In polls Portuguese
On come the Portuguese polls to elect a new parliament.
The ruling center-right has the lead, but it will certainly not win and self-reliance.
The Portuguese are invited to consider the post-MoU era and the three years that preceded austerity.
Despite the harsh measures taken, the positive signs in the Portuguese economy seems to have helped the coalition of center-right.
Campaigning ended Friday.
Conservative Prime Minister Pedro Passos Koueliou, as secretary general of the Socialist Party (PS) Anthony Costa tried to persuade the last undecided to vote for.
The coalition government "Portugal Front" credited 37.5% of the voting intentions, versus a 32.5% for the PS, based on the average of three polls published on Thursday night and confirmed the unexpected even for parties sympolitefsis recovery of the right, which seemed a given that we knew defeat before just one month.
Epeffimoumenos by supporters and members of the PS during a party event in central Lisbon, Costa said: "Every vote counts, the majority of Portuguese want to change the government." The former mayor of Lisbon walked on, accompanied by musicians, Tsiadou in the historic district of Lisbon, and about 2,000 supporters who accompanied him shouting: "Victory, victory!".
The atmosphere was seemingly festive, but many no longer believe that the opposition will win tomorrow's match. "I will vote for the PS, but I know that the right will win" the election, admitted Zouzou Moreira, 58, a retiree. Others say that Costa should tend the hand to the Communist Party and the Left Bloc, calculated that he can gather from 16% to 18% of the votes.
On the other, despite favorable for sympolitefsi polls, the Paso Koueliou risks losing the absolute majority of seats available to the government to Parliament by June 2011.
"I believe we will win this election," he said yesterday the prime minister, calling on his supporters to give him a strong majority.
Two hours after the Socialists, the candidate of the center-right prime minister and his supporters followed the same path, the same path of the center of Lisbon, as is customary at the end of the campaign. About a thousand supporters marched with him.
"The Portuguese have understood that they must keep in power the alliance which rebuilt the country," stated Manuel Gkonsalves, law student, 19 years.
But some chanted, as they passed the prime minister and his supporters: "Thieves!".
The term of office of Prime Minister was marked by unprecedented austerity policies, dictated by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, but also from the economic recovery of Portugal after 2013 and the gradual reduction of unemployment.
The victory of the Socialists would mean a "return to old policies of populism that led the country into bankruptcy," repeated the Paso Koueliou throughout the course of the election campaign.
Its main rival complains that surpassed even the requirements of the troika.
Abstinence is estimated that there is a danger to approach the record high that was recorded in 2011 to 42%.
In polls Portuguese
On come the Portuguese polls to elect a new parliament.
The ruling center-right has the lead, but it will certainly not win and self-reliance.
The Portuguese are invited to consider the post-MoU era and the three years that preceded austerity.
Despite the harsh measures taken, the positive signs in the Portuguese economy seems to have helped the coalition of center-right.
Campaigning ended Friday.
Conservative Prime Minister Pedro Passos Koueliou, as secretary general of the Socialist Party (PS) Anthony Costa tried to persuade the last undecided to vote for.
The coalition government "Portugal Front" credited 37.5% of the voting intentions, versus a 32.5% for the PS, based on the average of three polls published on Thursday night and confirmed the unexpected even for parties sympolitefsis recovery of the right, which seemed a given that we knew defeat before just one month.
Epeffimoumenos by supporters and members of the PS during a party event in central Lisbon, Costa said: "Every vote counts, the majority of Portuguese want to change the government." The former mayor of Lisbon walked on, accompanied by musicians, Tsiadou in the historic district of Lisbon, and about 2,000 supporters who accompanied him shouting: "Victory, victory!".
The atmosphere was seemingly festive, but many no longer believe that the opposition will win tomorrow's match. "I will vote for the PS, but I know that the right will win" the election, admitted Zouzou Moreira, 58, a retiree. Others say that Costa should tend the hand to the Communist Party and the Left Bloc, calculated that he can gather from 16% to 18% of the votes.
On the other, despite favorable for sympolitefsi polls, the Paso Koueliou risks losing the absolute majority of seats available to the government to Parliament by June 2011.
"I believe we will win this election," he said yesterday the prime minister, calling on his supporters to give him a strong majority.
Two hours after the Socialists, the candidate of the center-right prime minister and his supporters followed the same path, the same path of the center of Lisbon, as is customary at the end of the campaign. About a thousand supporters marched with him.
"The Portuguese have understood that they must keep in power the alliance which rebuilt the country," stated Manuel Gkonsalves, law student, 19 years.
But some chanted, as they passed the prime minister and his supporters: "Thieves!".
The term of office of Prime Minister was marked by unprecedented austerity policies, dictated by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, but also from the economic recovery of Portugal after 2013 and the gradual reduction of unemployment.
The victory of the Socialists would mean a "return to old policies of populism that led the country into bankruptcy," repeated the Paso Koueliou throughout the course of the election campaign.
Its main rival complains that surpassed even the requirements of the troika.
Abstinence is estimated that there is a danger to approach the record high that was recorded in 2011 to 42%.
