The Myth of Antonio Salazar
ANTONIO SALAZAR SECURED power by resigning. In 1929, when he was minister of finance in Portugal’s militaryled government, a minor scandal over regulating church bells divided the government’s secular and religious factions. Salazar, a Catholic, resigned. The president sided with him, a reversal that led the prime minister and the minister of war to resign instead. Three years later, Salazar himself was prime minister. He ruled for the next 36 years.
So it was with Salazar. The reserved, academically minded dictator held power through a combination of ability, work, factional balance, repression, and ultimately military support.
Salazar was a nationalist, an “integralist,” and a foe of liberalism, and he was prone to presenting himself as a defender of Western civilization. As those ideas come back into fashion, Salazar has seen a resurgence of interest. Into this vogue comes , a and , about the man at the heart of an alleged “dictatorship without a dictator.”
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