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Valencian Nationalist Bloc

The Valencian Nationalist Bloc (Valencian: Bloc Nacionalista Valencià, Bloc or BNV; IPA: [ˈblɔɡ nasionaˈlista valensiˈa]) was a Valencian nationalist party in the Valencian Country, Spain. It was the largest party in the Coalició Compromís until 2021, when it was replaced in a refoundation process by Més–Compromís.[3][4][5]

Valencian Nationalist Bloc
Bloc Nacionalista Valencià
LeaderEnric Morera
FoundedDecember 1999
Dissolved27 June 2021
Merger ofValencian People's Union
Valencian Nationalist Party
Nationalists of Alcoi
Succeeded byMés–Compromís
HeadquartersSant Jacint 28, 46006 Valencia
IdeologyValencian nationalism[1]
Progressivism
Ecologism
Political positionLeft-wing
European affiliationEuropean Free Alliance[2]
European Parliament groupGreens–EFA
ColoursOrange
Website
bloc.compromis.net

History edit

The Bloc was formed in 1998 as a result of the federation of several parties in a coalition formed for the 1995 regional elections. That group of parties was headed by Unitat del Poble Valencià (UPV, founded in 1982) which is the main predecessor of the current Bloc, together with other smaller parties, often locally based, such as the Valencian Nationalist Party (1990) or Alcoi Nationalists (1994).

The Bloc has historically defined itself as a left-wing party. This position shifted to a centrist or center-left position in the late nineties, as part of a strategy to appeal to a broader audience known as tercera via (third way).[6] This strategy proved unsuccessful, especially due to their failure to attract enough of the regionalist vote in the 2003 regional elections.

Then, for the 2007 Valencian regional elections to the Corts Valencianes, the Valencian regional parliament, the Bloc returned to a more left wing agenda as it ran in coalition with EUPV, the Valencian branch of Izquierda Unida, a coalition whose main member is the Communist Party (PCE). This coalition operated under the name of Compromís pel País Valencià. Compromís' results (seven seats) did not achieve their goal of growing and forming a front alongside the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) to oust the Partido Popular from the regional government. Still, they allowed Bloc to enter the autonomous Parliament (two seats) and secured EUPV representation as well (the remaining five seats).

However, a schism occurred soon after within the EUPV between the two more nationalist and social democratic MPs on the one side and the more communist and less nationalist remaining three members on the other. The former MPs were finally expelled from EUPV[7] and went on to create a new party Iniciativa del Poble Valencià (Valencian People Initiative). In turn, they allied themselves with the Bloc, thus effectively gaining a majority for the nationalists in the coalition, while creating a climate of frigid relations between EUPV and Bloc for the remainder of the term, making the renewal of the pact for future polls unlikely in the short term.

For the 2008 General election the Bloc ran in coalition with other left wing, regional and green parties, such as Iniciativa del Poble Valencià. However, despite the fact that the list was headed by a sitting deputy, Isaura Navarro, their vote fell relative to 2004.

For the 2011 Valencian Regional elections, they stood in an electoral alliance with Iniciativa del Poble Valencià and other Green parties in a new coalition called Coalició Compromís. This coalition won a record of six seats in the Valencian parliament, and also won the first seat in history for a Valencian Nationalist force in the Spanish national parliament at the 2011 Spanish General Election.

Representation edit

 
Unitat del Poble Valencià logo.

The Bloc only runs elections held in the Valencian Community. Including its Unitat del Poble Valencià former era, until 2011 it had historically polled at around 4% of the votes in elections for the Valencian regional parliament, with significantly lower figures when running at Spanish general elections in Valencia.

Since 2011, it has been represented by Coalició Compromís, and became the third political force in the Land of Valencia, with 3 of 6 seats of Coalició Compromís in the Valencian parliament, about 385 seats in municipal councils and one seat in the Spanish parliament.

