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LIVRE
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LIVRE[14] (L; lit. 'FREE'), temporarily known as LIVRE/Tempo de Avançar[15] (lit. 'FREE/Time to Move Forward', L/TDA), is a green left-wing Portuguese political party, founded in 2014. Its founding principles are ecology, universalism, freedom, equality, solidarity, socialism, and pro-Europeanism.[16]
Key Information
History
[edit]
In 2011, Left Bloc's Independent MEP Rui Tavares departed the party's group due to disagreements with coordinator Francisco Louçã and began sitting as an independent in European Parliament.[17] Tavares also left the Left Bloc's European Parliament group, GUE-NGL, and began sitting with Greens–European Free Alliance.
In 2014, ahead of that year's European elections, LIVRE was formed, with Tavares being its most notable founder. Its founding congress was 31 January.[18] The party was legalised by the Portuguese Constitutional Court on 20 March 2014.[19] On 20 May 2015, it officially changed its name LIVRE to LIVRE/Tempo de Avançar, with L/TDA as its abbreviation.[20] This change was made in order to run for the 2015 legislative election in a broad coalition with the citizen platform Tempo de Avançar, as only political parties can run in legislative elections.[21] It switched back to its original name a few years later. Its symbol is a poppy.
In the 2019 legislative election the party entered parliament for the first time, with Joacine Katar Moreira as their sole MP.[22] After several clashes between Katar Moreira and the party's leadership, including accusations that LIVRE only used her to achieve the state mandated subvention due to her being a black woman, and Katar Moreira's claim that the election was "won" only by her[23][24] the party expelled her from their caucus on 31 January 2020, losing all representation in the Assembly of the Republic.[25]
During the campaign for the 2022 legislative election, Rui Tavares, once again the main candidate from LIVRE, was able to appear in the televised debates due to the party having elected one MP during the previous election.[26] Rui Tavares was elected as the party's sole MP, with LIVRE regaining representation in parliament.[27]
During the 2024 legislative election, LIVRE increased their result to 3.2% and elected 4 MPs: Rui Tavares, Isabel Mendes Lopes (who became the first Parliamentary leader of LIVRE), Jorge Pinto and Paulo Muacho.[28]
In the same year, LIVRE selected Francisco Paupério as the main candidate for the 2024 European Parliament election after his victory in the party primaries, a result that caused some internal turmoil in the party after allegations of electoral fraud.[29] Rui Tavares was later criticized for not being as present as other party leaders in the party's campaign for the European elections.[15] In the end, LIVRE achieved 3.8% of the votes, their best result so far, but failed to elect any MEPs.[18]
Organization
[edit]Structure
[edit]The party's political responsibilities are divided between two main organs, both elected for two-year terms in the party congress: the Contact Group, composed of 15 people elected through lists and which are responsible for the Executive functioning of the party; the Assembly, composed of 50 people (with gender parity) elected through individual candidacies, responsible for determining the political positioning of the party. Unlike most parties in the Portuguese landscape, LIVRE does not have a determined leadership role, having rotating roles such a male-female Spokespeople duo from the Contact Group and a Coordinator of the Board of the Assembly. Given that both organs have term-limits and no person can be in one organ more than three consecutive terms, they are considered as rotative roles.[30]
Leadership positions
[edit]| Mandate | Co-Spokesperson for the Contact Group | Co-Spokesperson for the Contact Group | Coordinator of the Board of the Assembly |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024– | Rui Tavares | Isabel Mendes Lopes | Patricia Gonçalves |
