Veteran focus right lawmaker and TV intellectual Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa has won Portugal's presidential races.
With about 99% of the vote numbered,http://www.smettere-di-fumare.it/forum/profile.php?mode=viewprofile&u=1012814 the 67-year-old is winning 52% - enough to keep away from a keep running off.
His nearest adversary, liberal Antonio Sampaio da Novoa, is surveying 22%.
The post of president is fundamentally formal, yet the head of state can disintegrate parliament. A precarious departed wing coalition as of now oversees Portugal.
Spectators suspect the coalition might disentangle inside of a year or something like that, so the new president might wind up assuming a more dynamic part, the BBC's Alison Roberts reports from Lisbon.
A record 10 hopefuls partook in Sunday's races.
A triumphant contender needs half of the vote to maintain a strategic distance from a keep running off on 14 February.
Mr de Sousa is known as "Educator Marcelo" to his supporters and has been included in governmental issues since his childhood, building up the middle right Social Democratic Party.
He hosts the backing of conservative gatherings yet says he won't be dependent on them. He has swore to do all that he can to guarantee the present government's soundness.
On the off chance that chose, he will assume control in March from Anibal Cavaco Silva, a traditionalist who served two successive five-year terms.
An inside right coalition won the most voteshttp://prosafe.marionegri.it/forum/viewprofile.aspx?UserID=776 in October's race however lost its general lion's share in November to be supplanted by an organization together of left-wing parties which dismisses its severity program in parliament.
Portugal was one of the nations hardest hit by the emergency in the eurozone, tolerating a worldwide bailout in return for clearing cuts.
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