fbpx
Wikipedia

São Paulo Forum

São Paulo Forum (FSP), also known as the Foro de São Paulo, is a conference of left to far-left[1][better source needed][2][better source needed][3] political parties and other organizations from the Americas, primarily Latin America and the Caribbean. It was launched by the Workers' Party (Portuguese: Partido dos Trabalhadores – PT) of Brazil in 1990 in the city of São Paulo.

São Paulo Forum
Foro de São Paulo
"For a new integration of Latin America"
AbbreviationFSP
Formation1990 (first conference)
TypePolitical international
PurposeSouth and Central American network of left-wing to far-left political parties and organisations
HeadquartersSão Paulo, Brazil
Region served
The Americas
Websiteforodesaopaulo.org

The Forum of São Paulo was constituted in 1990, when the Brazilian Workers' Party approached other parties of Latin America and the Caribbean to debate the new international scenario after the fall of the Berlin Wall and rising adoption of some economic liberalization policies implemented at the time by right-leaning governments in the region. The stated main objective of the conference was to argue for alternatives to neoliberalism.[4]

The first meeting held in São Paulo in July 1990 was attended by members of 48 parties and organizations from Latin American and the Caribbean. The original name given to the meeting was Meeting of Left and Anti-imperialist Parties and Organizations of Latin America (Portuguese: Encontro de Partidos e Organizações de Esquerda e Anti-imperialistas da América Latina). Since the 1991 meeting in Mexico City, it started being alternately called Foro de São Paulo in reference to the location of the first meeting.[5] Subsequent meetings have been hosted by many of the parties throughout the region.

Political stance edit

According to FSP, more than 100 parties and political organizations participate in its conferences today. Their political positions vary across a wide spectrum, which includes: social-democratic parties, left-wing grassroots labor and social movements inspired by the Catholic Church, ethnic and environmentalist groups, anti-imperialist and nationalist organizations, communist parties, and armed guerrilla forces. The latter, however, is true only so far as one is willing to think of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia as an actual member of the FSP, when actually the FARC, although never formally banned from the Forum, have been barred from participating in its meetings as early as 2005, when they were refused admittance to that year's meeting of the FSP in São Paulo.[6]

These groups differ on a range of topics which go from the use of armed force in revolutions to the support of representative democracy. The Communist Party of Cuba, for example, has adopted a single-party system for decades, while Brazil's Workers' Party (PT) supports and participates in a multi-party system of representative democracy. Some parties such as Chile's Social Convergence advocate for radical democracy, participatory democracy, and workplace democracy instead of representative democracy as a primary value. These differences grant special relevance to FSP's final declarations, released at the end of each conference, which state the collective position of its members.

Ever since FSP's first meeting (1990), the Declaration which was approved expressed the participants' "willingness to renew leftist and socialist thought, to reaffirm its emancipating character, to correct mistaken conceptions, and to overcome all expressions of bureaucratism and all absence of true social and massive democracy."

The first Declaration manifests "an active compromise with the validity of human rights, of democracy and of popular sovereignty as strategic values, which place the constant challenge of leftist, socialist and progressive forces renewing their thoughts and actions."

At the second conference (Mexico, 1991), FSP expanded its objectives to add the proposal of working toward Latin American integration, an interchange of experiences, the discussion of the political left's differences and searching for consensus in action. The following conferences reinstate the participants' willingness to exchange experiences and develop a dialogue, while at the regional and continental level FSP's influence grows, with some of its members achieving electoral success and their candidates reaching the presidency of many countries.

