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The Diário da República (DR) is the official gazette of Portugal. Between 1869 and 1976, it was called the Diário do Governo. It is published by the National Printing House and comprises two series. Laws, decree-laws, decisions by the Constitutional Court and other relevant texts are published in the I Series.
Fábrica da Igreja da Paróquia de São Miguel da Sé de Castelo Branco: reconquista.pt: Região de Leiria: weekly: 1935: Leiria — Região de Leiria. Lda. regiaodeleiria.pt: Região Sul: weekly: 1993: Loulé — Navega Aqui - Publicações, Lda. regiao-sul.pt: Opinião Pública weekly 1991 Vila Nova de Famalicão 15,000 Editave Multimedia ...
The incumbent President, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, was reelected for a second term. The elections were held during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Portugal was under a lockdown as of election day. [2] President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa was reelected by a landslide, winning 60.7 percent of the votes. [3]
The flag was established in 2006 by Resolution of the Assembly of the Republic No. 73, dated 14 December 2006 and published on 28 December 2006 in issue number 248 of the Diário da República. It was hoisted for the first time on 3 January 2007 on the balcony of the Salão Nobre of the São Bento Palace .
Presidential elections are scheduled to be held in Portugal on 25 January 2026, with a possible second round on 15 February 2026. [1] The election will elect the successor to the incumbent President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa (President since 2016, supported by PSD), who is constitutionally barred from running for a third consecutive term.
The Assembly of the Republic has 230 members elected to four-year terms. The number of seats to be elected by each district depends on the district magnitude. [1] 226 seats are allocated proportionally by the number of registered voters in the 18 Districts in Mainland Portugal, plus Azores and Madeira, and 4 fixed seats are allocated for overseas voters, 2 seats for voters in Europe and ...
The 14th Legislature of the Third Portuguese Republic (Portuguese: XIV Legislatura da Terceira República Portuguesa) ran from 25 October 2019 to 4 December 2021.The composition of the Assembly of the Republic, the legislative body of Portugal, was determined by the results of the 2019 legislative election, held on 6 October 2019.
The Portuguese Republican Party (Portuguese: Partido Republicano Português, pronounced [pɐɾˈtiðu ʁɛpuβliˈkɐnu puɾtuˈɣeʃ]) was a Portuguese political party formed during the late years of the constitutional monarchy that proposed and later brought about the replacement of the monarchy with the Portuguese First Republic.