The Regional Junta of the Azores was the governing body created under Decree-Law 458-B/75, to substitute the Civil Governors of the autonomous districts of Ponta Delgada, Angra do Heroísmo and Horta and their individual General Juntas. The Regional Junta was initially proposed by the Group of 11 (Grupo dos Onze, presided by the Civil Governor of the autonomous district of Ponta Delgada, António Borges Coutinho, in January 1975. Ironically, its creation was attributed to the events on 6 June 1975. The Regional Junta of the Azores governed for little more than a year, between 22 August 1975 and 8 September 1976.
History
Until the 19th century, the governing bodies of the Azores and Madeira were independent entities and treated as overseas territories by the national government in Lisbon. After 2 March 1895, the Azores and Madeira began to operate as autonomous territories of Portugal, and was institutionalized in the Portuguese Constitution. The Azores functioned as autonomous districts under the administration of district General Juntas, the upper-tier institution responsible for fiscal policy and with the competencies to manage the regional economy. In practice, though, the Azores was abandoned politically and neglected from development programs, with emigration becoming the only "exit strategy" for local overcapacity and poverty. This autonomy and economic status remained until 1974. Yet, progressively, after 1910, many of these territory's rights and responsibilities were gradually reduced.
Regional government
The Regional Junta functioned as a dependency of the Prime Minister and was composed of a president and six representatives. The Military Governor of the Azores was by default the president of the Regional Junta, with the representatives nominated by the national government. The other members of this organ included representatives for:
Education and scientific investigation, social communication and culture;
Agriculture, fishing and industry;
Transport, commerce, communication and tourism.
The Governing Junta of the Azores was nominated on 22 August 1975, and presided by Altino Amadeu Pinto de Magalhães, who at that time was the Military Governor. Representatives were selected from between political personalities of great importance, from the electoral results of the April 1975 Constituent Assembly, that included:
Assuntos Sociais, Trabalho e Emigração
Coordenação Económica e Finanças
Transportes, Comércio, Comunicações e Turismo
Educação, Investigação Científica, Comunicação Social e Cultura
Administração Local, Equipamento Social e Ambiente
Agricultura, Pescas e Indústria
The Regional Junta was the provisional government in the Azores, which tried to resolve many of urgent problems in the region, in addition to begin the process of administrative and political unification, following 150 years of the effects of the district system. Among some of its relevant tasks, the Regional Junta established a commission that elaborated the judicial statuate that established Azorean autonomy. The multi-party commission elaborated a counter-proposal that, even today, was considered polemic: the political equalization of voting power between islands and decentralization of governmental departments. From this proposal, the redistribution of electoral seats between the nine electoral circles using a mixed system. This integrated model provided for a minimum number of representatives and an additional representative for each 7500 registered voters, or greater than 1000. This allowed each island to have at least two elected representatives and that the island of São Miguel could never have more than 50% of the elected seats. Within each mandate the distribution of seats would be made by the Hondt method, which benefited minorities. The Regional Junta was extinguished with the establishment of the first Regional Government of the Azores, on 9 September 1976, wherein all the competencies, property and responsibilities were transferred to its title.