Vote. The Portuguese do not approve of the right-wing coalition with Chega, Ventura and Marisa Matias approaching Ana Gomes in the presidential elections



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Most of the Portuguese refuse to establish a right-wing government supported by Chega in the next legislative elections. According to the Intercampus poll for “Correio da Manhã” and for “Jornal de Negócios”, only 21.9% of those surveyed agree with a contraption with André Ventura’s party, similar to what happened in the Azores. 66.2% already believe that there should not be a coalition with Chega.

The opinion of the Portuguese only changes when the issue does not include Chega: on a right-wing agreement without Chega’s participation, the survey reveals that 51.8% of the Portuguese surveyed agree with this scenario.

Although the majority does not agree with Chega’s participation in a right-wing coalition in the legislatures, the leader André Ventura is gaining points in the voting intentions for the presidential elections, moving closer to Ana Gomes. In November he rose 2.3 percentage points and reached 10.5% of voting intentions, while the former Socialist MEP stood at 16.1%, down 1.1 points compared to the survey carried out in October.

Marisa Matias, on the other hand, was the candidate for the presidential elections that rose the most, also approaching Ana Gomes. Compared to last month, the candidate of the Left Bloc obtained 2.6 points more, which places the voting intentions at 8.7%.

Maintaining the leadership is Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa with 56.6% of the voting intentions. At this time, the Presidency-in-Office is closer to Cavaco Silva’s record in 2011, which was 52.95%, than to the record of 70.35% reached by Mário Soares in 1991.

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