
“When we look at the names in a school and cannot find an André, a João, a Maria, a Joana, a Pedro, there is a problem. It means there is a demographic inversion,” said André Ventura, attempting to downplay the citation of immigrant children’s names by Chega party members during a parliamentary debate on Friday.
In his speech at the presentation of Chega’s municipal candidates for the Coimbra district, held on Friday afternoon, Ventura expressed confusion over why immigrant children’s names cannot be mentioned in parliament.
“Oh, you can’t say names in parliament. I have never seen them genuinely concerned about the children’s names, nor the children themselves, when, in miserable and shameful LGBT events, they used them for cultural propaganda of what they believe in and what they tried to destroy: families and family values,” he criticized.
Throughout his speech, which lasted over 20 minutes and focused heavily on immigration, the Chega leader alleged that the Left Bloc was also indifferent to children when “a few days ago, they included a child of six years old, or five, or 10, from those Hindustani countries in their propaganda.”
“This country is very amusing. If these names are pointed out to indicate a problem that needs correction, all hell breaks loose; lawsuits must be filed, they must be arrested, this must stop, but if they are used for leftist propaganda and to support the values of destruction that the left has espoused, then the children can be used all they like,” he added.
Ventura reiterated that Chega will not remain silent when hundreds of mothers contact him every day, saying they cannot find school places for their children “because others are taking those places.”
“The numbers don’t lie and they are there. We are heading towards two million foreigners in the national territory, many of them in absolutely precarious situations, in cities spread across the country in a completely uncontrolled way, and without anyone giving these people a sense of future. They let them in without any control or order,” he accused.
On the topic of municipal elections, scheduled for October 12, the Chega president expressed confidence that they will “win municipalities across the country.”
“The numbers show it, the polls too, but above all, what I feel on the street every day. Our municipal victory will be the first step towards our national victory and our victory in the legislative elections, whenever they may be in the country,” he concluded.