António Cardoso e Cunha explained

António Cardoso e Cunha
Office:Commissioner for Energy, Euratom, Small Businesses, Staff and Translation
Term Start:1989
Term End:1993
President:Jacques Delors
Predecessor:Nicolas Mosar
Successor:Marcelino Oreja
Office1:European Commissioner for Fisheries
Term Start1:5 January 1986
Term End1:1989
President1:Jacques Delors
Predecessor1:Position established
Successor1:Carlo Ripa di Meana
Office2:Minister for Agriculture and Fisheries
Term Start2:1980
Term End2:1981
Primeminister2:
Successor2:Basílio Horta
Birth Date:28 January 1933
Birth Place:Leiria, Portugal
Party:Social Democratic Party
Alma Mater:University of Lisbon

António José Baptista Cardoso e Cunha (28 January 1933 – 24 January 2021) was a Portuguese Social Democratic Party (PSD) politician. He was a government minister in the 1970s and 1980s, and then from 1986 to 1992 he served as Portugal's first European Commissioner.

Career

Born in Leiria, Cardoso e Cunha studied at the University of Lisbon and then worked as chemical engineer and in business administration.

He was elected to the Assembly of the Republic in 1978, and in September 1978 he was appointed as State Secretary for Foreign Trade, a junior ministerial post in the Democratic Alliance government led by Alfredo Nobre da Costa. In November 1978, the new Prime Minister Carlos Mota Pinto appointed Cardoso e Cunha as State Secretary for Industrial Renewal. From 1980 to 1981, Cardoso e Cunha served in the cabinets of Francisco Sá Carneiro and Francisco Pinto Balsemão as Minister for Agriculture and fisheries.

When Portugal joined the European Economic Community in 1986, Cardoso e Cunha was nominated by the government of Aníbal Cavaco Silva to be Portugal's first member of the European Commission. He joined the first Delors Commission as Commissioner for Fisheries, and in 1989 was appointed to the second Delors Commission as Commissioner for Energy, Euratom, small businesses, staff and translation. He served until the Commission's term ended in 1993.

He was then appointed as the first commissioner of Expo '98. He was replaced in 1997 after a change of government, and became president of the state-owned airline TAP Air Portugal until 2004.

In 2006, Cardoso e Cunha was declared bankrupt by the Lisbon Court of Commerce.