Coimbra mayor faces criticism over journalist dispute

Saturday, 11 April 2026AI summary
Coimbra mayor faces criticism over journalist dispute
Photo: Diário de Notícias

The Liberal Initiative (Iniciativa Liberal or IL) and the Communist Party (Partido Comunista Português or PCP) have criticized Coimbra Mayor Ana Abrunhosa for publicly attacking a journalist from the Lusa news agency. Abrunhosa accused the reporter of bias and political agenda following a report on the Coimbra Film House, prompting the Lusa management to label her comments as defamatory. The mayor stated she has lost confidence in the journalist and intends to file a formal complaint.

Context & Explainers

Ana Abrunhosa is a Portuguese politician who appears in this story after publicly criticising Agriculture Minister José Manuel Fernandes for visiting flood-hit areas only recently and for speaking to journalists before meeting local officials. Her comments followed a reprimand from Coimbra's mayor, so residents in the affected towns and local authorities should note the political tensions around the flood response.

What is the Liberal Initiative (IL) political party?
  • Leader: Mariana Leitão (since July 2025)
  • Ideology: Classical liberalism, economic libertarianism

Founded in 2017, the Liberal Initiative advocates for reduced state intervention, tax simplification, labor market liberalization, and secular liberalism under the motto "Less State, More Freedom". The party gained its first parliamentary seat in 2019 and now holds 9 seats. ​ Mariana Leitão, 42, became the party's first female leader in July 2025 after Rui Rocha resigned following disappointing 2025 election results. Leitão previously served as parliamentary leader and has been announced as the party's candidate for the 2026 presidential election. The party explicitly rejects alliances with both far-left and far-right parties, positioning itself as the "only alternative" that won't negotiate with extremes.

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.

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