The presidential candidate visited a PSP police station and promised to make security a priority if he is elected, defending the need for data to understand reality.
António José Seguro recognizes that there are security problems in Portugal, but refuses to stigmatize territories. The presidential candidate spent the day between Vila Franca de Xira and Amadora.
The almost two hours walking through the streets of Amadora took him back decades in time. Twenty years later, the reunion takes place in the middle of the electoral campaign, in the socialist city where he lived in 1990 and where he now comes to appeal for votes.
“The lamp that goes in front lights up twice” António José Seguro sticks to the popular proverb to make it clear that, in the final stretch of the campaign, the confrontation is between two and that he intends to move forward to reach other voters.
Hours after bringing the topic of security to the agenda, the pieces of the puzzle began to fall into place with the visit to the PSP police station in Vila Franca de Xira. He assumes that security will be a priority in his mandate, if he is elected, and that, for this, data is needed to allow us to understand the reality.
Used to warm receptions in the markets he has visited, this Wednesday he was surprised by the empty stalls in Vila Franca de Xira, where he chose to moderate his speech and reinforce the idea that polls do not win elections.