Coalitions edit

 
The people of Compromís, with Joan Baldoví in front, celebrating their first MP in the 2011 Spanish general election.

Bloc has been represented at the Valencian parliament three times, twice by means of a coalition with the Valencian branch of United Left.

Their first participation in this coalition was in 1987, under Bloc's "Unitat del Poble Valencià" (UPV) former name.[8] According to the coalition pact, UPV was allotted two out of the six MPs. Internal tensions within the coalition and, especially, within the UPV, led to its disbanding. These events were the start of the process which led to the demise of UPV and its refoundation as BLOC.

Still, both parties (under new names, Bloc for UPV and Esquerra Unida del País Valencià, EUPV, for United Left) agreed to repeat their coalition for the 2007 regional elections, in order to secure if only joint representation, something which was at stake if they participated by themselves. This renewed coalition, called Compromís pel País Valencià, indeed achieved representation with seven MPs, two of which corresponded to Bloc according to the coalition pact rules. Internal dissent plagued again the coalition, this time predating especially on its EUPV component, which has split since.[9]

In 2011, the BLOC created a coalition Coalició Compromís, running alongside Iniciativa del Poble Valencià (a scission of United Left) and the Green, both partners in the previous coalition. Coalició Compromís got 6 seats in the Valencian Parlement in the 2011 elections, consolidating itself as the third political force in the Land of Valencia.

At municipalities edit

Support for the Bloc is higher at the local level, with 384 councillors and about 20 mayors. Thus, it is the distant third major Valencian political party at the municipal level, far from the major parties, PP and PSPV-PSOE. The party is nearly absent in a number of areas in the Valencian Community (virtually all of those comarcas which are Spanish speaking only) while it is a major political agent in others, namely in its historic stronghold at the contiguous area formed by the northernmost part of Alicante province and the southernmost part of Valencia province.

International representation edit

 
Enric Morera, 2008.

For the 1999 European Parliament election the Bloc allied with the Catalonia-based Convergence and Union and the Majorca Socialist Party with Bloc leader Enric Morera fifth on the list. The coalition won two seats, however Morera briefly became a Euro MP in April 2004[10]

The Bloc joined the Galeusca coalition in the 2004 European Parliament election, with other nationalist parties from the Spanish state such as the Basque Nationalist Party, the Catalan Convergence and Union, the Galician Nationalist Bloc, and the Socialist Party of Majorca. Galeusca got two seats, neither of them for the BNV.

Electoral performance edit

Corts Valencianes edit

Date Votes Seats Status Size
# % ±pp # ±
1999* 102,700 4.5% +1.8  0 N/A 5th
2003 114,011 4.7% +0.2  0 N/A 4th
2007 195,116 8.0% N/A  2 Opposition **
2011 176,213 7.2% +4.9  1 Opposition ***
2015 456,823 18.5% +11.3  7 Government ***

Cortes Generales edit

Valencian Community edit

Congress of Deputies
Date Votes Seats Status Size
# % ±pp # ±
2000* 58,551 2.4% N/A  0 N/A 4th
2004 40,759 1.5% –0.9  0 N/A 4th
2008** 29,760 1.1% –0.4  0 N/A 4th
2011 125,306 4.8% N/A  1 Opposition ***
2015 673,549 25.1% N/A  1 Opposition ****
2016 659,771 25.4% N/A  0 Opposition *****
 
Senate
Date Seats Size
# ±
2000*  0 5th
2004  0 4th
2008**  0 3rd
2011  0 ***
2015  0 ****
2016  1 *****

European Parliament edit

Spain
Date Votes Seats Size
# % ±pp # ±
1999 937,687 4.4% N/A  0 *
2004 798,816 5.2% N/A  0 **
2009 808,246 5.1% N/A  0 ***
2014 302,266 1.9% N/A  1 ****
 
