Juntos Hacemos Historia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Together We Make History
Juntos Hacemos Historia
Party Presidents
Founded23 December 2020; 14 months ago (2020-12-23)[1]
Preceded byJuntos Haremos Historia
IdeologyCardenism
Democratic socialism
Left-wing nationalism
Green politics
Political positionCentre-left to Left-wing
(Big tent)
Member parties
Seats in the Chamber of Deputies
279 / 500
Seats in the Senate
78 / 128

Juntos Hacemos Historia (English: Together We Make History) is a Mexican electoral alliance formed by the National Regeneration Movement (MORENA), the Labor Party (PT) and the Ecologist Green Party of Mexico (PVEM) to compete in the 2021 legislative election.[2][3]

The coalition is the political heir of the Juntos Haremos Historia (Together we will make history) coalition, who competed the 2018 general election, with the difference that it no longer includes the Social Encounter Party (which was dissolved soon after the election) and now comprises PVEM (which was part of the Todos por México coalition in 2018 and joined the government only in 2019).

It competed with the Va por México coalition (formed by the National Action Party, the Institutional Revolutionary Party and the Party of the Democratic Revolution)

The New Alliance Party is part of the alliance in certain states.[4][5]

State elections[]

The coalition is also competing in the 2021 state elections, in which the governors of 15 states will be elected. In each state, the coalition is made up of different parties, incorporating in some cases the Solidarity Encounter Party (PES) and the New Alliance Party (PNA), which are still active on the local level.

State Parties
Baja California Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg
Baja California Sur Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg
Campeche Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg
Chihuahua Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Partido Nueva Alianza (México).svg
Colima Morena logo (Mexico).svg Partido Nueva Alianza (México).svg
Guerrero No coalition
Michoacán Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg
Nayarit Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg Partido Nueva Alianza (México).svg
Nuevo León Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg Partido Nueva Alianza (México).svg
Querétaro No coalition
San Luis Potosí Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg
Sinaloa No coalition
Sonora Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg Partido Nueva Alianza (México).svg
Tlaxcala Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg Partido Nueva Alianza (México).svg
Partido Encuentro Social (México).svg
Zacatecas Morena logo (Mexico).svg Worker's Party logo (Mexico).svg Logo Partido Verde (México).svg Partido Nueva Alianza (México).svg

References[]

  1. ^ Redaccion (23 December 2020). "Morena, PT y PVEM presentan alianza 'Juntos hacemos historia' para elecciones de 2021" [Morena, PT and PVEM present their 'Juntos hacemos historia' for the 2021 election]. El Financiero (in Spanish).
  2. ^ "Morena, PT y PVEM presentan alianza 'Juntos hacemos historia' para elecciones de 2021". El Financiero (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  3. ^ "Morena, PT y PVEM dan a conocer la alianza "Juntos Hacemos Historia" para contender en elecciones de 2021 | Enfoque Noticias". 2020-12-26. Archived from the original on 2020-12-26. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
  4. ^ "Confirma PES alianza con Morena en estados". El Financiero (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-02-22.
  5. ^ "Morena y Nueva Alianza irán juntos en 2021 para mantener la mayoría en Diputados". ADNPolítico (in Spanish). 2020-11-25. Retrieved 2021-08-24.
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