| 2022–2024 | Teresa Mota | ||
| 2020–2022 | Pedro Mendonça | Isabel Mendes Lopes | Luciana Rio Branco Patrícia Robalo José Manuel Azevedo |
| 2018–2020 | Ana Natário | ||
| 2016–2018 | Rui Tavares | ||
| 2014–2016 | Marta Loja Neves | ||
Elected politicians
[edit]Members of the Assembly of the Republic
[edit]- Rui Tavares (Lisbon)
- Isabel Mendes Lopes (Lisbon)
- Patrícia Gonçalves (Lisbon)
- Jorge Pinto (Porto)
- Filipa Pinto (Porto)
- Paulo Muacho (Setúbal)
- Rui Tavares (Lisbon)
- Isabel Mendes Lopes (Lisbon)
- Jorge Pinto (Porto)
Filipa Pinto – from October 2024 to January 2025 - Paulo Muacho (Setúbal)
- Rui Tavares (Lisbon)
- Joacine Katar Moreira (Lisbon) – became independent in February 2020
Political stances
[edit]One of the main points of the party's manifesto going into the 2022 Portuguese legislative election was support for a universal basic income.[31] The party also highlighted its support for increasing the national minimum wage to €1,000 per month, extending support for: remote working, pregnant workers, workers with health problems, caregivers and supporting "micro-businesses". The party also supports a Green New Deal for Portugal, lowering VAT from 23% to 6% on vets and pet food, banning bullfighting and legalizing cannabis.[32][33]
Election results
[edit]Assembly of the Republic
[edit]Vote share in the Portuguese legislative elections

| Election | Main candidate | Votes | % | Seats | +/- | Government | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Rui Tavares | 39,330 | 0.7 (#9) | 0 / 230
|
New | No seats | |
| 2019 | Joacine Katar Moreira | 56,940 | 1.1 (#9) | 1 / 230 0 / 230
|
Opposition | Joacine Katar Moreira was expelled from the LIVRE caucus in January 2020. | |
| No seats | |||||||
| 2022 | Rui Tavares | 71,232 | 1.3 (#9) | 1 / 230
|
Opposition | ||
| 2024 | 204,875 | 3.2 (#7) | 4 / 230
|
Opposition | |||
| 2025 | 257,291 | 4.1 (#5) | 6 / 230
|
Opposition |
Presidential
[edit]| Election | Candidate Supported | Votes | % | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Sampaio da Nóvoa | 1,062,138 | 22.9 (#2) | Lost |
| 2021 | Ana Gomes | 540,823 | 13.0 (#2) | Lost |
European Parliament
[edit]| Election | List leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | EP Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Rui Tavares | 71,495 | 2.2 (#6) | 0 / 21
|
– | |
| 2019 | 60,446 | 1.8 (#8) | 0 / 21
|
|||
| 2024 | Francisco Paupério | 148,572 | 3.8 (#7) | 0 / 21
|
Local elections
[edit]The following results include LIVRE led coalitions.
| Election | Votes | % | Mayors | +/- | Councillors | +/- | Assemblies | +/- | Parishes | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | 17,417 | 0.06 | 0 / 308
|
New | 0 / 2,074
|
New | 1 / 6,461
|
New | 2 / 27,019
|
New |
| 2021 | 24,685 | 0.05 | 0 / 308
|
1 / 2,064
|
3 / 6,448
|
3 / 26,797
|
||||
| 2025 | 58,440 | 1.07 | 0 / 308
|
1 / 2,058
|
26 / 6,463
|
41 / 27,973
|
Regional Assemblies
[edit]| Region | Election | Main candidate | Votes | % | Seats | +/- | Government |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Azores | 2016 | José Manuel Azevedo | 227 | 0.2 (#11) | 0 / 57
|
New | No seats |
| 2020 | 362 | 0.4 (#11) | 0 / 57
|
No seats | |||
| 2024 | 735 | 0.6 (#8) | 0 / 57
|
No seats | |||
| Madeira | 2023 | Tiago Camacho | 858 | 0.6 (#10) | 0 / 47
|
New | No seats |
| 2024 | Marta Sofia | 911 | 0.7 (#11) | 0 / 47
|
No seats | ||
| 2025 | 959 | 0.7 (#10) | 0 / 47
|
No seats |
References
[edit]- ^ "Livre. Europeias, primárias e crescimento marcam 14.º Congresso". Notícias ao Minuto. 9 May 2024. Archived from the original on 1 September 2025. Retrieved 1 September 2025.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2022). "Portugal". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
- ^ Ana Raposo Marques; et al. "A esquerda verde progressista do Século XXI" [The Progressive Green Left of the 21st Century] (PDF) (in Portuguese). Retrieved 17 May 2025.