During the early 1990s, the FSP was seen by some as expressing the emergence of a new Latin American leftist paradigm: non-authoritarian, de-militarized and grassroots-friendly.[7] As others have noted, however, there is a marked contradiction between the fiery and quasi-revolutionary rhetoric about "socialism of the 21st century" indulged in sometimes by many FSP's leaders, and the plain fact that the positions of power held by such leaders depend, on most cases, on their holding positions in governments which have emerged through the electoral road.[8] In a statement made in 2008 in Lima, before a gathering of Peruvian businessmen, however, Brazil's President Lula would declare, approvingly, that the FSP had "educated" the Left in the understanding of the existence of possibilities of running for elections and gaining power through the democratic way – a declaration that prompted a comment from AFP, reproduced at the Rede Globo site, to the effect that the hallmark of FSP's activities had been its "very moderate" character.[9]

Nevertheless, almost since its inception, the FSP has been the target of criticism from the right in the United States and Latin America, especially in Brazil, describing it as an organization promoting terrorism and/or a revival of communism,[10] something regarded even by mainstream conservatives as unfounded and "exaggerated to say the least".[11] The allegedly subversive character of the Foro's activities, however, was revived during the 2010 Brazilian presidential election campaign, as the vice-presidential candidate in the José Serra ticket, Antônio Pedro de Siqueira Indio da Costa, denounced repeatedly the supposed connection, by way of the Foro, between the Brazilian Workers' Party and the FARC.[12] Alternatively, the Foro is seen also as more than a simple regular gathering, in that policies that had been advised by it came to be actively implemented later – such as the strengthening of Mercosur, or the setting up of Unasur – but that the Foro was better understood as a "brainstorming organization", a "think-tank for politicians".[13] [14]

During the fifth meeting (Montevideo, 1995) a dispute arose about the attendance of the Movimiento Bolivia Libre, which was charged, in a motion presented by ten parties, led by Argentina's Partido Obrero, of support to the repressive actions of the neoliberal government of Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada in Bolivia. The refusal of the motion by the Foro's plenum led to the permanent withdrawal of Partido Obrero from the meeting. Partido Obrero had already declared itself in opposition to the Foro's positions, having previously made public a note in which it protested against the change in the official name of the organization, as "offering evidence of putting, in the place of actual making of common policies, a kind of purely academic workshop, [a sure sign] of conscious depoliticization leading eventually to the cover-up of rightist policies".[5]

During the 14th meeting in El Salvador, it was resolved that the Foro should organize a number of subordinate organizations and facilities: an electronic bulletin on the Net, a politic-cultural festival, an electoral observatory and a cadre school.[15]

In the final declaration of the FSP's 15th meeting in Montevideo, there is a reinstatement and updating of the Foro's goals: to aid "the progressive forces in the continent who are in power and strive in various ways to build projects which – according to each country's particular characteristics – allow them to face the main problems generated by neoliberalism"[16] – something which added to the statement made at the same time by Belela Herrera, International Relations chargé of the Uruguayan Broad Front, that issues like ecology, exclusion, racism and xenophobia had added themselves inseparably to the Left's traditional agenda.[17] The meeting also debated the ongoing Colombian armed conflict, which prompted a declaration by the International Relations Secretary of the Brazilian Workers' Party, Valter Pomar, who exposed what in his view was the Foro's general stance towards the current Colombian situation: "In Colombia we have a military confrontation that has been going on for decades, having as its players the [Colombian] State, as well as the paramilitary and insurgent forces. The Foro is interested in achieving peace and in having a negotiated process towards reaching this goal".[18]

In the 16th meeting, which opened on 20 August 2009 in Mexico City, the Foro was expected to concentrate discussion on the 2009 Honduran constitutional crisis as well as engaging in efforts to the restoration of the deposed Honduran president Manuel Zelaya.[19] The Vice president of the Mexican Senate, Yeidckol Polevnsky, has invited the Honduran MP Silvia Ayala, as a member of the Democratic Unification Party and leader of the manifestations in support of Zelaya held in San Pedro Sula, to attend the meeting[20] – something that attracted the fury of the pro-government Honduran press.[21]

The ongoing meeting in Mexico will also be the first to organize a parallel youth meeting, where member parties will discuss the impact of the global economic crisis on Latin American youth and the responses that could be offered to it.[22]

In January 2010, the European Left – the broad front of European national Left parties formed in view of a common stand in European politics – at the opening of its Third Congress, expressed its interest in strengthening ties with the FSP.[23]

In September 2021, the Democratic Socialists of America applied for membership.[24]

Participants edit

 
Map showing Foro de São Paulo members as of 2023:
  Member in government
  Member not in government

