Luís Montenegro walked into office without a plan — and now he’s trying to govern with finger-pointing and headlines. With no concrete policies, no economic vision, and no courage to lead, he’s resorted to the oldest trick in the populist playbook: blame the immigrants. When you have no roadmap, xenophobia becomes your GPS.
Malundo Kudiqueba
Instead of offering real solutions to housing, health, or wages, Montenegro has decided that the problem in Portugal is people with accents. Ironically, it’s the immigrants keeping hospitals running, farms producing, and care homes afloat — while politicians like him are busy producing… excuses.
If immigrants vanished tomorrow, the country would collapse. If some politicians vanished, no one would notice — except the bar at São Bento.
Montenegro isn’t leading; he’s chasing. Specifically, chasing André Ventura’s shadow, hoping to steal just enough hate to stay relevant.
You can’t out-Chega Chega — but you can certainly embarrass yourself trying.
Montenegro talks about “defending national identity” — as if corruption, nepotism, and empty promises were the sacred pillars of Portuguese culture. If that’s identity, maybe it’s time for a little change.
He blames immigrants for taking jobs, while politicians take bribes. One is working; the other is stealing — and it’s not the immigrant.
This isn’t leadership. It’s cowardice wrapped in a flag.
Montenegro’s message to the Portuguese people is clear: “I have no plan, but hey — at least I’m not foreign.”
Punchlines won’t build hospitals. Slogans won’t feed families. And demonising immigrants won’t make Portugal stronger — just smaller.
Amsterdam, 05 March 2025.
Malundo Kudiqueba
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