- ^ "Declaração de Princípios".
- ^ a b Tilo Wagner (24 April 2014). "Upstart Portuguese party wants more Europe". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 12 November 2015.
- ^ Morlino, Leonardo; Raniolo, Francesco (30 March 2017). The Impact of the Economic Crisis on South European Democracies. Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-52371-2.
- ^ Quari, Serenella (17 September 2024). "Portugal's Parliamentary Elections in 2024: A Shift in the Political Landscape on the 50th anniversary of the democratic revolution of 25 April 1974". Diritti Comparati (in Italian). Retrieved 18 June 2025.
- ^ Andrei Khalip (8 October 2019). "Portugal president asks Socialist Costa to form government". Euronews. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
- ^ Demony, Catarina; Goncalves, Sergio (15 October 2019). "Portugal's new cabinet list approved; Centeno keeps finance job". Reuters. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
- ^ [8][9]
- ^ European Spring Webpage (retrieved on 17 October 2018)
- ^ Livre announcement (retrieved on 19 January 2022)
- ^ Maria Lopes (23 May 2014). "Rui Tavares recebe apoio da cúpula dos Verdes europeus". Público (in Portuguese). Retrieved 26 May 2014.
- ^ ACÓRDÃO N.º 316/2017 Tribunal Constitucional. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
- ^ a b Paul Mitchell (25 May 2015). "Moves for a "left alliance" government accelerate in Portugal". World Socialist Web Site. International Committee of the Fourth International. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
- ^ "Declaração de princípios aprovada na reunião de 16 de novembro de 2013". LIVRE (in Portuguese). 16 November 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
- ^ "Rui Tavares diz-se vítima de "caça ao independente" lançada por Louçã". SIC Notícias (in Portuguese). 22 June 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
- ^ a b "Partido Livre inicia hoje congresso fundador e de eleição de órgãos". ionline (in Portuguese). 31 January 2014. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
- ^ "ACÓRDÃO N.º 255/2014" (in Portuguese). Tribunal Constitucional. 19 March 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
- ^ "ACÓRDÃO N.º 283/2015" (in Portuguese). Tribunal Constitucional. 20 May 2015. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
- ^ "Mudou o nome do Livre. Agora é Livre/Tempo de Avançar" (in Portuguese). Diário de Notícias. 26 May 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ "Joacine Katar Moreira é a primeira deputada negra em Portugal?". Poligrafo (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 11 April 2024.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Joacine grita ao congresso: "Isto é uma perseguição. Elegeram uma mulher negra que foi útil para a subvenção"". Diário de Notícias (in Portuguese). 18 January 2020. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
- ^ "Joacine Katar Moreira: "Fui eu que ganhei as eleições sozinha"". Público (in Portuguese). 24 November 2019. Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ Penela, Rita. "Livre: "A partir deste momento tudo o que Joacine disser ou fizer na ação política não nos representa"". Observador (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 11 April 2024.
- ^ Ribeiro, Nuno (15 December 2021). "CNE dá razão ao Livre pela exclusão dos debates eleitorais". Público. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
- ^ Pincha, João Pedro (31 January 2022). "A festa de anos do Livre teve a eleição de Rui Tavares como brinde". PÚBLICO (in Portuguese). Retrieved 11 April 2024.
- ^ "Livre em êxtase após eleição de grupo parlamentar com quatro deputados". SIC Notícias (in Portuguese). 11 March 2024. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
- ^ "Membros do Livre dizem que vitória de Francisco Paupério nas primárias para as europeias foi "chapelada eleitoral"". Visão (in Portuguese). 23 April 2024. Retrieved 24 July 2025.
- ^ "Estatutos do LIVRE".
