Portugal Opposition Says 'Martian Invasion' Needed for Coalition Deal

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Portugal's Socialist opposition leader said Wednesday it would take a "Martian invasion" to convince him to join a coalition government, after the ruling center-right bloc fell short of outright election victory.

Pedro Passos Coelho's "Portugal Ahead" coalition notched up 38.6 percent of the vote in Sunday's ballot, short of an absolute majority, leaving him needing support from other parties to govern.

President Anibal Cavaco Silva on Tuesday charged Passos Coelho with forming a "stable and lasting government", but in a stark indication of the challenges facing the 51-year-old, Socialist leader Antonio Costa scoffed at the idea of a deal.

A coalition with the center-right "is only imaginable in an extreme situation, like a Martian invasion," Costa said on Wednesday.

Passos Coelho's victory at the polls came despite overseeing four years of painful austerity measures imposed in order for the debt-hit country to receive an international bailout.

The second-placed party, the anti-austerity Socialists, picked up 32.4 percent of the vote, retaining its status as the main opposition group in parliament.

Silva had called for compromise -- he has never concealed his support for a "grand coalition" uniting left and right.

After a meeting of his party, which looks increasingly divided after its electoral defeat, former Lisbon mayor Costa said he would begin consultations with "all political forces."

- Stability pledge -

On election night he had hinted at compromise, saying he would fight to "end the chapter of austerity" but would not threaten Portugal's commitments towards its creditors.

The country emerged in May 2014 from a three-year 78-billion-euro ($88-billion) bailout from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). 

Passos Coelho's Social Democrats on Wednesday signed a new coalition deal with their conservative Popular Party partners.

"We will do everything we can to stop the election becoming the precursor to political instability," said Passos Coelho, who plans to meet the Socialist leader in the coming days.

Four seats to be decided by votes from Portuguese expatriates will be determined by October 14. The center-right alliance holds 104 out of the seats decided so far, against 85 for the Socialists, and is certain to fall short of the 116 needed for outright control of the 230-seat legislature.

That means that Passos Coelho will have to get the support, or at least the acquiescence, of other parties. The house is dominated by leftist parties, which hold 121 seats and though wracked by divisions, could threaten a minority government.

Costa has let it be known that he was not ready in the short term to join forces with the Communist Party or the Left Bloc, the sister party of Greece's anti-austerity Syriza, to stymie the right -- but he did not completely rule out future accords.

Portugal must present the key aspects of its 2016 budget to the European Commission by October 15 -- a key test for any future agreement between the center-right and the Socialists.

On the campaign trail Costa threatened to block any center-right government's budget, but on election night he showed a more conciliatory side and analyst Antonio Costa Pinto said he has little room for maneuver now.

Weakened by the poll defeat, "the Socialists will end up supporting government policy to give themselves time to sort out their internal problems," Pinto said.

And the Socialists will be wary of forcing early elections in case voters punish them at the ballot box for precipitating a political crisis.

Moreover, under the Portuguese constitution, a newly elected parliament cannot be dissolved before six months, so no election could be held before April 2016 in any case.

Since the arrival of democracy in 1974, Portugal has seen several minority governments, from both left and right, but only one managed to serve its full term.

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