In government edit

The following countries are currently being governed by leaders and member parties of the Foro de São Paulo:

Aligned governments edit

The following centre-left and left-wing parties or coalitions, who are currently in government, even though not members of the forum, maintain good relations and have been integrated with the members of the FSP:

As main opposition edit

The following countries had members of the Foro de São Paulo as the main opposition parties in their parliaments and/or were the second electoral force in the past elections:

Formerly ruling party or coalition partners edit

Official members edit

Country Name Government
  Argentina Communist Party of Argentina In opposition
Communist Party of Argentina (Extraordinary Congress) In opposition
Revolutionary Communist Party In opposition
Evita Movement In opposition
Broad Front In opposition
Frente Transversal Nacional y Popular In opposition
Intransigent Party In opposition
Solidary Party In opposition
Socialist Party In opposition
Freemen of the South Movement Extra-parliamentary opposition
Humanist Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Workers' Revolutionary Party-Posadista Extra-parliamentary opposition
Union of Militants for Socialism Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Aruba Democratic Network Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Barbados People's Empowerment Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Belize Belize People's Front Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Bolivia Movement for Socialism In government
  Brazil Workers' Party In government
Communist Party of Brazil In government
Democratic Labour Party Parliamentary support
Brazilian Communist Party Extra-parliamentary support
  Chile Communist Party of Chile In government
Socialist Party of Chile In government
Commons In government
Libertarian Left In government
Humanist Party In government
Revolutionary Left Movement Extra-parliamentary opposition
Allendist Socialism Movement Extra-parliamentary support
  Colombia Alternative Democratic Pole In government
Unión Patriótica In government
Indigenous and Social Alternative Movement (MAIS) In government
Commons In government
Democratic Unity In government
Green Alliance Parliamentary support
Colombian Communist Party In government
Patriotic March In government
Presentes por el Socialismo Extra-parliamentary support
  Costa Rica Broad Front In opposition
People's Vanguard Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Cuba Communist Party of Cuba One-party state
  Curaçao Sovereign People Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Dominican Republic Modern Revolutionary Party In government
Alliance for Democracy In government
Country Alliance In opposition
Dominican Liberation Party In opposition
Dominican Revolutionary Party In opposition
People's Force In opposition
Communist Labor Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Fatherland for All Movement Extra-parliamentary opposition
Revolution Force Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
United Left Movement Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Ecuador Revolución Ciudadana In opposition
Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement – New Country In opposition
Socialist Party – Broad Front of Ecuador In opposition
Ecuadorian Communist Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Communist Party of Ecuador Extra-parliamentary opposition
Marxist–Leninist Communist Party of Ecuador Extra-parliamentary opposition
  El Salvador Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front In opposition
  Guatemala Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity Extra-parliamentary support[27]
Winaq In government[28]
Tejiendo Pueblo Extra-parliamentary support
  Haiti Struggling People's Organization In opposition
  Honduras Liberty and Refoundation In government
  Mexico National Regeneration Movement In government
Labor Party In government
Party of the Democratic Revolution In opposition
  Nicaragua Sandinista National Liberation Front In government
  Panama Democratic Revolutionary Party In government
  Paraguay Guasú Front In opposition
Party for a Country of Solidarity In opposition
Citizen Participation Party In opposition
Tekojoja People's Party In opposition
Popular Socialist Convergence Party In opposition
Revolutionary Febrerista Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Paraguayan Communist Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Popular Patriotic Movement Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Party of the Movement Towards Socialism Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Peru Free Peru In opposition
Peruvian Communist Party In opposition
Peruvian Humanist Party In opposition
Communist Party of Peru – Red Fatherland Extra-parliamentary opposition
Socialist Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Peruvian Nationalist Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
Land and Liberty Extra-parliamentary opposition
United People's Party Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Puerto Rico Communist Party of Puerto Rico Extra-parliamentary opposition
Hostosian National Independence Movement Extra-parliamentary opposition
Revolutionary Nationalist Movement Extra-parliamentary opposition
Socialist Front Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Saint Lucia Saint Lucia Labour Party In government
  Trinidad and Tobago Movement for Social Justice Extra-parliamentary opposition
  Uruguay Broad Front In opposition
March 26 Movement Extra-parliamentary opposition
Uruguay Assembly In opposition
Movement of Popular Participation In opposition
Communist Party of Uruguay In opposition
Artiguist Tendency In opposition
Revolutionary Workers' Party In opposition
People's Victory Party In opposition
Socialist Workers Party In opposition
Socialist Party of Uruguay In opposition
  Venezuela United Socialist Party of Venezuela In government
Fatherland for All In government
Movement We Are Venezuela In government
Communist Party of Venezuela In opposition

