Party for Democracy (Chile)
Party for Democracy Partido por la Democracia | |
---|---|
Leader | Natalia Piergentili |
Secretary-General | Óscar Santelices |
Chief of Senators | Guido Girardi |
Chief of Deputies | Jorge Tarud |
Founded | 15 December 1987 |
Headquarters | Santo Domingo 1828 Santiago |
Youth wing | Juventud PPD |
Membership (2017) | 30,691 (6th)[1] |
Ideology | Social democracy[citation needed] Progressivism[citation needed] Democratic socialism[citation needed] |
Political position | Centre-left[2][3] |
National affiliation | Progressive Convergence Constituent Unity |
Regional affiliation | COPPPAL |
International affiliation | Progressive Alliance Socialist International[4] |
Colours | Blue, Yellow and Red |
Chamber of Deputies | 8 / 120 |
Senate | 7 / 38 |
Regional Councillors | 30 / 278 |
Mayors | 37 / 345 |
Communal Councillors | 269 / 2,130 |
Website | |
www | |
The Party for Democracy (Spanish: Partido por la Democracia, PPD) is a centre-left political party in Chile. It states to stand in the traditions of liberal progressivism[5][better source needed] . It was founded in December 1987 by Ricardo Lagos, who aimed at forming a legal social-democratic party, as the Socialist Party of Chile (PS) remained illegal at the time. The PPD continued to function after the defeat of Pinochet. Until 1997, double membership of PPD and the PS was allowed.
The party nominated, as part of the Concertación (Coalition of Parties for Democracy), in the 1999/2000 presidential elections, Ricardo Lagos Escobar, the main leader of the party. He would later win 48.0% of the vote in the first round and was ultimately elected with 51.3% in the second round. At the 2001 legislative election, the party ran as part of the Coalition of Parties for Democracy and won 20 out of 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 3 out of 38 elected seats in the Senate. This changed at the 2005 elections to 21 and 3. In the 2009 elections, it won 18 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 4 in the Senate.
Ideology[]
In the first few years of the party, it had difficulty establishing a well-defined ideology, due to the political diversity of its founders, who ranged from communist militants to members of the National Party. Eventually it converged on a combination of social democracy and social liberalism (called progressive liberalism in the early years of the party). Currently, according to its "Declaration of Principles," the PPD describes itself as "a left[ist] political party, democratic, progressive and [in favor of] parity".[5]
In 2007, a large part of the party's social-liberal wing broke off to form ChilePrimero, which would eventually become the Liberal Party.
History[]
The Party for Democracy (PPD) was founded on 15 December 1987 as an instrumental political organization whose primary objective was to finish with the military regime and achieve again democracy in Chile by peaceful, political means, taking advantage of the opportunity to mobilize the Chileans who represented the plebiscite by means of which the dictator Augusto Pinochet sought to extend its mandate.
Its founder, Ricardo Lagos, later President of Chile (2000-2006), said in the ceremony of constitution of the party that the only requirements to integrate the ranks of the PPD were: "to be against the institutional system of the regime of the dictator Pinochet because it does not lead to democracy, and in addition want to defeat it by political means".
People were admitted to the party of various ideologies including socialism, radicalism, social democrats, liberal progressives, left-wing Christians, Mapucists, communists, and young people up to the national student movement of the 1980s opponents of Augusto Pinochet, among them the .
The PPD worked actively to achieve the triumph of the "No" option in the 1988 plebiscite that he brought back the free elections to the country. Participated in the formation of the Concertación, political alliance that has dominated the Chilean government since the end of the military government until 2010, when Sebastián Piñera representing the Coalition for change came to power.
Election results[]
Due to its membership in the Concert of Parties for Democracy, the party has endorsed the candidates of other parties on several occasions, as well as due to the fact that presidential elections in Chile are held using a two-round system.
Presidential elections[]
Date | Candidate | Party | Round I | Round II | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
% | % | ||||
1989 | Patricio Aylwin | PDC | 55.2 | victory | |
1993 | Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle | PDC | 58.0 | victory | |
1999 | Ricardo Lagos | PPD | 48.0 | 51.3 | victory |
2005 | Michelle Bachelet | PS | 46.0 | 53.5 | victory |
2009 | Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle | PDC | 29.6 | 48.4 | defeat |
2013 | Michelle Bachelet | PS | 46.7 | 62.2 | victory |
2017 | Alejandro Guillier | Ind. | 22.7 | 45.4 | defeat |
2021 | Yasna Provoste | PDC |
See also[]
- Category:Party for Democracy (Chile) politicians
References[]
- ^ TOTAL AFILIADOS ACTUALIZADOS POR PARTIDOS POLITICOS - 15 de abril de 2017
- ^ http://historiapolitica.bcn.cl/partidos_politicos/wiki/Partido_Por_la_Democracia History of the Political Parties - National Congress Library of Chile
- ^ Paul W. Posner (2009). "Local Democracy and Popular Participation in Chile and Brazil". In Patricia Silvia; Herwig Cleuren (eds.). Widening Democracy: Citizens and Participatory Schemes in Brazil and Chile. BRILL. p. 59. ISBN 978-90-474-3189-3.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2015-04-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ Jump up to: a b Party for Democracy. Declaration of Principles (1993), p. 6. ""The PPD is a progressive party, where you find the tradition of the democratic socialism and the liberal progressivism, by what you feel to own their historic struggles for democracy and social justice in Chile and in the world. "
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Partido por la Democracia. |
- Political parties established in 1987
- Political parties in Chile
- Full member parties of the Socialist International
- Progressive Alliance
- 1987 establishments in Chile