Deadly Portugal funicular crash likely due to problems with cable, report says

Portugal's Office for Air and Rail Accident Investigations on Saturday released its first investigative report into the crash. (REUTERS)
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Updated 07 September 2025
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Deadly Portugal funicular crash likely due to problems with cable, report says

  • Portugal’s Office for Air and Rail Accident Investigations on Saturday released its first investigative report into the crash

LISBON: Problems with a cable likely caused a Lisbon funicular railway popular with tourists to hurtle down a hill, killing at least 16 people and injuring another 22 when it crashed into a building, according to a preliminary report.
The yellow tram-like carriage, which carries people up and down a steep hillside in the Portuguese capital, hit a building after leaving the track on Wednesday, just meters from its twin at the bottom of a steep hill.
Portugal’s Office for Air and Rail Accident Investigations on Saturday released its first investigative report into the crash.
The report said the cabins had traveled “not more than about six meters” when they “suddenly lost the balancing force provided by the cable connecting them.”
“Cabin No. 2 suddenly reversed, its movement halting approximately 10 meters beyond due to its partial excursion past the end of the track and the burial of the underside of the trambolho (trolley) at the end of the cable trench,” it added.
“Cabin No. 1, at the top of Calcada da Gloria, continued its downward movement, increasing its speed.
The report added: “The cabin’s brakeman immediately applied the pneumatic brake and the hand brake to try to halt the movement. These actions had no effect in stopping or reducing the cabin’s speed, and it continued accelerating down the slope.”
The report added an examination of the wreckage showed “the connecting cable had given way” at the attachment point to the cabin at the top of the hill.
A final report will be published later.


Democrats outpace Republicans in fundraising for key US House races

Updated 6 sec ago
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Democrats outpace Republicans in fundraising for key US House races

  • Democratic strategists say House Republicans are more focused on preserving ‌their small majority than expanding it, prioritizing member retention over candidate recruitment

WASHINGTON: Democratic candidates so far have outraised Republican hopefuls in the most ​competitive districts for the US House of Representatives with crucial mid-term elections nine months away, according to a Reuters analysis of campaign finance reports.
Incumbents in battleground districts, regardless of party, have a clear edge over their challengers, hauling in more than $84 million last year, according to federal reports released in January.
But a Reuters review of disclosures in 30 of the most competitive districts where incumbents are seeking reelection found that Republican challengers have struggled to raise money from donors when compared to Democratic challengers taking on Republican ‌incumbents.
Forty-two Republican candidates ‌in 16 Democratic-held districts last year collected some $20 million, ​about $465,000 each, ‌while ⁠54 ​Democratic candidates ⁠in 14 Republican-held districts hauled in around $50 million, nearly $918,000 each.
Republicans hold a narrow 218-214 majority in the House. The party that controls the White House historically suffers losses in midterm elections, and Democrats would only need to flip a handful of seats in November to gain control of the chamber for the final two years of Donald Trump’s presidency.
Democrats have a fundraising edge in each of the three battleground districts in which there is ⁠no incumbent seeking reelection.
The reports show the financial picture of campaigns ‌in the districts that will likely determine control ‌of the House heading into the primary election season, which ​begins March 3 with votes in Texas, ‌North Carolina and Arkansas.
Democratic strategists say House Republicans are more focused on preserving ‌their small majority than expanding it, prioritizing member retention over candidate recruitment.
“Given the fact that Republicans have claimed for the last year that they’re on offense, one could be shocked to learn how weak their recruitment has been this cycle,” said Katarina Flicker, a spokesperson for the Democratic ‌super PAC House Majority PAC. “In competitive, Democratic-held seats across the country, Republicans are struggling to field credible candidates.”

REPUBLICANS CLAIM ADVANTAGE AMONG INCUMBENTS
Mike ⁠Marinella, a spokesperson ⁠for the National Republican Congressional Committee, said GOP incumbents as a whole “are absolutely dominating Democrats” in fundraising and on issues voters care about.
“It says a lot about the national Democrats’ desperation when they have to cherry-pick scraps of data to convince themselves they’re competing,” Marinella said.
At least 31 House Republicans will vacate their seats early next year after retiring or seeking higher office. The DCCC, House Democrats’ campaign arm, is targeting six of those seats, though only three are expected by political analysts to be competitive.
Control of the House and Senate will be determined by races in nearly three dozen districts and eight key states, respectively. The Republicans have a 53-47 edge in the Senate.
Other ​factors — such as the mid-decade redraw ​of congressional districts in several states and spending by political committees, national parties and super PACs — could play a significant role in the outcome of November’s congressional elections.