Valencian Community
Date Votes Size
# % ±pp
1999 54,589 2.4% +0.6 5th
2004 19,627 1.1% –1.3 4th
2009 18,458 1.0% –0.1 5th
2014 139,863 8.0% +7.0 *****

References edit

  1. ^ Estatuts del Bloc Nacionalista Valencià, p. 6-7
  2. ^ El Bloc s'incorpora a l'Aliança Lliure Europea notícia a Vilaweb del 12 d'abril de 2013
  3. ^ Alós, Carlos (2021-06-26). "El Bloc aprueba cambiar su denominación por la de Més Compromís por la mínima". Levante-EMV (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-09-06.
  4. ^ "La refundación del Bloc y su apuesta por la izquierda social salen adelante sin entusiasmo". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 2021-06-28. Retrieved 2021-09-06.
  5. ^ Martínez, Laura (2021-03-10). "El Bloc liga su nueva denominación y su futuro político a la marca de Compromís". ElDiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-09-06.
  6. ^ Martín Cubas, Joaquín (2007). La polémica identidad de los valencianos: a propósito de las reformas de los Estatutos de Autonomía. Institut de Ciències Polítiques i Socials. nstitut de Ciències Polítiques i Socials. Barcelona, Catalunya.
  7. ^ "El Bloc rechaza expulsar de Compromís a las diputadas críticas de EU". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). 2007-07-26. Retrieved 2017-12-13.
  8. ^ [1] 2008-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Compromís expulsa a la coordinadora de Esquerra Unida". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). 2008-07-05. Retrieved 2017-12-13.
  10. ^ Spanish MEPs