- ^ "Rendimento Básico Incondicional. É mesmo possível e desejável recebermos dinheiro por existirmos?". Rádio Renascença (in European Portuguese). 14 January 2022. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
- ^ Martins, Paula (25 January 2022). "The politics of Portugal – who are the parties?". The Portugal News. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
- ^ Silva, Lara (31 January 2022). "2022 Portuguese General Election: Socialist Party Wins Majority". Portugal.com. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
External links
[edit]LIVRE
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and Initial Establishment
LIVRE originated as a political movement initiated by Rui Tavares, a historian and former Member of the European Parliament who had represented the Bloco de Esquerda until 2011, seeking a distinct green-left platform focused on ecological sustainability, social justice, and pro-European integration.[6][7] The party's formal founding occurred during its inaugural congress in Porto on January 31 and February 1, 2014, where delegates approved foundational documents including moções outlining principles of Liberdade – Esquerda – Europa – Ecologia (Liberty – Left – Europe – Ecology), emphasizing universalism, equality, solidarity, and opposition to austerity policies prevalent in post-2008 Portugal.[8][9] The congress established LIVRE's unique organizational structure, rejecting traditional hierarchical leadership in favor of collective decision-making through a Contact Group and open primaries accessible to supporters endorsing its charter, aiming to foster participatory democracy and distance from established party models.[10] This approach reflected founders' disillusionment with rigid leftist structures, positioning LIVRE as a libertarian-left alternative amid Portugal's economic crisis and the dominance of the Socialist Party and Social Democratic Party.[11] Following the congress, LIVRE rapidly pursued legal recognition, contesting the May 2014 European Parliament elections as its debut, where it secured 2.18% of the national vote (approximately 78,000 votes) but no seats, demonstrating initial grassroots mobilization despite limited resources.[12] The party was officially registered with the Portuguese Constitutional Court on March 20, 2014, enabling its full operational establishment as a national entity and setting the stage for subsequent domestic electoral forays.[13]Early Electoral Participations and Growth
LIVRE entered the electoral arena shortly after its founding in July 2014, with its inaugural national participation in the October 4, 2015, legislative elections, contested under the banner LIVRE/Tempo de Avançar. The party secured sufficient support in the Lisbon constituency to elect a single deputy, its founder Rui Tavares, marking the breakthrough of a new green-left force into parliamentary politics amid a fragmented left opposition to the center-right government.[14] This outcome reflected LIVRE's appeal to urban, progressive voters disillusioned with established parties, leveraging Tavares's profile as a former European Parliament member.[11] The party's modest debut laid the groundwork for consolidation, as it retained its lone Assembly seat in the October 6, 2019, legislative elections, again in Lisbon, despite intensified competition from rising left alternatives like the Left Bloc and PAN.[15] This persistence demonstrated early resilience, with vote share edging upward to approximately 1.2% amid broader left-wing fragmentation following the Socialist Party's minority government's policy shifts.[16] LIVRE's focus on participatory democracy and ecological issues contributed to niche growth, particularly in metropolitan areas, though structural barriers like Portugal's district-based proportional representation limited expansion beyond a single mandate.[17] Between 2015 and 2019, LIVRE supplemented legislative efforts with involvement in local and European contests, fostering internal structures like open primaries to build grassroots engagement and ideological coherence. This period saw incremental membership increases and alliances with civil society, positioning the party as a distinct voice for federalist, eco-socialist positions outside traditional left coalitions.[2] Retention of parliamentary presence amid economic recovery and shifting voter alignments underscored LIVRE's adaptation, though it highlighted challenges in scaling beyond symbolic representation in a party system dominated by larger blocs.Post-2022 Developments and Alliances
