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Is Portugal shifting to the right?

Centre-left socialist president is elected, but far-right rival secures record share of the vote.

After decades of being largely immune to political upheaval, Portugal is witnessing what many consider an accelerated shift to the right.

This week’s presidential election is seen as a wake-up call.

It brought to power a centre-left politician – with a big win.

But the strong showing of his rival, the far-right candidate, signals that Portugal could be on a path to joining other European countries in a political move to the right.

The president of this European country is largely a figurehead, but he still wields considerable power.

So, how will this vote shape Portugal’s political future? And how has it been watched across Europe?

Presenter: James Bays

Guests:

Miguel Poiares Maduro – Director of the School of Transnational Governance at the European University Institute

Karel Lannoo – CEO of the Centre for European Policy Studies

Will wounded Ireland shuffle pack for Italy game?

Jonathan Bradley

BBC Sport NI senior journalist
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When Andy Farrell took charge of Ireland after the 2019 World Cup, Joe Schmidt’s erstwhile defensive specialist faced calls to radically overhaul a team that had clearly dropped from a considerable peak.

In 2018, Ireland had won a Six Nations Grand Slam and beaten New Zealand in Dublin as part of an autumn clean sweep.

By the time Farrell took over, England had punctured a Manu Tuilagi-shaped hole in their best laid World Cup plans before they got to the tournament and were shocked by Japan in the pool stages before the All Blacks exacted revenge in the quarter-final.

Then, having been the head coach in waiting for a year, there was a feeling that Farrell’s association with the previous ticket got his tenure started on the back foot.

Yet, by the time of his first game in charge in February 2020, Farrell resisted any temptation to enforce a major break from the Schmidt regime, his biggest selection calls revolving around replacing retired veterans Rob Kearney and Rory Best.

While handing an international debut to Caelan Doris was a nod to the future, the naming of the then 34-year-old Johnny Sexton as his captain was a clear indication of a focus on the here and now.

As Ireland muddled through a pair of third-place Six Nations campaigns disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic, Farrell remained steadfast in his approach of evolution rather than revolution and was rewarded for his faith with a historic series win in New Zealand in 2022 and a Six Nations Grand Slam the next year.

In the wake of Thursday’s humbling defeat by France in Paris to start the 2026 Six Nations however, Farrell has faced the strongest calls since those earliest days of his tenure to dramatically overhaul the team.

Ireland v Italy

2026 Six Nations

Saturday, 14 February, 14:10 GMT

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While Farrell was accurate when judging his 2020-21 squad as one in transition rather than terminal decline, the mood music around the team feels even more sombre this time around.

It may only be two years ago that Ireland were chasing the history of back-to-back Grand Slams, but Thursday’s loss saw them drop to fifth in the world rankings and they have lost seven of their past nine against the teams above them.

With the four most recent of those reverses coming by double-digits, Thursday was no isolated incident. It is undeniable that a gap to the world’s best has emerged and now widened.

Farrell has always shown himself not to be one to throw the baby out with the bathwater but, whether it be seeking an injection of fresh blood, the heralding of a new direction or simply to prompt a reaction to their Parisian lack of “intent”, it is clear he has some big selection calls to make before Thursday’s team announcement to face the Azzurri.

To an extent, Farrell had already shaken up his team coming into this championship even when already without Andrew Porter, Tadhg Furlong, Mack Hansen, Hugo Keenan and Robbie Henshaw through injury, while Bundee Aki was suspended.

Jacob Stockdale was preferred to James Lowe while, with Tadhg Beirne selected in the second row, the selection of Cian Prendergast ostensibly came at the expense of the benched James Ryan.

Josh van der Flier v Nick Timoney

Josh van der FlierGetty Images

Despite only playing half an hour at the Stade de France, back row Nick Timoney was arguably Ireland’s most impactful player in Paris.

The Ulster back row’s international career is perhaps indicative of how settled Ireland’s team has become.

He made his debut against USA in the summer of 2021 but, before his subsequent role off the bench against France, his next five caps were spread across four and a half years and came against Argentina, as a match-day morning inclusion, Fiji, Georgia, Japan and Australia.

All through that period, he was consistently among the best and most consistent performers for his province and on Thursday gave the impression of a man who had been impatiently waiting for his first crack at the Six Nations and top-level international opposition.

While capable of playing across the back row, it will be Josh van der Flier feeling the pressure at number seven.

Joe McCarthy v Edwin Edogbo

Joe McCarthyGetty Images

There is little doubt that Joe McCarthy has a long future in the Ireland engine room.

Just 24 years old, he has a profile that is rare in Irish rugby, providing a real combination of physicality and athleticism in the second row. Indeed, having established himself as a starter only after the 2023 World Cup, he is among the most recent additions to Farrell’s starting XV.

However, as a penalty concession for coming in at the side straight in front of the posts and right in front of the referee on Thursday shows, his decision-making and discipline remain a major work-on.

