Cega MP Bruno Nunez said this Saturday that PS voters should be put “in a jar and sent to NASA for study” and treatment if the Socialists win the legislative elections again.
“If the PS wins the election, all those who voted for the PS should be put in a jar and sent to NASA for study as they need treatment and study to continue to prolong socialism in Portugal,” he said.
The deputy spoke at the sixth National Congress of the party, which is taking place at the Cultural Center of Viana do Castelo.
Bruno Nunez, elected by Setúbal, believed that Pedro Nuno Santos represented a “return to 1974”, an idea that the party president expressed in his speech at the end of the morning, and, referring to the electoral coalition that brings together the SDS, CDS-PP and The PPM, the Democratic Alliance (AD), defended that Chega was a “democratic alternative.”
The deputy believed that the party will receive “recognition of its merits on March 10, when it wins the elections.”
Several deputies took the stage in the afternoon of the second day of the VI Chegin National Congress, which will last until Sunday.
Rui Afonso, elected for Porto, also defended the need to “eradicate socialism in Portugal once and for all” and highlighted the “unique opportunity” to “change the situation” in the next legislative elections.
Accusing the PS and SDP of fueling a “network of interests and corruption,” the Chegi MP noted that the AD “does not represent the alternative” that he considered in Chega.
Pedro Pessanha defended that Chega is “the only party with right-wing values”, saying that there would be “no” political solution if the party led by Andre Ventura, from whom he asked for loyalty and devotion, was excluded.
The man elected by Lisbon in the 2022 elections stressed that “in government or in opposition,” Chega is “the hope for a Portugal free of socialism.”
Responding to protests from security forces, Pedro Pessanha said the government needed to address the needs of these professionals and conduct a review of their careers and salaries.
Rui MP Paulo Sousa devoted his speech to the issue of immigration, noting that his statements had recently been “fact checked” by Polygraph, concluding that the media “have not yet understood” what the party’s position on the issue is.
Noting that as an agricultural businessman he had immigrants working for him, the National MP said Chega was advocating immigration that was “controlled” rather than the way it is now where “anyone enters this country without control and regulation “.
“We are neither racist, nor xenophobic, nor against the immigration of those who come for good,” he said, asking “those who do not come for good or for work” to go “to another country.”
Patricia Carvalho, deputy director, focused her speech on rejecting the idea that Chega is a sexist party, emphasizing the presence of women in the congress and in internal positions.
The party’s communications leader took the opportunity to criticize the “Mortagua sisters” of BE, whom she accused of “supporting Islamic immigration” and “Islamic theoretical movements” that “force women to wear the veil” and “encourage men to penetrate their private parts women,” citing mixed bathrooms and the election of the first trans woman as Miss Portugal as examples.
Author: Lusa
Source: CM Jornal

I’m Sandra Hansen, a news website Author and Reporter for 24 News Reporters. I have over 7 years of experience in the journalism field, with an extensive background in politics and political science. My passion is to tell stories that are important to people around the globe and to engage readers with compelling content.