Former members edit

Country Name Notes
  Brazil Popular Socialist Party Withdrew from the Foro in 2004 due to the Foro's support of the Fidel Castro and Hugo Chávez governments in Cuba and Venezuela.[29]
Brazilian Socialist Party Withdrew from the Foro in 2019 due to the Foro's support of the Nicolás Maduro government in Venezuela.[30]
  Ecuador PAIS Alliance Left the Foro in 2021 following the renaming as the MOVER Movement.

Meetings and organization edit

Meetings were held in São Paulo (1990), Mexico City (1991), Managua (1992), Havana (1993), Montevideo (1995), San Salvador (1996), Porto Alegre (1997), Mexico City (1998), Managua (2000), Havana (2001), Antigua Guatemala (2002), Quito (2003), São Paulo (2005), San Salvador (2007), Montevideo (2008), Mexico City (2009), Buenos Aires (2010), Managua (2011), Caracas (2012), São Paulo (2013), La Paz (2014), Mexico City (2015), San Salvador (2016), Managua (2017), Havana (2018), Caracas (2019) and Brasília (2023).

The Foro's chief authority is its meeting itself. Between meetings, the Foro is represented by an Executive Group (Grupo de Trabalho) composed of a sample of its overall membership that usually meets thrice a year as well as by an Executive Secretariat (Secretariado Executivo).[31]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gonzalez, Mike. "The Marxist Influence of the São Paulo Forum in Latin America". The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  2. ^ "The Marxist Hurricane in South America". The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  3. ^ Fantini, Ellen (2023-02-05). "The São Paulo Forum and the Future of Latin America: An Interview with Alejandro Peña Esclusa". europeanconservative.com. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  4. ^ Cf. Carlos Baraibar & José Bayardi: "Foro de San Pablo ¿qué es y cuál es su historia?", 23 August 2000, . Archived from the original on 2016-03-09. Retrieved 2014-02-13.
  5. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 20 November 2007. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  6. ^ Cf. Folha de S.Paulo May 31, 2005
  7. ^ See, for instance, William I. Robinson,"The São Paulo Forum: is there a new Latin American left?", Monthly Review, December 1992, available at [1]
  8. ^ cf. Inés Hayes, "XIV São Paulo Forum: Left parties debate the current historic conjuncture", available at [2]
  9. ^ "G1 > Mundo – NOTÍCIAS – Foro de São Paulo ajudou a democratizar esquerda latino-americana, diz Lula". Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  10. ^ Such as the material found at [3] 2011-05-11 at the Wayback Machine organized by Unoamerica, a coalition of conservative Latin American political groups; see also Luísa Roxo Barja, "A face obscura da política: governo e eleições no Mídia Sem Máscara", Aurora-Revista de Arte, Mídia e Política, no. 4(2009), available at [4], retrieved July 20, 2014; and Angelo Kirst Adami, "Hugo Chávez, o ditador : o discurso da revista Veja sobre o presidente da Venezuela", B.Sc Monography IN Communications/Jornalism, UFRGS, 2008, available at [5], retrieved July 20, 2014
