José Sócrates

José Sócrates Carvalho Pinto de Sousa GCIH (born 6 September 1957), commonly known as José Sócrates (Portuguese pronunciation: [ʒuˈzɛ ˈsɔkɾɐtɨʃ]), is a Portuguese politician who was the prime minister of Portugal from 12 March 2005 to 21 June 2011. For the second half of 2007, he acted as the president-in-office of the Council of the European Union.

José Sócrates
GCIH
Sócrates in 2006
Prime Minister of Portugal
In office
12 March 2005  21 June 2011
PresidentJorge Sampaio
Aníbal Cavaco Silva
Preceded byPedro Santana Lopes
Succeeded byPedro Passos Coelho
Secretary-General of the Socialist Party
In office
27 September 2004  23 July 2011
PresidentAntónio de Almeida Santos
Preceded byEduardo Ferro Rodrigues
Succeeded byAntónio José Seguro
Minister of Social Infrastructure
In office
23 January 2002  6 April 2002
Prime MinisterAntónio Guterres
Preceded byEduardo Ferro Rodrigues
Succeeded byLuís Valente de Oliveira
Minister of the Environment
In office
25 October 1999  6 April 2002
Prime MinisterAntónio Guterres
Preceded byElisa Ferreira
Succeeded byArlindo Cunha
Minister in the Cabinet of the Prime Minister
In office
25 November 1997  25 October 1999
Prime MinisterAntónio Guterres
Preceded byJorge Coelho
Succeeded byArmando Vara
Secretary of State Assistant to the Minister of the Environment
In office
30 October 1995  25 November 1997
Prime MinisterAntónio Guterres
Preceded byJoaquim Poças Martins
António Taveira da Silva
Succeeded byJosé Guerreiro
Member of the Assembly of the Republic
In office
25 November 1997  20 June 2011
ConstituencyCastelo Branco
In office
13 August 1987  30 October 1995
ConstituencyCastelo Branco
Personal details
Born
José Sócrates Carvalho Pinto de Sousa

(1957-09-06) 6 September 1957
Vilar de Maçada, Alijó, Portugal
Political partyIndependent
(2018–present)
Other political
affiliations
Social Democratic Party
(1974–1981)
Socialist Party
(1981–2018)
SpouseSofia Costa Pinto Fava (Divorced)
Children2
Alma materPolytechnic Institute of Coimbra
Lusíada University
Polytechnic Institute of Lisbon
Independente University
University Institute of Lisbon
Signature

Sócrates grew up in the industrial city of Covilhã. He joined the centre-left Socialist Party in 1981 and was elected as a member of parliament in 1987. Sócrates entered the government in 1995, as secretary of state for environment in the first cabinet of António Guterres. Two years later, he became Minister of Youth and Sports (where he helped to organize Portugal's successful bid to host UEFA Euro 2004) and in 1999 became Minister for Environment. Sócrates prominence rose during the governments of António Guterres to the point that when the prime minister resigned in 2001, he considered to appoint Sócrates as his successor.

In opposition, José Sócrates was elected leader of the Socialist Party in 2004 and led the party to its first absolute majority in the 2005 election. By then, Portugal was experiencing an economic crisis, marked by stagnation and a difficult state of public finances. Like the preceding centre-right government, Sócrates implemented a policy of fiscal austerity and structural reforms. Among the most important reforms were the 2007 Social Security reform and the 2009 labour law reform. His government also restructured the provision of public services, closing thousands of elementary schools and dozens of health care facilities and maternity wards in rural areas and small cities. Despite austerity, Sócrates' government intended to boost economic growth through government-sponsored investments, namely in transportation, technology and energy as well as in health and school infrastructure. The government launched several public–private partnerships to finance such projects. Internally, Sócrates was accused of having an authoritarian style and of trying to control media, while internationally he completed the negotiations of Lisbon Treaty and had close ties with leaders such as the prime minister of Spain José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and the president of Venezuela Hugo Chavez. The first Sócrates government was initially able to reduce the budget deficit and controlling public debt, but economic growth lagged.

In 2008–09, with the Great Recession starting to hit Portugal and facing recession and high unemployment, austerity was waned as part of the European economic stimulus plan. Nevertheless, support for Sócrates and the Socialists eroded and the ruling party lost its majority in the 2009 election. The second government of José Sócrates faced a deterioration of the economic and financial state of the country, with skyrocketing deficit and growing debt. Austerity was resumed in 2010 while the country entered a hard financial crisis in the context of the European debt crisis.

On 23 March 2011, Sócrates submitted his resignation to President Aníbal Cavaco Silva after the Parliament rejected a new austerity package (the fourth in a year), leading to the 2011 snap election. Financial status of the country deteriorated and on 6 April Sócrates caretaker government requested a bail-out program which was conceded. The €78 billion IMF/European Union bailout to Portugal thus started and would last until May 2014. Sócrates lost the snap election held on 5 June 2011 and resigned as Secretary-General of the Socialist Party. For most of his political career, Sócrates was associated with several corruption cases, notably Independente University and Freeport cases.

On 21 November 2014 he was arrested in Lisbon, accused of corruption, tax evasion, and money laundering, becoming the first former Prime Minister in the history of the country to be thus accused. On 24 November Sócrates was remanded in custody on preliminary charges of corruption and tax fraud. He was held in Évora prison until 4 September 2015 when he left the prison for a relative's house in Lisbon, where he remained under house arrest until 16 October 2015. That day, a judge released him from house arrest, allowing him to await the end of the investigation in freedom, although remaining forbidden from leaving the country or contacting other suspects of the case. The police investigation, known as Operation Marquis continued until his indictment in October 2017. In 2018, Sócrates abandoned the Socialist Party.

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