External links edit

  • Bloc Nacionalista Valencià
  • Bloc Jove
  • Coalició Compromís

valencian, nationalist, bloc, valencian, bloc, nacionalista, valencià, bloc, ˈblɔɡ, nasionaˈlista, valensiˈa, valencian, nationalist, party, valencian, country, spain, largest, party, coalició, compromís, until, 2021, when, replaced, refoundation, process, més. The Valencian Nationalist Bloc Valencian Bloc Nacionalista Valencia Bloc or BNV IPA ˈblɔɡ nasionaˈlista valensiˈa was a Valencian nationalist party in the Valencian Country Spain It was the largest party in the Coalicio Compromis until 2021 when it was replaced in a refoundation process by Mes Compromis 3 4 5 Valencian Nationalist Bloc Bloc Nacionalista ValenciaLeaderEnric MoreraFoundedDecember 1999Dissolved27 June 2021Merger ofValencian People s UnionValencian Nationalist PartyNationalists of AlcoiSucceeded byMes CompromisHeadquartersSant Jacint 28 46006 ValenciaIdeologyValencian nationalism 1 ProgressivismEcologismPolitical positionLeft wingEuropean affiliationEuropean Free Alliance 2 European Parliament groupGreens EFAColoursOrangeWebsitebloc wbr compromis wbr netPolitics of SpainPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 2 Representation 2 1 Coalitions 2 2 At municipalities 3 International representation 4 Electoral performance 4 1 Corts Valencianes 4 2 Cortes Generales 4 2 1 Valencian Community 4 3 European Parliament 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe Bloc was formed in 1998 as a result of the federation of several parties in a coalition formed for the 1995 regional elections That group of parties was headed by Unitat del Poble Valencia UPV founded in 1982 which is the main predecessor of the current Bloc together with other smaller parties often locally based such as the Valencian Nationalist Party 1990 or Alcoi Nationalists 1994 The Bloc has historically defined itself as a left wing party This position shifted to a centrist or center left position in the late nineties as part of a strategy to appeal to a broader audience known as tercera via third way 6 This strategy proved unsuccessful especially due to their failure to attract enough of the regionalist vote in the 2003 regional elections Then for the 2007 Valencian regional elections to the Corts Valencianes the Valencian regional parliament the Bloc returned to a more left wing agenda as it ran in coalition with EUPV the Valencian branch of Izquierda Unida a coalition whose main member is the Communist Party PCE This coalition operated under the name of Compromis pel Pais Valencia Compromis results seven seats did not achieve their goal of growing and forming a front alongside the Spanish Socialist Workers Party PSOE to oust the Partido Popular from the regional government Still they allowed Bloc to enter the autonomous Parliament two seats and secured EUPV representation as well the remaining five seats However a schism occurred soon after within the EUPV between the two more nationalist and social democratic MPs on the one side and the more communist and less nationalist remaining three members on the other The former MPs were finally expelled from EUPV 7 and went on to create a new party Iniciativa del Poble Valencia Valencian People Initiative In turn they allied themselves with the Bloc thus effectively gaining a majority for the nationalists in the coalition while creating a climate of frigid relations between EUPV and Bloc for the remainder of the term making the renewal of the pact for future polls unlikely in the short term For the 2008 General election the Bloc ran in coalition with other left wing regional and green parties such as Iniciativa del Poble Valencia However despite the fact that the list was headed by a sitting deputy Isaura Navarro their vote fell relative to 2004 For the 2011 Valencian Regional elections they stood in an electoral alliance with Iniciativa del Poble Valencia and other Green parties in a new coalition called Coalicio Compromis This coalition won a record of six seats in the Valencian parliament and also won the first seat in history for a Valencian Nationalist force in the Spanish national parliament at the 2011 Spanish General Election Representation edit nbsp Unitat del Poble Valencia logo The Bloc only runs elections held in the Valencian Community Including its Unitat del Poble Valencia former era until 2011 it had historically polled at around 4 of the votes in elections for the Valencian regional parliament with significantly lower figures when running at Spanish general elections in Valencia Since 2011 it has been represented by Coalicio Compromis and became the third political force in the Land of Valencia with 3 of 6 seats of Coalicio Compromis in the Valencian parliament about 385 seats in municipal councils and one seat in the Spanish parliament Coalitions edit nbsp The people of Compromis with Joan Baldovi in front celebrating their first MP in the 2011 Spanish general election Bloc has been represented at the Valencian parliament three times twice by means of a coalition with the Valencian branch of United Left Their first participation in this coalition was in 1987 under Bloc s Unitat del Poble Valencia UPV former name 8 According to the coalition pact UPV was allotted two out of