from its membership two years later. Since then he has been politically inactive.

Professional and academic career

Manuel Monteiro is a licenciate in Law from the Catholic University of Portugal. He worked at the Portuguese Industry Confederation and Banco Comercial Português. He also taught at Tomar Polytechnical Institute and Lusíada University. In 2012 he received a doctorate degree from Lusíada University.

Electoral history

CDS leadership election, 1992

More information Candidate, Votes ...
Ballot: 21 March 1992
Candidate Votes %
Manuel Monteiro WIN
Basílio Horta
António Lobo Xavier
Turnout
Source: CDS Congress[4]
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European Parliament election, 1994

More information Party, Candidate ...
Ballot: 12 June 1994
Party Candidate Votes % Seats +/−
PS António Vitorino1,061,56034.910+3
PSD Eurico de Melo1,046,91834.49±0
CDS–PP Manuel Monteiro379,04412.53±0
CDU Luis Manuel de Sá340,72511.23–1
Other parties 121,4984.00–1
Blank/Invalid ballots 94,2363.1
Turnout 3,044,00135.5425+1
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[5]
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Legislative election, 1995

More information Party, Candidate ...
Ballot: 1 October 1995
Party Candidate Votes % Seats +/−
PS António Guterres2,583,75543.8112+40
PSD Fernando Nogueira2,014,58934.188–47
CDS–PP Manuel Monteiro534,4709.115+10
CDU Carlos Carvalhas506,1578.615–2
Other parties 152,7902.60–1
Blank/Invalid ballots 113,0931.9
Turnout 5,904,85466.30230±0
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[6]
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European Parliament election, 2004

More information Party, Candidate ...
Ballot: 13 June 2004
Party Candidate Votes % Seats +/−
PS António Costa[a]1,516,00144.512±0
FP João de Deus Pinheiro1,132,76933.39–2
CDU Ilda Figueiredo309,4019.12±0
BE Miguel Portas167,3134.91+1
PCTP/MRPP Garcia Pereira36,2941.10±0
PND Manuel Monteiro33,8331.00new
Other parties 74,5052.20±0
Blank/Invalid ballots 134,1664.0
Turnout 3,404,78238.6024–1
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[7]
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Legislative election, 2005

More information Party, Candidate ...
Ballot: 20 February 2005
Party Candidate Votes % Seats +/−
PS José Sócrates2,588,31245.0121+25
PSD Pedro Santana Lopes1,653,42528.875–30
CDU Jerónimo de Sousa433,3697.514+2
CDS–PP Paulo Portas416,4157.312–2
BE Francisco Louçã364,9716.48+5
PCTP/MRPP Garcia Pereira48,1860.80±0
PND Manuel Monteiro40,3580.70new
Other parties 33,5830.60±0
Blank/Invalid ballots 169,0522.9
Turnout 5,747,83464.26230±0
Source: Comissão Nacional de Eleições[8]
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Notes

  1. Second in the list, became the top candidate after the sudden death of António de Sousa Franco, the original top candidate, during the campaign.

References

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