On come the Portuguese polls to elect a new parliament.
The ruling center-right has the lead, but it will certainly not win and self-reliance.
The Portuguese are invited to consider the post-MoU era and the three years that preceded austerity.
Despite the harsh measures taken, the positive signs in the Portuguese economy seems to have helped the coalition of center-right.
Campaigning ended Friday.
Conservative Prime Minister Pedro Passos Koueliou, as secretary general of the Socialist Party (PS) Anthony Costa tried to persuade the last undecided to vote for.
The coalition government "Portugal Front" credited 37.5% of the voting intentions, versus a 32.5% for the PS, based on the average of three polls published on Thursday night and confirmed the unexpected even for parties sympolitefsis recovery of the right, which seemed a given that we knew defeat before just one month.
Epeffimoumenos by supporters and members of the PS during a party event in central Lisbon, Costa said: "Every vote counts, the majority of Portuguese want to change the government." The former mayor of Lisbon walked on, accompanied by musicians, Tsiadou in the historic district of Lisbon, and about 2,000 supporters who accompanied him shouting: "Victory, victory!".
The atmosphere was seemingly festive, but many no longer believe that the opposition will win tomorrow's match. "I will vote for the PS, but I know that the right will win" the election, admitted Zouzou Moreira, 58, a retiree. Others say that Costa should tend the hand to the Communist Party and the Left Bloc, calculated that he can gather from 16% to 18% of the votes.
On the other, despite favorable for sympolitefsi polls, the Paso Koueliou risks losing the absolute majority of seats available to the government to Parliament by June 2011.
"I believe we will win this election," he said yesterday the prime minister, calling on his supporters to give him a strong majority.
Two hours after the Socialists, the candidate of the center-right prime minister and his supporters followed the same path, the same path of the center of Lisbon, as is customary at the end of the campaign. About a thousand supporters marched with him.
"The Portuguese have understood that they must keep in power the alliance which rebuilt the country," stated Manuel Gkonsalves, law student, 19 years.
But some chanted, as they passed the prime minister and his supporters: "Thieves!".
The term of office of Prime Minister was marked by unprecedented austerity policies, dictated by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, but also from the economic recovery of Portugal after 2013 and the gradual reduction of unemployment.
The victory of the Socialists would mean a "return to old policies of populism that led the country into bankruptcy," repeated the Paso Koueliou throughout the course of the election campaign.
Its main rival complains that surpassed even the requirements of the troika.
Abstinence is estimated that there is a danger to approach the record high that was recorded in 2011 to 42%.
In polls Portuguese
On come the Portuguese polls to elect a new parliament.
The ruling center-right has the lead, but it will certainly not win and self-reliance.
The Portuguese are invited to consider the post-MoU era and the three years that preceded austerity.
Despite the harsh measures taken, the positive signs in the Portuguese economy seems to have helped the coalition of center-right.
Campaigning ended Friday.
Conservative Prime Minister Pedro Passos Koueliou, as secretary general of the Socialist Party (PS) Anthony Costa tried to persuade the last undecided to vote for.
The coalition government "Portugal Front" credited 37.5% of the voting intentions, versus a 32.5% for the PS, based on the average of three polls published on Thursday night and confirmed the unexpected even for parties sympolitefsis recovery of the right, which seemed a given that we knew defeat before just one month.
Epeffimoumenos by supporters and members of the PS during a party event in central Lisbon, Costa said: "Every vote counts, the majority of Portuguese want to change the government." The former mayor of Lisbon walked on, accompanied by musicians, Tsiadou in the historic district of Lisbon, and about 2,000 supporters who accompanied him shouting: "Victory, victory!".
The atmosphere was seemingly festive, but many no longer believe that the opposition will win tomorrow's match. "I will vote for the PS, but I know that the right will win" the election, admitted Zouzou Moreira, 58, a retiree. Others say that Costa should tend the hand to the Communist Party and the Left Bloc, calculated that he can gather from 16% to 18% of the votes.
On the other, despite favorable for sympolitefsi polls, the Paso Koueliou risks losing the absolute majority of seats available to the government to Parliament by June 2011.
"I believe we will win this election," he said yesterday the prime minister, calling on his supporters to give him a strong majority.
Two hours after the Socialists, the candidate of the center-right prime minister and his supporters followed the same path, the same path of the center of Lisbon, as is customary at the end of the campaign. About a thousand supporters marched with him.
"The Portuguese have understood that they must keep in power the alliance which rebuilt the country," stated Manuel Gkonsalves, law student, 19 years.
But some chanted, as they passed the prime minister and his supporters: "Thieves!".
The term of office of Prime Minister was marked by unprecedented austerity policies, dictated by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, but also from the economic recovery of Portugal after 2013 and the gradual reduction of unemployment.
The victory of the Socialists would mean a "return to old policies of populism that led the country into bankruptcy," repeated the Paso Koueliou throughout the course of the election campaign.
Its main rival complains that surpassed even the requirements of the troika.
Abstinence is estimated that there is a danger to approach the record high that was recorded in 2011 to 42%.
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