Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Europe endless – Kraftwerk
- Introduction
- 1 Lessons from the Past? The 1954 Association Agreement between the UK and the European Coal and Steel Community
- 2 From the European Free Trade Association to the European Economic Community and the European Economic Area: Portugal’s Post-Second World War Path
- 3 Norway and the European Economic Area: Why the Most Comprehensive Trade Agreement Ever Negotiated Is Not Good Enough
- 4 Switzerland: Striking Hard Bargains with Soft Edges
- 5 The Customs Union between Turkey and the European Union
- 6 Ukraine: The Association Agreement Model
- 7 Canada and the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement
- 8 The World Trade Organization Model
- 9 “Singapore on the Thames”
- 10 The United Kingdom and the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- 11 Australia (and New Zealand) after the 1973 “Great Betrayal”
- 12 What Future for the Crown Dependencies, Overseas Territories and Gibraltar?
- 13 The Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland: A Flexible and Imaginative Solution for the Unique Circumstances on the Island of Ireland?
- 14 EU–UK Security Relations after Brexit
- 15 The UK Still In Europe? Is the UK’s Membership of the Council of Europe In Doubt?
- Afterword
- Index
2 - From the European Free Trade Association to the European Economic Community and the European Economic Area: Portugal’s Post-Second World War Path
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 December 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Europe endless – Kraftwerk
- Introduction
- 1 Lessons from the Past? The 1954 Association Agreement between the UK and the European Coal and Steel Community
- 2 From the European Free Trade Association to the European Economic Community and the European Economic Area: Portugal’s Post-Second World War Path
- 3 Norway and the European Economic Area: Why the Most Comprehensive Trade Agreement Ever Negotiated Is Not Good Enough
- 4 Switzerland: Striking Hard Bargains with Soft Edges
- 5 The Customs Union between Turkey and the European Union
- 6 Ukraine: The Association Agreement Model
- 7 Canada and the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement
- 8 The World Trade Organization Model
- 9 “Singapore on the Thames”
- 10 The United Kingdom and the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership
- 11 Australia (and New Zealand) after the 1973 “Great Betrayal”
- 12 What Future for the Crown Dependencies, Overseas Territories and Gibraltar?
- 13 The Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland: A Flexible and Imaginative Solution for the Unique Circumstances on the Island of Ireland?
- 14 EU–UK Security Relations after Brexit
- 15 The UK Still In Europe? Is the UK’s Membership of the Council of Europe In Doubt?
- Afterword
- Index
Summary
PORTUGAL AND THE SECOND WORLD WAR
The long authoritarian rule of António de Oliveira Salazar (1932–68) and the democratic transition following the 1974 Carnation Revolution were the main factors determining Portugal's post-Second World War position regarding European organizations. Following a 28 May 1926 military coup d’état against the democratic regime, Salazar was appointed finance minister and granted extraordinary powers to enable the country to avoid imminent financial collapse. On 5 July 1932 he was appointed as Portugal's one hundredth prime minister. A new constitution was drafted, with Salazar as its guiding spirit. Taking a leaf out of the book of other authoritarian and fascist regimes at that time, he organized a popular referendum on 19 March 1933 to approve his Constitution but also to consolidate his powers and vision.
The resulting Estado Novo (New State) effectively established an antiparliamentarian, corporatist and authoritarian form of governance that would last until 1974. Salazar rapidly outlawed political parties, imprisoned opposition leaders, instituted censorship of the press and reorganized the state, imitating many of the features of the regime of his contemporary in Italy, Benito Mussolini, including the creation of a secret police service, the “State Defence and Surveillance Police” (Polícia Internacional e de Defesa do Estado) which, profiting from technical assistance from Nazi Germany's Gestapo, established concentration camps and tortured prisoners.
Salazar consolidated his hold on power during the 1930s, surviving abortive uprisings and a 1937 assassination attempt. During the 1939–45 war, the Portuguese government adopted a “neutral” position, aiming to preserve its profitable economic trade with Germany but also wishing not to jeopardize its centuries-old alliance with the United Kingdom (the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance, ratified by the Treaty of Windsor in 1386, remains to this day the oldest extant alliance in the world). Portugal's neutrality also meant that its overseas territories were less at risk of invasion and occupation. However, following the December 1941 entry of the United States into the war and the strategic importance for the Allied forces of the Azores, the Portuguese government was forced to align itself more closely with the Allies, while remaining theoretically neutral.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Outside the EUOptions for Britain, pp. 21 - 32Publisher: Agenda PublishingPrint publication year: 2020