In the 2024 Portuguese legislative election held on March 10, LIVRE increased its representation in the Assembly of the Republic from one seat in 2022 to four seats, achieving approximately 2.4% of the national vote share.[18] This growth reflected the party's appeal among urban, progressive voters focused on environmental and European integration issues, amid a fragmented left-wing spectrum where larger parties like the Socialist Party (PS) and Left Bloc (BE) stagnated or declined.[18] LIVRE ran independently, without formal coalitions, emphasizing its distinct green-left positioning.[19] Following the 2024 election, which resulted in a minority center-right Democratic Alliance (AD) government, LIVRE's leader Rui Tavares expressed openness to negotiating specific policy themes—such as environmental protections—with the AD coalition, provided it excluded cooperation with the far-right Chega party. However, no formal alliances materialized, and LIVRE maintained its opposition stance, critiquing the government's fiscal and housing policies while advocating for pluralistic left-wing alternatives beyond PS dominance.[20] A subsequent snap legislative election on May 18, 2025, further bolstered LIVRE's position, expanding its seats to six and marking it as the only left-leaning party to register gains amid broader left-wing losses and a rightward electoral shift.[5] This performance, driven by increased voter turnout in key districts like Lisbon and Porto, underscored LIVRE's consolidation as a niche force in Portuguese politics, with ongoing emphasis on ecological transition and democratic reforms.[5] Post-election, the party continued independent parliamentary activity, including proposals for sustainable development, without entering governing pacts.[21]Ideology
Core Ideological Foundations
LIVRE's core ideological foundations derive from a synthesis of left-libertarianism, political ecology, democratic socialism, and advocacy for a European democratic project, as outlined in the party's self-description. These elements converge to form a progressive framework that prioritizes human emancipation within ecological and democratic boundaries, rejecting both neoliberal commodification and authoritarian collectivism. The party's Declaration of Principles, adopted on November 16, 2013, establishes seven fundamental tenets: universalism, freedom, equality, solidarity, socialism, ecology, and Europeanism.[22][23] Universalism asserts the universality of human rights—encompassing civil, political, economic, social, cultural, and environmental dimensions—and demands their defense without exception, regardless of tactical or ideological considerations. Freedom is framed as personal autonomy enabling the realization of individual potential alongside collective advancement, serving as the foundational practice and ultimate aim of LIVRE's politics. Equality mandates legal parity, equal opportunities, and fair resource allocation to rectify inherited disparities, while solidarity invokes fraternity to uplift the vulnerable and mitigate social inequities.[22] Socialism, in LIVRE's conception, opposes the market-driven commodification of humans, labor, and nature, favoring a mixed economy of private, public, and cooperative elements where the state actively secures universal rights, freedoms, and equalities. Ecology delimits all ideologies by the tangible constraints of natural reality, advocating sustainable production and consumption, reverence for ecosystems, efficient resource stewardship, and intergenerational equity in environmental well-being. Europeanism promotes a supranational democratic federation grounded in human rights, aiming to transcend national limitations through deepened integration and accountability.[22] These principles collectively orient LIVRE toward eradicating Portugal's financial dependencies and underdevelopment, cultivating a societal model centered on human dignity, knowledge production, and territorial vitality, and expanding participatory democracy at both national and continental scales.[22]Evolution of Positions
LIVRE's ideological foundations crystallized in response to rifts within Portugal's radical left, particularly founder Rui Tavares's departure from the Bloco de Esquerda (BE) in December 2011 over profound disagreements on European Union policy. As a BE-elected MEP since 2009, Tavares supported integrationist measures such as the EU fiscal compact, viewing them as necessary for coordinated economic governance amid the eurozone crisis, while the BE maintained a staunchly Eurosceptic line rooted in opposition to supranational fiscal oversight. This break represented an early evolution towards a more pragmatic, federalist orientation on the left, prioritizing ecological and libertarian principles over anti-EU radicalism.[18] Upon its formal founding on January 31, 2014, LIVRE explicitly positioned itself as a left-libertarian alternative, blending green ecologism, participatory democracy, social justice, and enthusiastic Europeanism to fill a void in Portugal's party system between establishment socialists and Eurosceptic radicals. The party's initial manifesto emphasized direct citizen involvement, sustainable economics decoupled from austerity dogmas, and a vision of the EU as a democratic federation capable of addressing transnational challenges like climate change—contrasting sharply with the BE's and Portuguese Communist Party's (PCP) transversal Euroscepticism. This stance marked LIVRE as a novelty, advocating critical yet supportive EU engagement rather than rejectionism.[18] Since inception, LIVRE has demonstrated ideological consistency rather than radical shifts, steadfastly upholding its Europeanist core amid Portugal's post-crisis politics. Positions on environmental urgency, feminist republicanism, and anti-corruption transparency have persisted, with adaptations focusing on implementation—such as intensified calls for EU Green Deal alignment in housing and energy policies during the 2019–2024 parliamentary terms—without altering foundational commitments. Alliances, like the 2015 LIVRE/Tempo de Avançar coalition for legislative elections, tested pragmatic outreach to independents but reinforced rather than diluted the party's libertarian-green identity, yielding modest electoral gains while preserving autonomy from larger left blocs.[18][18]Policy Positions