the six MPs Internal tensions within the coalition and especially within the UPV led to its disbanding These events were the start of the process which led to the demise of UPV and its refoundation as BLOC Still both parties under new names Bloc for UPV and Esquerra Unida del Pais Valencia EUPV for United Left agreed to repeat their coalition for the 2007 regional elections in order to secure if only joint representation something which was at stake if they participated by themselves This renewed coalition called Compromis pel Pais Valencia indeed achieved representation with seven MPs two of which corresponded to Bloc according to the coalition pact rules Internal dissent plagued again the coalition this time predating especially on its EUPV component which has split since 9 In 2011 the BLOC created a coalition Coalicio Compromis running alongside Iniciativa del Poble Valencia a scission of United Left and the Green both partners in the previous coalition Coalicio Compromis got 6 seats in the Valencian Parlement in the 2011 elections consolidating itself as the third political force in the Land of Valencia At municipalities edit Support for the Bloc is higher at the local level with 384 councillors and about 20 mayors Thus it is the distant third major Valencian political party at the municipal level far from the major parties PP and PSPV PSOE The party is nearly absent in a number of areas in the Valencian Community virtually all of those comarcas which are Spanish speaking only while it is a major political agent in others namely in its historic stronghold at the contiguous area formed by the northernmost part of Alicante province and the southernmost part of Valencia province International representation edit nbsp Enric Morera 2008 For the 1999 European Parliament election the Bloc allied with the Catalonia based Convergence and Union and the Majorca Socialist Party with Bloc leader Enric Morera fifth on the list The coalition won two seats however Morera briefly became a Euro MP in April 2004 10 The Bloc joined the Galeusca coalition in the 2004 European Parliament election with other nationalist parties from the Spanish state such as the Basque Nationalist Party the Catalan Convergence and Union the Galician Nationalist Bloc and the Socialist Party of Majorca Galeusca got two seats neither of them for the BNV Electoral performance editCorts Valencianes edit Date Votes Seats Status Size pp 1999 102 700 4 5 1 8 0 89 nbsp 0 N A 5th2003 114 011 4 7 0 2 0 89 nbsp 0 N A 4th2007 195 116 8 0 N A 2 99 nbsp 2 Opposition 2011 176 213 7 2 4 9 3 99 nbsp 1 Opposition 2015 456 823 18 5 11 3 10 99 nbsp 7 Government In coalition with The Greens Within Commitment for the Valencian Country Within Compromis Cortes Generales edit Valencian Community edit Congress of Deputies Date Votes Seats Status Size pp 2000 58 551 2 4 N A 0 32 nbsp 0 N A 4th2004 40 759 1 5 0 9 0 32 nbsp 0 N A 4th2008 29 760 1 1 0 4 0 33 nbsp 0 N A 4th2011 125 306 4 8 N A 1 33 nbsp 1 Opposition 2015 673 549 25 1 N A 2 32 nbsp 1 Opposition 2016 659 771 25 4 N A 2 33 nbsp 0 Opposition Senate Date Seats Size 2000 0 12 nbsp 0 5th2004 0 12 nbsp 0 4th2008 0 12 nbsp 0 3rd2011 0 12 nbsp 0 2015 0 12 nbsp 0 2016 1 12 nbsp 1 In coalition with The Greens Valencians for Change In coalition with Initiative Greens Within Compromis Within Es el moment Within A la valenciana European Parliament edit Spain Date Votes Seats Size pp 1999 937 687 4 4 N A 0 64 nbsp 0 2004 798 816 5 2 N A 0 54 nbsp 0 2009 808 246 5 1 N A 0 54 nbsp 0 2014 302 266 1 9 N A 1 54 nbsp 1 Valencian Community Date Votes Size pp1999 54 589 2 4 0 6 5th2004 19 627 1 1 1 3 4th2009 18 458 1 0 0 1 5th2014 139 863 8 0 7 0 Within Convergence and Union Within Galeusca Peoples of Europe Within Coalition for Europe Within European Spring Within Compromis References edit Estatuts del Bloc Nacionalista Valencia p 6 7 El Bloc s incorpora a l Alianca Lliure Europea noticia a Vilaweb del 12 d abril de 2013 Alos Carlos 2021 06 26 El Bloc aprueba cambiar su denominacion por la de Mes Compromis por la minima Levante EMV in Spanish Retrieved 2021 09 06 La refundacion del Bloc y su apuesta por la izquierda social salen adelante sin entusiasmo La Vanguardia in Spanish 2021 06 28 Retrieved 2021 09 06 Martinez Laura 2021 03 10 El Bloc liga su nueva denominacion y su futuro politico a la marca de Compromis ElDiario es in Spanish Retrieved 2021 09 06 Martin Cubas Joaquin 2007 La polemica identidad de los valencianos a proposito de las reformas de los Estatutos de Autonomia Institut de Ciencies Politiques i Socials nstitut de Ciencies Politiques i Socials Barcelona Catalunya El Bloc rechaza expulsar de Compromis a las diputadas criticas de EU EL PAIS in Spanish 2007 07 26 Retrieved 2017 12 13 1 Archived 2008 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Compromis expulsa a la coordinadora de Esquerra Unida EL PAIS in Spanish 2008 07 05 Retrieved 2017 12 13 Spanish MEPsExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to BLOC Bloc Nacionalista Valencia Bloc Jove Coalicio Compromis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Valencian Nationalist Bloc amp oldid 1192336545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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