It was only last year, after the reverse fixture in the Six Nations, that the Ireland camp were publicly talking about how the Leinster player would learn from his costly yellow card for pulling back Thomas Ramos.

When Ireland were at their best, such transgressions were simply not tolerated.

In Munster’s uncapped Edwin Edogbo, Farrell now has an alternative who could bring similar physical presence to the side and the 23-year-old has shown good form for his province since returning for injury too.

    • 15 hours ago

Garry Ringrose v Jude Postlethwaite

Garry RingroseGetty Images

Like Van der Flier, Garry Ringrose is a player who has not found his best form after returning from the British and Irish Lions tour of Australia without a Test cap.

The Leinster centre was arguably the most unfortunate to miss out on facing the Wallabies, admirably self-reporting symptoms of concussion when he had been selected for the second Test.

So long a key defensive cog for Ireland, despite being at the centre of a debate on the value of missed tackles statistics, the 31-year-old was hardly alone in looking off the pace in Paris but midfield is definitely an area where the side would benefit from experimenting with younger options.

Ringrose, Stuart McCloskey, Henshaw, Aki and even the side’s most recent debutant Tom Farrell, are all the wrong side of 30 with the next World Cup still one year and eight months away.

Jude Postlethwaite was not even in the senior squad until news broke of Aki’s impending suspension but he certainly impressed earlier this season for Ulster.

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‘Didn’t want the season to end like this’ – Grealish has surgery

Matt Davis

BBC Sport Senior Journalist

Jack Grealish says he “didn’t want the season to end like this” after confirming he has had surgery on a foot stress fracture.

Grealish, who was on a season-long loan at Everton from Manchester City, suffered the injury on 18 January during a 1-0 win over former club Aston Villa.

The 30-year-old midfielder had made 22 appearances in all competitions for Everton this season, scoring twice and providing six assists.

“Didn’t want the season to end like this but that’s football, gutted,” he wrote in a post on Instagram.

“Surgery done and now all focus on getting back fit. I know for sure I will come back fitter, stronger and better than before.”

The injury ends any hopes of Grealish making England’s World Cup squad this summer.

Grealish’s recent form at Everton led to suggestions that he could earn a recall to the England squad and push for a place at the World Cup.

His most recent appearance came under caretaker manager Lee Carsley in October 2024.

Grealish won three Premier League titles, the Champions League and the FA Cup after joining City from Aston Villa for a then British record £100m in 2021.

However, he fell out of favour last season, making only seven league starts for City before being left out of the squad for the Club World Cup in the United States. He since signed for Everton on loan.

“The support I’ve had since coming to this unbelievable club has meant the world to me,” he added.

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Deadly drone attacks on civilians continue in Sudan’s Kordofan, UN says

Fatal drone strikes on civilians persist in Sudan’s Kordofan, as the central region has emerged as the latest front line in Sudan’s nearly three-year conflict, the United Nations has said.

Addressing the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk painted a grim picture of the conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which has plunged the country into widespread bloodshed and humanitarian catastrophe.

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“We can only expect worse to come” unless decisive steps are taken by the international community to stop the fighting, Turk said, emphasising that inaction would lead to even greater horrors.

Turk also highlighted harrowing survivor testimonies from el-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, which fell to RSF forces in October following an 18-month siege. He described accounts of atrocity crimes committed by the paramilitary after it overran the city, including mass killings and other grave violations targeting civilians.

“Responsibility for these atrocity crimes lies squarely with the [RSF] and their allies and supporters,” he said

As Sudan’s devastating civil war expands beyond the western Darfur region into the central Kordofan areas, Turk cautioned that the shift in fighting is likely to bring even more severe violations against civilians, expressing deep concern over the potential for additional grave abuses, specifically highlighting the increasing use of “advanced drone weaponry systems” by both warring parties.

“In the last two weeks, the SAF and allied Joint Forces broke the sieges on Kadugli and Dilling,” Turk said. “But drone strikes by both sides continue, resulting in dozens of civilian deaths and injuries.”

Turk’s office has documented more than 90 civilian deaths and 142 injuries caused by drone strikes carried ⁠out by both the RSF and the armed forces from late January to February 6, he said.

Among those incidents were three strikes on health facilities in South Kordofan that killed 31 people last week, according to the World Health Organization.

On February 7, a drone attack carried out by the RSF hit a vehicle transporting displaced families in central Sudan, killing at least 24 people, including eight children, the Sudan Doctors Network said.

The latest attacks follow a series of drone attacks on humanitarian aid convoys and fuel trucks across North Kordofan.

The UN human rights chief said he has witnessed the destruction caused by RSF attacks on Sudan’s Merowe Dam and its hydroelectric power station.

UN installs relief housing units for displaced families in Gaza

NewsFeed

The United Nations has installed the first batch of relief housing units for displaced Palestinians in Gaza City. Residents say the temporary houses provide better protection than tents, but that the conditions remain far from normal life.