Constituent Assembly of Portugal
The Constituent Assembly was the Portuguese constituent assembly elected on 25 April 1975, after the Carnation Revolution, for the purpose of adopting a constitution for the Third Portuguese Republic, the Constitution of 1976.
Background
After the Carnation Revolution, the National Salvation Junta dissolved all political offices previously existing in the Estado Novo. On 14 May 1974, the President of the National Salvation Junta, António de Spínola, abolished the National Assembly and the Corporative Chamber, the two parliamentary chambers in the Estado Novo, and established a transitory constitution to be used until the new constitution was approved.Election
The election of the Constituent Assembly was carried out in Portugal on 25 April 1975, exactly one year after the Carnation Revolution and was the first free election in fifty years, the first in the new democratic regime created after the revolution.The election was won by the Socialist Party, with the Democratic People's Party being the second most voted party. The parliament had a large majority of moderate parties, from Socialism to Centrism, meaning a victory of "democratic legitimacy over revolutionary legitimacy". A new Constitution was approved on 2 April 1976.
Composition
Changes
- Several Democratic People's Party MPs → Independent: A total of 21 PPD MPs, including the party's parliamentary group leader, Carlos Mota Pinto, announced, on December 1975, that they are leaving the PPD and will become Independents, following deep disagreements with the party leader, Francisco Sá Carneiro, regarding the ideology and policies of the party.