Prime Minister Luís Montenegro and Chega leader André Ventura met this Thursday to discuss the proposed Single Social Benefit (Prestação Social Única or PSU) and labour legislation. Ventura announced that the PSU proposal will move to the committee stage without a general parliamentary vote, following government concessions on several party demands. However, significant disagreements remain regarding the government's broader labour reform package.
Government and Chega negotiate social benefit and labour reform
Context & Explainers

- Prime Minister, Portugal: 2024 - Present
- Party: Social Democratic Party (PSD)
Luís Filipe Montenegro Cardoso de Morais Esteves (born February 16, 1973, in Porto) is a Portuguese lawyer and center‑right politician who has served as Prime Minister of Portugal since April 2, 2024. A long‑time member of the Social Democratic Party (PSD), he is the leading figure of the post‑Troika generation of Portuguese conservatives. Montenegro was elected to the Assembly of the Republic in 2002 for the Aveiro district and remained an MP for 16 years, becoming PSD parliamentary leader from 2011 to 2017 during the bailout and austerity period under Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho. He was a prominent defender of strict austerity measures, arguing in 2014 that “the life of the people is no better, but the life of the country is a lot better,” a phrase that has followed his public image since. After an unsuccessful leadership bid against Rui Rio in 2020, Montenegro won the PSD leadership in 2022. He then forged the centre‑right Democratic Alliance (PSD–CDS‑PP and allies), which won a plurality of seats in the 2024 legislative election. Refusing to partner with the far‑right Chega, which he has called “often xenophobic, racist, populist and excessively demagogic,” he formed a minority government as head of the XXIV Constitutional Government on April 2, 2024. His first government fell in March 2025 after a no‑confidence vote linked to a conflict‑of‑interest affair, but fresh elections saw the Democratic Alliance increase its seat share, allowing Montenegro to return as prime minister leading the XXV Constitutional Government. His importance to Portugal lies in attempting to re‑center the traditional centre‑right after the crisis years, defending liberal‑conservative economics and EU alignment while drawing a sharp line against formal cooperation with the radical right, thus shaping how Portuguese democracy manages its new multi‑party era.

André Ventura, born January 15, 1983, is a lawyer, academic, and Portugal's most prominent far-right leader. He founded Chega ("Enough") in 2019 after his PSD mayoral campaign attacked the Romani community. Chega surged from 1.3% in 2019 to 22.8% in May 2025, becoming parliament's second-largest party and making Ventura Leader of the Opposition.
His platform emphasizes immigration restrictions, law-and-order policies, constitutional reform, and contains inflammatory anti-Romani rhetoric that has triggered multiple discrimination convictions and investigations. Politically classified as far-right by international media, Ventura cultivates alliances with European far-right figures including Marine Le Pen and Santiago Abascal.
The PSU (Prestação Social Única) is a proposed single social benefit designed to consolidate various existing welfare payments into one streamlined system. The goal of this reform is to simplify access to support, reduce administrative complexity, and improve work incentives for low-income households.
8 sources
- Ventura signals that the Single Social Benefit proposal will move to committee stage without a parliamentary voteeco.sapo.pt ·
- After meeting with Montenegro, Ventura says Single Social Benefit will be lowered without a vote, labour reform remains without agreementpublico.pt ·
- Ventura says Single Social Benefit should go to committee without a vote to allow further negotiations between Chega and the Governmentdn.pt ·
- Chega announces that the Government conceded on six of seven demands for the PSU to proceedcnnportugal.iol.pt ·
- Asylum and borders divide parliamentobservador.pt ·
- Montenegro says there is still a "long way to go" to make a single social benefit viablecmjornal.pt ·
- Government scrambles to approve PSU – Single Social Benefitportugalresident.com ·
- André Ventura wants PSU to go to committee stage without a vote in Parliamentrtp.pt ·






