Ethical and legal issues Miguel Relvas has been involved in some controversies although he was never formally charged. Known instances include:
Supposed pocketing and abusing of official allowances - As a member of Parliament, Miguel Relvas was one of several Portuguese parliamentarians to have pocketed out-of-town housing allowances despite living in Lisbon, and airfare allowances for trips not made or made in lower classes of service than entitled. As president of the municipal assembly of
Tomar, he made €30,000 in phone calls on his official phone paid for by the municipality.
Supposed cronyism - Upon becoming Minister of Parliamentary Affairs in 2011, Miguel Relvas appointed for himself and his four secretaries of state a total of 56 advisors ("assessores") and support staff—a remarkably high number as the total staff of his Ministry was only 65. The most blatant case was the hiring of his previous chauffeur from Parliament for €2,448 per month (compared with less than €1,000 for most government drivers) despite already having three Ministry chauffeurs at his disposal.
Supposed Influence Peddling - As business man, Miguel Relvas has worked for private companies (see above) seen as close to his
PSD political party and geared towards doing business through high-level political connections in Portugal, Brazil and Africa. The Head the Portuguese Order of the Architects claimed in July 2012 that when Miguel Relvas was secretary of state in 2003 he sought to influence the awarding of a public procurement contract in favour of a company where (future Prime-Minister)
Pedro Passos Coelho worked. Miguel Relvas refuted the allegation and said he was initiating a libel lawsuit but, in October 2012, it emerged that indeed
Pedro Passos Coelho had personally sought to obtain the awarding of such contract for the company he represented—Tecnoforma, with Miguel Relvas' official backing. Moreover, it was also revealed that during Miguel Relvas' term as Secretary of State of Local Administration the large majority of EU financial support for two training programs in Portugal's center region were channelled to Tecnoforma but that the intended results never materialized. The investigation was withdrawn.
Supposed inflation of his academic credentials - Miguel Relvas obtained a
bachelor's degree only in 2007 and under unusual circumstances (see below). It also emerged that when he became a member of the
Portuguese Parliament in 1985, he had officially declared that he was a second-year law student, when in fact he had completed just one first-year course prior to dropping out. Miguel Relvas explained in 2012 that there had been "a lapse" and he had corrected that information latter in the year in a subsequent declaration. In characteristic display of
chutzpah, Miguel Relvas announced right after obtaining his controversial BA degree that he was going to pursue a masters degree in political science. '''Possible association to Portugal's secret services scandal'
- In 2011 a public scandal emerged in Portugal that came to be known as "caso das secretas" involving as main protagonist Jorge Jacob Silva Carvalho a former secret agent at two Portuguese intelligence agencies SIS and SIED (the so called secretas'') and allegedly a Freemason lodge brother of Miguel Relvas (see below). Silva Carvalho resigned as Director of SIED in 2010 and, according to criminal charges against him made by the Portuguese attorney-general, he took with him unauthorized copies of the personal files of many prominent Portuguese figures. For undetermined reasons, Miguel Relvas first sought to limit press exposure of the case (see below) and then to distance himself from it, including by stating under oath that he had only once casually met Silva Carvalho. Media reports confirmed that Silva Carvalho and Relvas had met in person at least 3 times and communicated with each other by SMS. The "caso das secretas" has an internal
PSD party dimension as one of the targeted personalities in Silva Carvalho's stolen personal files was former Portuguese prime-minister
Francisco Pinto Balsemão who, like Relvas, is from the social-democratic party
PSD but is at odds with Relvas over the privatization of a public TV channel that would increase competition on the channel (
SIC) owned by Balsemão media group. Perhaps for these reasons, the
Expresso weekly newspaper, also owned by Balsemão's media group, has joined the daily newspaper
Público in seeking to show Miguel Relvas' association to the "caso das secretas."
Alleged intimidation of the press - Miguel Relvas found himself in a potentially criminal situation when the
Público daily newspaper reported that he attempted to blackmail one of its journalists not to pursue a story on "
caso das secretas" (see above). Allegedly, Miguel Relvas had called and threatened the journalist with revealing compromising details of her private life (a likely possibility in view of the precedent that another Público journalist had his calls intercepted by a Freemason associate of Relvas involved in the "
caso das secretas"). Miguel Relvas admitted calling the journalist but denied making threats. The Press Regulatory Authority ERC launched an official enquiry that found no evidence Miguel Relvas obtained any private information or pressured the journalist (the majority of the members appointed to that enquiry's commission were from Miguel Relvas
PSD party).
Denial of responsibility - To date, Miguel Relvas has never acknowledged wrongdoing or impropriety in any of his political, business, or academic endeavors, even when he was compelled to resign as a result of the irregularities in the attribution of his university degree (see below).
Connections to the Freemasonry Miguel Relvas is said to be a
Freemason and high-ranking member of the Universalis Lisbon masonic lodge that congregates important Portuguese politicians and businessmen. However,
Freemasonry activities in Portugal are largely secretive and Miguel Relvas has not publicly confirmed or denied his membership.
Academic qualifications In July 2012 Miguel Relvas found himself embroiled in public controversy in connection with the degree he obtained from
Lusophone University/
Universidade Lusófona with little coursework. Miguel Relvas enrolled in 1984 at
Universidade Livre, of Lisbon, where he sought to obtain a law-degree but completed just one course (political science and constitutional law) with the lowest passing grade (10 out of 20). In 1985 he switched majors from law to history but did not complete any course and eventually dropped out until 1995 when he enrolled at the international relations program of
Universidade Lusíada (which was the rebaptized
Universidade Livre after its courses lost their accreditation) but again did not to complete any courses. In 2006, following the enactment of the
Bologna Process that allowed awarding of university coursework credits to reflect professional experience under the
ECTS-credits framework, Miguel Relvas managed to obtain from
Universidade Lusófona 160 credit equivalencies out of the 180 necessary to obtain a bachelor's degree in political science and international relations. The credit equivalencies were awarded on the basis of his "rich professional experience" by the Dean of the university himself (Fernando Santos Neves) and were not made explicit in terms of the individual courses exempted. Miguel Relvas was only required to complete 4 courses (which he did with comfortable grades although there seem to be no records of him attending classes or taking tests) and was awarded in 2007 a BA degree with GPA of 11 (out of 20). It remains unclear what role the University's Board (Conselho Científico) played in this process and most of its members at the time have distanced themselves from this decision, which seems to have been personally taken by Dean Santos Neves, who resigned on July 12, 2012 from his Dean position but stayed with
Universidade Lusófona in another capacity. Portugal's Minister of Education
Nuno Crato initially declined to comment on Relvas' degree, but in October 2010 he ordered an auditing of all of Universidade Lusófona's degrees by accreditation, which could result in the revocation of some of those degrees including Relvas'. The audit was supposed to be ready in "60 days" (i.e. before end-2012), but results were held until April 2013, just prior to which Miguel Relvas resigned abruptly and without acknowledging the audit's results as a reason for his resignation. The audit confirmed that many of Relvas' course equivalencies were attributed without plausible experience or even experience of any sort and that he had taken no written exams in the four courses for which he did not obtain equivalencies. The Ministry of Education referred the process to the Portugal's Public Attorney's Office with a view to the revocation of Miguel Relvas' university degree, which took place by court decision in June 2016. ==In popular culture==