Were there more political prisoners after the 25th of April than before? False
On the 25th of April, there were more than four thousand political prisoners. Afterwards, even considering former PIDE agents, the number is lower.

Latest news and stories about pide in Portugal for expats and residents.
On the 25th of April, there were more than four thousand political prisoners. Afterwards, even considering former PIDE agents, the number is lower.

He openly opposed the regime in the barracks. He was elected to decide how Portugal would be from 1976 onwards. Carlos Lage is one of the deputies of the Constituent Assembly.

Sophia de Mello Breyner and Francisco Sousa Tavares created a code that the PIDE secret police never discovered in the correspondence they exchanged while the lawyer was detained for opposing the Estado Novo regime, their son Miguel Sousa Tavares told Lusa. Beyond accompanying his mother on visits to Caxias prison, Miguel Sousa Tavares was tasked with helping her draft letters and 'translate' the messages sent by his father. The son recalled that they had invented a brilliant code to share political secrets within the resistance circle against the Estado Novo. Miguel Sousa Tavares swore to his mother that he would never reveal the enigma contained in the letters, which required a creative writing style to ensure the PIDE did not suspect a key was hidden within. The code was used whenever Francisco Sousa Tavares was imprisoned and able to communicate with his wife. Miguel Sousa Tavares, who was the only child entrusted with the secret, noted that the code was used during his father's detention related to the 'Ballet Rose' scandal in 1967, which also involved Urbano Tavares Rodrigues and Mário Soares.

Miguel Sousa Tavares was part of the commission for the extinction of the PIDE/DGS after the 25th of April, where he came face-to-face with inspector Sacchetti, who had interrogated his mother, Sophia de Mello Breyner, during the dictatorship.
The Portuguese Genealogy Association has uncovered family ties linking André Ventura to two other candidates and to a Church member who was persecuted by the PIDE and nicknamed the 'revolutionary bishop'.
