Far too many odds are stacked up against the country as it enters a new political cycle. Most of them lie internally and in my view pose the biggest challenge/threat to Portuguese society as it shaped itself to this day.
The electorate here has traditionally been wise enough casting their ballots in a manner that broadly does justice to prevailing political and social context.
It is now for the winning PSD - the Social Democrats led by Pedro Passos Coelho - to put together a coalition government with junior party CDS-PP to deliver what Portugal has needed most, and lacked, over its 37-year old Democracy: strong, purposeful and focused administration that runs daily affairs but also pursues longer-term planning and policy objectives.
Only too often the country's Constitution is referred to as a stumbling block in the way of economic development in a market-economy model.
While the Constitution may require fine-tuning or deeper adjustment of sorts, the main blame for the country's sclerotic functioning lies elsewhere.
Contradictory as it may seem Portugal's best hope for success (whose upcoming government is severely limited in scope by the tight EU/ECB/IMF strait jacket) is to do with that very programme signed up to by the three main parties.
The parties that yesterday got the most votes, nearly 80% between them, which suggests an endorsement by the electorate of the conditionality-based financial rescue plan.
The package will force structural changes to take place if it is to be implemented to full effect.
The Portuguese people have now given the country's politicians a clear mandate.
It is for politicians to provide Portugal with a strong administration ready to take on every tough challenge/decision ahead.
A good start and pointer would be to get the new government up and running much sooner than what has generally been the case here...
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