  11. ^ Cf. Kenneth Maxwell, "Brazil: Lula's Prospects", The New York Review of Books, December 5, 2002, available at [6]
  12. ^ cf., e.g., Venezuela's El Universal, August the 17th. 2010: "FARC causan polémica en debate de candidatos brasileños".
  13. ^ Bruno de Paula Castanho e Silva, "THE SÃO PAULO FORUM AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF LATIN AMERICAN REGIONAL INTEGRATION".Paper presented at the XXIInd World Congress of Political Science, Madrid, 2012. Available at [7].Retrieved July 20, 2014
  14. ^ Oliveira, A. Marques, T. Carvalho, F. “REDES PARTIDÁRIAS TRANSNACIONAIS” NA AMÉRICA LATINA? COERÊNCIA IDEOLÓGICA ENTRE PARTIDOS E CANDIDATURAS PRESIDENCIAIS (2000-2015) “Transnational Party Networks” in Latin America? Ideological coherence between parties and presidential candidates (2000-2015), Mural Internacional, Rio de Janeiro, Vol.13, e66621, 2022. DOI: 10.12957/rmi.2022.66621| e-ISSN: 2177-7314. Available at [8]. Retrieved Dec 23, 2022
  15. ^ "Cf. Brazilian Workers' Party Site".
  16. ^ "Cf. Brazilian Workers' Party site".
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  18. ^ "Foro de San Pablo abre debates: entre las viejas banderas y nuevos desafíos". LARED21. 23 May 2008. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  19. ^ "Frum de So Paulo discutir sobre Honduras". Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  20. ^ Cf. Prensa Latina
  21. ^ . Diario La Tribuna. Archived from the original on 2 December 2010. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  22. ^ DEMOS, Desarrollo de Medios, S.A. de C.V. (20 August 2009). "La Jornada: Hoy, reunión regional de izquierdas". Retrieved 16 December 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ cf. . Archived from the original on 2011-06-13. Retrieved 2010-04-02. 13 January 2010
  24. ^ Kerson, Roger (21 September 2021). "Democratic Socialists of America Make a Strategy for the Biden Era". In These Times.
  25. ^ "FELICITACIONES AL 30 ANIVERSÁRIO FUNDACIÓN DEL FORO, de PRM (Republica Dominicana)" (PDF). forodesaopaulo.org.
  26. ^ "Primer ministro sanvicentino destaca importancia de Foro de Sao Paulo". Trabajadores. 13 July 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
  27. ^ "Alianza a la vista: "definir las candidaturas es lo más difícil, todos quieren su espacio"". 21 September 2022.
  28. ^ "Alianza a la vista: "definir las candidaturas es lo más difícil, todos quieren su espacio"". 21 September 2022.
  29. ^ "Blog do PPS: Algumas verdades sobre o "Foro de São Paulo", o PT e os tiranetes que enxovalham a esquerda democrática". Blog do PPS. 20 October 2014. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  30. ^ Morais, Esmael (2019-08-30). "PSB aprova saída de Foro de São Paulo e critica Maduro". Blog do Esmael (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2022-03-28.
  31. ^ "Cf. Brazilian Workers' Party site".

