
“To change Portugal, I decided to go into the realm of political incorrectness”: An Interview with André Ventura
Chega presents the possibility of a radical change in Portugal.

Chega presents the possibility of a radical change in Portugal.

Guinea-Bissau is politically unstable and plagued by drug traffickers. The president himself may be implicated in the violence.

After fifty years of ‘restoring democracy’ in Portugal, the people are turning against globalisation.

The bill would open the way for ‘mixed’ bathrooms and locker rooms for school-age children.

Portugal is being transformed by mass immigration—in all likelihood, irreversibly.

Nova Direita is striving to revolutionise the ideological vision of the Portuguese Right by standing unapologetically for national sovereignty and geopolitical neutrality.

Change is in the air as national populists Chega go from strength to strength following a grift scandal that brought down the ruling socialists.

The snap election comes after a green grift scandal toppled the ruling socialists.

The scandal could bring down the entire socialist government.

Nogueira believed the future would be shaped by great nations and that ethnically pluralistic polities—empires—were culturally and civilisationally superior to homogeneous ones.