Domestic and Economic Policies
LIVRE promotes a transition to an ecological and cooperative economic model, emphasizing public investment in a Green New Deal, support for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), and fostering social enterprises that redistribute over 50% of profits. The party advocates for a knowledge-based economy, allocating 1% of GDP to culture and 3% to research and development (R&D) by 2030, while promoting renewable energy communities and local production to decentralize energy markets and achieve an 80% recycling target by 2030.[24] In fiscal policy, LIVRE seeks progressive taxation on wealth and capital, including inheritance taxes and a carbon tax with social equity measures, alongside reductions in the tax burden on labor and efforts to combat evasion. The party proposes introducing a financial transaction tax, ensuring fair taxation of multinationals via a global 15% minimum corporate income tax (IRC), and simplifying deductions while reducing penalties for minor errors. It also calls for ending tax havens and revoking the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance. Specific tax relief includes deducting VAT on cultural goods, taxing streaming platforms' profits to fund culture per EU directives, reducing VAT to 6% on energy services, water-efficient agricultural equipment, and animal feed.[24] On labor, LIVRE's platform includes raising the minimum wage to €1,150 by 2028, implementing a four-day workweek, and reducing standard hours to 30 per week by 2030 with 30 vacation days. The party emphasizes dignifying public sector work through salary updates, full service time recognition, and reduced precarity, alongside preventing algorithmic wage discrimination on platforms and improving conditions for health professionals and workers in state enterprises like CP and TAP.[24] Domestically, LIVRE prioritizes housing accessibility, aiming for 10% public housing stock using Recovery and Resilience Plan (PRR) funds and state budgets to reach 600,000 homes long-term, with programs like "Cidade Sem Periferias" to combat segregation and "Ajuda de Casa" financing up to 30% of first-home values based on INE market data. It proposes a unified "Balcão da Habitação" for support services, mandatory debt extinguishment via property handover for housing loans, and a Housing Emergency Fund for temporary aid. In education, the party supports free public schooling with textbooks and computers through 12th grade, reduced class sizes, inclusion from early childhood (four months), anti-segregation measures, and expanded university residences using state properties.[24] Health policies focus on strengthening the National Health Service (SNS) with universal access, eliminating moderate fees, assigning family doctors to all citizens (max 1,500 patients per doctor), and expanding mental health via community teams and school psychologists. LIVRE advocates legalizing recreational cannabis with labeling, extending abortion rights to 14 weeks without reflection periods, and improving prison healthcare including one psychologist per 50 inmates for substance and mental health issues. Social welfare measures include annual increases in the Social Integration Income (IAS) above inflation, aligning pensions with the minimum wage by 2028, subsidies for informal caregivers, and enhanced support for vulnerable groups like refugees and ex-prisoners via transitional housing.[24] In justice, the party calls for combating gender-based violence through annual surveys, extended reporting deadlines, and victim networks; increasing judicial staff; reducing justice fees; reforming prisons for rehabilitation; and providing transitional housing for releasees. LIVRE also supports international mechanisms like the International Criminal Court for war crimes.[24]Environmental and Social Policies
LIVRE positions itself as an advocate for ecological sustainability, emphasizing the need to respect natural limits in production and consumption patterns. The party promotes rational resource management and extends solidarity principles to future generations to safeguard environmental health and biodiversity. In its policy framework, LIVRE supports transitions to renewable energy sources and critiques policies that prioritize short-term development over long-term ecological preservation, such as opposing building regulations that weaken nature restoration commitments.