External links edit

  • Website of Foro de São Paulo

são, paulo, forum, also, known, foro, são, paulo, conference, left, left, better, source, needed, better, source, needed, political, parties, other, organizations, from, americas, primarily, latin, america, caribbean, launched, workers, party, portuguese, part. Sao Paulo Forum FSP also known as the Foro de Sao Paulo is a conference of left to far left 1 better source needed 2 better source needed 3 political parties and other organizations from the Americas primarily Latin America and the Caribbean It was launched by the Workers Party Portuguese Partido dos Trabalhadores PT of Brazil in 1990 in the city of Sao Paulo Sao Paulo ForumForo de Sao Paulo For a new integration of Latin America AbbreviationFSPFormation1990 first conference TypePolitical internationalPurposeSouth and Central American network of left wing to far left political parties and organisationsHeadquartersSao Paulo BrazilRegion servedThe AmericasWebsiteforodesaopaulo wbr org The Forum of Sao Paulo was constituted in 1990 when the Brazilian Workers Party approached other parties of Latin America and the Caribbean to debate the new international scenario after the fall of the Berlin Wall and rising adoption of some economic liberalization policies implemented at the time by right leaning governments in the region The stated main objective of the conference was to argue for alternatives to neoliberalism 4 The first meeting held in Sao Paulo in July 1990 was attended by members of 48 parties and organizations from Latin American and the Caribbean The original name given to the meeting was Meeting of Left and Anti imperialist Parties and Organizations of Latin America Portuguese Encontro de Partidos e Organizacoes de Esquerda e Anti imperialistas da America Latina Since the 1991 meeting in Mexico City it started being alternately called Foro de Sao Paulo in reference to the location of the first meeting 5 Subsequent meetings have been hosted by many of the parties throughout the region Contents 1 Political stance 2 Participants 2 1 In government 2 2 Aligned governments 2 3 As main opposition 2 4 Formerly ruling party or coalition partners 2 5 Official members 2 6 Former members 3 Meetings and organization 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksPolitical stance editAccording to FSP more than 100 parties and political organizations participate in its conferences today Their political positions vary across a wide spectrum which includes social democratic parties left wing grassroots labor and social movements inspired by the Catholic Church ethnic and environmentalist groups anti imperialist and nationalist organizations communist parties and armed guerrilla forces The latter however is true only so far as one is willing to think of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia as an actual member of the FSP when actually the FARC although never formally banned from the Forum have been barred from participating in its meetings as early as 2005 when they were refused admittance to that year s meeting of the FSP in Sao Paulo 6 These groups differ on a range of topics which go from the use of armed force in revolutions to the support of representative democracy The Communist Party of Cuba for example has adopted a single party system for decades while Brazil s Workers Party PT supports and participates in a multi party system of representative democracy Some parties such as Chile s Social Convergence advocate for radical democracy participatory democracy and workplace democracy instead of representative democracy as a primary value These differences grant special relevance to FSP s final declarations released at the end of each conference which state the collective position of its members Ever since FSP s first meeting 1990 the Declaration which was approved expressed the participants willingness to renew leftist and socialist thought to reaffirm its emancipating character to correct mistaken conceptions and to overcome all expressions of bureaucratism and all absence of true social and massive democracy The first Declaration manifests an active compromise with the validity of human rights of democracy and of popular sovereignty as strategic values which place the constant challenge of leftist socialist and progressive forces renewing their thoughts and actions At the second conference Mexico 1991 FSP expanded its objectives to add the proposal of working toward Latin American integration an interchange of experiences the discussion of the political left s differences and searching for consensus in action The following conferences reinstate the participants willingness to exchange experiences and develop a dialogue while at the regional and continental level FSP s influence grows with some of its members achieving electoral success and their candidates reaching the presidency of many countries During the early 1990s the FSP was seen by some as expressing the emergence of a new Latin American leftist paradigm non authoritarian de militarized and grassroots friendly 7 As others have noted however there is a marked contradiction between the fiery and quasi revolutionary rhetoric about socialism of the 21st century indulged in sometimes by many FSP s leaders and the plain fact that the positions of power held by such leaders depend on most cases on their holding positions in governments which have emerged through the electoral road 8 In a statement made in 2008 in Lima before a gathering of Peruvian businessmen however Brazil s President Lula would declare approvingly that the FSP had educated the Left in the understanding of the existence of possibilities of running for elections and gaining power through the democratic way a declaration that prompted a comment from AFP reproduced at the Rede Globo site to the effect that the hallmark of FSP s activities had been its very moderate character 9 Nevertheless almost since its