André Ventura, known for being a fan and television commentator of football club, Benfica, with a short political career, after a municipal experience, elected as a councillor by the centre-right PSD in Loures, was the last of the members of the Lisbon circle to be elected on election night.

Chega, which defines itself as a conservative, won more than 66,000 votes, 22,000 of which were in the Lisbon district.

The European extreme right is already present in almost all the national parliaments of the EU Member States, now with the exception of Ireland, Luxembourg and Malta.

The parties under the extreme right are very heterogeneous, including populists, nationalists, ultraconservatives and even neo-Nazis, and have grown in the EU countries from the combination of the economic crisis, migrations, discrediting politics and mistrust of the institutions.

Alone or in a coalition, far-right parties have not only entered the vast majority of national parliaments but have also managed to rise to power in nine European countries.

Far-right parties rule alone in Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic and in coalitions in Italy, Austria, Finland, Latvia, Slovakia and Bulgaria.

Moreover, in Denmark, the Danish People's Party provides one-off support for the governing party, and in France, Marine de Pen's party is gaining ground.

The House of Commons in the United Kingdom has no representatives of the extreme right, despite the fact that the UK Independence Party (UKIP) is represented in the House of Lords.

Finland and Italy have already had coalition governments with the far right, but those governments have fallen.