[2][25][26] On climate action, LIVRE aligns with European Green priorities, advocating for robust measures against climate change impacts, including adjustments to forestry practices like reducing eucalyptus plantations to protect soil and water resources. The party's 2025 electoral program includes proposals for enhanced public investment in research and development for sustainable technologies, alongside stable funding for environmental education and innovation. These stances reflect LIVRE's green-left orientation, prioritizing empirical evidence of environmental degradation—such as Portugal's vulnerability to wildfires and coastal erosion—over unsubstantiated optimism about unchecked growth.[27][28][29] In social policy, LIVRE focuses on fostering equality under the law, equal opportunities, and equitable resource allocation to reduce disparities in living standards. It endorses intersectoral strategies to eradicate poverty, emphasizing wealth redistribution generated from high-value economic activities rather than austerity measures. A key proposal in the 2025 legislative program is granting €5,000 to each newborn in Portugal to bolster family support and demographic sustainability.[30][24][31] Regarding gender-related policies, LIVRE advocates integrating gender considerations into public budgeting and promoting equal access to employment and leadership roles, while supporting measures to combat domestic violence and ensure reproductive rights. On immigration, the party favors regulated pathways for integration, including regularization for long-term residents contributing to the economy, aligned with its pro-European stance on mobility within the EU. These positions draw from data on Portugal's aging population and labor shortages, aiming for causal links between social inclusion and economic productivity without endorsing open borders.[32][33][18]Foreign Policy and European Integration
LIVRE advocates for deepened European integration through democratic reforms, positioning itself as a proponent of a transnational democracy that expands sovereignty beyond national borders while prioritizing human rights, solidarity, and ecological sustainability. The party seeks to transform the European Union into a more accountable entity by empowering the European Parliament with the authority to propose legislation and determine member election procedures, aiming to align EU policies directly with citizen preferences expressed in parliamentary elections.[34][35] In terms of foreign policy, LIVRE emphasizes promoting unity within the EU to develop strategic autonomy, particularly in response to global uncertainties and conflicts such as the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which the party supports countering through aid and solidarity. It calls for enhanced EU-level cooperation in defense, including dedicated mechanisms and a commissioner for the area, while viewing national armies as complementary to NATO structures rather than replacements. This stance reflects LIVRE's self-identification as a left Europeanist force committed to a resilient, united Europe capable of addressing security challenges without relinquishing multilateral alliances.[36][37][38][39] LIVRE's Europeanism distinguishes it within Portugal's left-wing spectrum by rejecting Euroscepticism prevalent in some leftist circles, instead favoring federalist elements like common foreign policy coordination and resistance to nationalist fragmentation. Founder Rui Tavares, a former Greens/EFA MEP, has consistently promoted platforms emphasizing EU solidarity, further integration, and opposition to authoritarian threats, as evidenced in the party's 2024 European election manifesto. This approach aligns with LIVRE's broader universalist principles, extending to advocacy for international law and peace-building in global hotspots.[18][35]Organization
Internal Structure and Governance
LIVRE's governance emphasizes participatory democracy, collective decision-making, and avoidance of centralized personal leadership, as outlined in its statutes approved in 2016 and consolidated in 2019.[40][41] The supreme organ is the Congress, which convenes every two years or before major elections, including all party members and supporters in its composition.[40] This body approves foundational documents such as the statutes and political program, elects national directing organs, and can be called extraordinarily by the Assembly or by one-fifth of members or territorial nuclei.[40] Congresses, such as the XV held on April 12-13, 2025, in Oeiras, operate in hybrid format to facilitate broad involvement.[42] Between congresses, the Assembly functions as the highest directing body, meeting at least three times annually to set political strategy, guidelines, and orientations.[40] It comprises members elected by the Congress and coordinates with the executive Group of Contacto, a 15-member body responsible for daily operations, implementation of decisions, and internal coordination, elected for two-year terms with a three-term limit.[43][40] Party representation externally is handled by a rotating spokesperson drawn from the Group of Contacto, typically functioning as a co-spokesperson pair to ensure gender parity, as seen in the current term with Rui Tavares and Isabel Mendes Lopes serving in this role.[43][40] The structure incorporates subsidiarity through territorial nuclei for local organization and regional assemblies for decentralized input, alongside the Council of Jurisdiction, which includes ethics, arbitration, and fiscal oversight commissions to enforce internal rules and transparency.[40] Internal elections use direct, secret, and equal suffrage, while candidate selection for public office relies on open primaries accessible to supporters.[40] Meetings are public by default, except in cases approved by the ethics commission, promoting accountability and deliberation over hierarchy.[40] This framework limits mandates to two years to prevent power concentration, aligning with the party's statutes mandating rotation and broad participation.[40]Leadership and Key Figures
