The Lisboeta

Nuno Melo votes in Porto, the 'Cidade Invicta', and recalls that Marcelo has experienced 'very challenging political cycles' in a short space of time

Sunday, 18 January 2026RSS
Nuno Melo votes in Porto, the 'Cidade Invicta', and recalls that Marcelo has experienced 'very challenging political cycles' in a short space of time

The Minister of National Defence recognises the strong likelihood of a run-off; nonetheless, he expresses the hope that the pace of electoral events will slow after the President of the Republic is chosen.

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Context & Explainers

Emigrant voting lets Portuguese citizens living abroad cast ballots in national elections, usually by mail or at consulates. With several hundred thousand registered overseas voters, their turnout and geographic distribution can be decisive in close presidential contests, so candidates often campaign to win votes in key emigrant communities.

Remote voting means casting a ballot without being physically present at a polling station, using methods such as postal ballots, proxy voting or internet/telephone systems. In the current presidential vote context many Portuguese abroad had to travel to consulates because remote options weren’t available, so voters living overseas should check well before election day which methods (if any) apply to them and how to register.

Tactical voting means choosing a less-preferred candidate to achieve a strategic outcome—for example concentrating support to ensure a preferred candidate reaches the second round (segunda volta) or to block a rival. Party leaders urge it when they want to avoid splitting votes among similar candidates and increase the chance of a favourable runoff result.