For the local elections of December 2001, he integrated the candidate list headed by Santana Lopes
Partido Social Democrata (PSD - Social Democratic Party) as an independent. He became vice-Mayor of Lisbon in January 2002.
15th Constitutional Government In April 2003 Rodrigues was integrated into the
15th Constitutional Government of Portugal as
Minister of the Public Works, Transportation and Habitation. He spent 15 months in the post, during which many advancements were made, such as the creation of metropolitan authorities of transports, a Spanish-Portuguese agreement on the construction of high-speed rail lines, and legislation for the creation of the societies of urbane rehabilitation. With the inauguration of the
16th Constitutional Government of Portugal in July 2004, he returned to
Lisbon city hall as Mayor, an office he held for eight months. In March 2005, with the fall of the 16th Constitutional Government and the return of Santana Lopes to the municipal government, Carmona Rodrigues took the vice-presidency of the city government over again.
Mayoral election In October 2005, Carmona Rodrigues won the mayoral election, once again becoming Mayor of Lisbon, as an independent candidate supported by the
Partido Social Democrata (PSD - Social Democratic Party). The results in the city's team of
vereadores (municipal government) were: eight to PSD, five to PS, two to the communist coalition, one to CDS-PP and one to the Left Bloc. In 2007, following the fall of the municipal executive, there were midterm elections which occurred on 15 July 2007. He ran as a candidate with an independent movement that he created for that purpose and ended up in second place with 16.7% of the votes (behind
António Costa (PS). This was one of the first important electoral results of independent movements in Portugal municipal elections. This
Lisboa com Carmona movement elected four city councilors. He left active politics in 2009. ==Family==