LIVRE maintains a collective leadership structure without a single party president, emphasizing participatory democracy through organs like the Grupo de Contacto, which acts as the executive body and includes co-spokespersons responsible for public representation. As of the most recent documented mandate (2022–2024), the Grupo de Contacto featured 15 members, with Rui Tavares serving as co-porta-voz alongside Teresa Mota, coordinating daily operations and strategic direction.[43] This body oversees policy formulation and electoral campaigns, reflecting LIVRE's commitment to internal pluralism and avoidance of personalized leadership.[43] Rui Tavares stands as the most prominent figure in LIVRE's history and current activities, having co-founded the party in 2014 following his departure from the Left Bloc. A historian by training, Tavares has represented LIVRE as a deputy in the Assembly of the Republic since 2019, primarily for the Lisbon constituency, and frequently heads electoral lists, as seen in the 2025 legislative elections where LIVRE increased its seats to six.[44] His role extends to international advocacy, drawing from prior experience as a Member of the European Parliament (2009–2014), where he focused on green and left-libertarian issues.[45] Other key figures include Jorge Pinto, a deputy who was selected as LIVRE's candidate for the 2026 presidential election on October 21, 2025, emphasizing continuity in the party's progressive platform.[46] The parliamentary group, now comprising six members post-2025 elections, features additional voices such as those in the Grupo de Contacto like Filipa Pinto and Joana Filipe, who contribute to legislative work on environmental and social policies.[43] [4] This distributed leadership has enabled LIVRE to navigate internal challenges, including past departures like that of Joacine Katar Moreira in 2020, while sustaining growth as the only left-wing party to gain seats in the 2025 vote.[47]Membership and Elected Officials
LIVRE maintains a relatively small but growing membership base, characteristic of newer green-left parties in Portugal. Following the May 18, 2025, legislative elections, the party reported approximately 1,500 applications for membership within the subsequent three months, reflecting increased interest amid its electoral gains. Exact total membership figures are not publicly disclosed by the party, though its participatory model emphasizes open primaries and deliberative democracy, attracting engaged supporters rather than mass enrollment seen in established parties.[48] In the Assembly of the Republic, LIVRE secured 6 seats following the 2025 snap election, up from 4 in the prior legislature, with representatives including parliamentary leader Isabel Mendes Lopes (elected in Lisbon), Rui Tavares (Porto), and Jorge Pinto (Porto).[49][50] These MPs focus on environmental, European integration, and progressive issues, operating independently without formal coalition ties. The party holds no seats in the European Parliament as of 2025. At the local level, LIVRE significantly expanded its presence in the October 13, 2025, municipal elections, electing over 50 local officials—more than quintupling the 8 from 2021—primarily as councilors and parish assembly members across various municipalities.[51][52] This growth underscores efforts to build grassroots leadership, though the party did not secure any municipal presidencies.Electoral Performance
Assembly of the Republic Elections
LIVRE first gained representation in the Assembly of the Republic during the October 4, 2015, legislative election, contesting as the LIVRE/Tempo de Avançar coalition and securing one seat.[14] The party retained this single seat in the October 6, 2019, election while running independently.[53] In the January 30, 2022, election, LIVRE again won one seat, receiving 1.28% of the valid votes.[54] The party's electoral performance improved markedly in subsequent snap elections amid political instability. In the March 10, 2024, legislative election, LIVRE secured four seats.[55] It further increased to six seats in the May 18, 2025, election, obtaining 257,273 votes or 4.07% of the vote share.[4] [55] The following table summarizes LIVRE's performance in Assembly of the Republic elections:| Year | Votes | Percentage | Seats | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | - | - | 1 | New |
| 2019 | - | - | 1 | Steady |
| 2022 | - | 1.28% | 1 | Steady |
| 2024 | 204,676 | - | 4 | Increase 3 |
| 2025 | 257,273 | 4.07% | 6 | Increase 2 |