Left-wing parties demand price caps on fuel and essential goods

Saturday, 14 March 2026AI summary
Left-wing parties demand price caps on fuel and essential goods
Photo: RTP Notícias

The Portuguese Communist Party (Partido Comunista Português or PCP) and the Left Bloc (Bloco de Esquerda or BE) are calling for government regulation and price fixing for fuel and food. Leaders Paulo Raimundo and José Manuel Pureza criticized the “obscene profits” of large companies during a protest in Lisbon, citing speculation linked to Middle East tensions. Consumers should note that these parties are also pushing for an extraordinary tax on large corporate profits.

Context & Explainers

What is the PCP?

The Portuguese Communist Party (PCP or Partido Comunista Português) is a Marxist‑Leninist party founded in 1921 out of the revolutionary trade‑union and anarcho‑syndicalist movement, becoming the Portuguese section of the Comintern in 1923. Banned after the 1926 coup, it went underground and became a central force of resistance to the Estado Novo dictatorship, organizing clandestine unions, anti‑fascist struggle and supporting the colonial liberation movements. After the 1974 Carnation Revolution, the PCP was pivotal in land reform, nationalisations and embedding social rights in the 1976 Constitution, especially in the Alentejo and Setúbal regions where it has long been very strong.

Today the PCP is a smaller but still influential party rooted in the CGTP trade‑union confederation and local government, holding a handful of Assembly seats and one MEP in the Left group. It advocates a “patriotic and left‑wing alternative”: defence of workers’ rights, public services and national sovereignty, strong criticism of EU and NATO constraints, and support for socialist countries and anti‑imperialist causes.

José Manuel Pureza is the national coordinator of the Left Bloc (Bloco de Esquerda), the party quoted in the story. In the article he is cited criticizing the president’s stance on the labour package, so his comments reflect the party’s public position on that policy.

Sources (4)

Continue reading