inception the FSP has been the target of criticism from the right in the United States and Latin America especially in Brazil describing it as an organization promoting terrorism and or a revival of communism 10 something regarded even by mainstream conservatives as unfounded and exaggerated to say the least 11 The allegedly subversive character of the Foro s activities however was revived during the 2010 Brazilian presidential election campaign as the vice presidential candidate in the Jose Serra ticket Antonio Pedro de Siqueira Indio da Costa denounced repeatedly the supposed connection by way of the Foro between the Brazilian Workers Party and the FARC 12 Alternatively the Foro is seen also as more than a simple regular gathering in that policies that had been advised by it came to be actively implemented later such as the strengthening of Mercosur or the setting up of Unasur but that the Foro was better understood as a brainstorming organization a think tank for politicians 13 14 During the fifth meeting Montevideo 1995 a dispute arose about the attendance of the Movimiento Bolivia Libre which was charged in a motion presented by ten parties led by Argentina s Partido Obrero of support to the repressive actions of the neoliberal government of Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada in Bolivia The refusal of the motion by the Foro s plenum led to the permanent withdrawal of Partido Obrero from the meeting Partido Obrero had already declared itself in opposition to the Foro s positions having previously made public a note in which it protested against the change in the official name of the organization as offering evidence of putting in the place of actual making of common policies a kind of purely academic workshop a sure sign of conscious depoliticization leading eventually to the cover up of rightist policies 5 During the 14th meeting in El Salvador it was resolved that the Foro should organize a number of subordinate organizations and facilities an electronic bulletin on the Net a politic cultural festival an electoral observatory and a cadre school 15 In the final declaration of the FSP s 15th meeting in Montevideo there is a reinstatement and updating of the Foro s goals to aid the progressive forces in the continent who are in power and strive in various ways to build projects which according to each country s particular characteristics allow them to face the main problems generated by neoliberalism 16 something which added to the statement made at the same time by Belela Herrera International Relations charge of the Uruguayan Broad Front that issues like ecology exclusion racism and xenophobia had added themselves inseparably to the Left s traditional agenda 17 The meeting also debated the ongoing Colombian armed conflict which prompted a declaration by the International Relations Secretary of the Brazilian Workers Party Valter Pomar who exposed what in his view was the Foro s general stance towards the current Colombian situation In Colombia we have a military confrontation that has been going on for decades having as its players the Colombian State as well as the paramilitary and insurgent forces The Foro is interested in achieving peace and in having a negotiated process towards reaching this goal 18 In the 16th meeting which opened on 20 August 2009 in Mexico City the Foro was expected to concentrate discussion on the 2009 Honduran constitutional crisis as well as engaging in efforts to the restoration of the deposed Honduran president Manuel Zelaya 19 The Vice president of the Mexican Senate Yeidckol Polevnsky has invited the Honduran MP Silvia Ayala as a member of the Democratic Unification Party and leader of the manifestations in support of Zelaya held in San Pedro Sula to attend the meeting 20 something that attracted the fury of the pro government Honduran press 21 The ongoing meeting in Mexico will also be the first to organize a parallel youth meeting where member parties will discuss the impact of the global economic crisis on Latin American youth and the responses that could be offered to it 22 In January 2010 the European Left the broad front of European national Left parties formed in view of a common stand in European politics at the opening of its Third Congress expressed its interest in strengthening ties with the FSP 23 In September 2021 the Democratic Socialists of America applied for membership 24 Participants edit nbsp Map showing Foro de Sao Paulo members as of 2023 Member in government Member not in government In government edit The following countries are currently being governed by leaders and member parties of the Foro de Sao Paulo nbsp Bolivia Luis Arce Movement for Socialism 2020 present nbsp Brazil Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Workers Party Brazil of Hope 2023 present nbsp Chile Gabriel Boric Apruebo Dignidad 2022 present nbsp Colombia Gustavo Petro Historic Pact for Colombia 2022 present nbsp Cuba Miguel Diaz Canel Communist Party of Cuba 2018 present nbsp Dominican Republic Luis Abinader Modern Revolutionary Party 2020 present 25 nbsp Honduras Xiomara Castro Liberty and Refoundation 2022 present nbsp Mexico Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador Morena 2018 present nbsp Nicaragua Daniel Ortega Sandinista National Liberation Front 2007 present nbsp Panama Laurentino Cortizo Democratic Revolutionary Party 2019 present nbsp Saint Lucia Philip J Pierre Saint Lucia Labour Party 2021 present nbsp Venezuela Nicolas Maduro United Socialist Party of Venezuela 2013 present Aligned governments edit The following centre left and left wing parties or coalitions who are currently in government even though not members of the forum maintain good relations and have been integrated with the members of the FSP nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Unity Labour Party 2001 present 26 nbsp Spain United Left 2020 present As main opposition edit The following countries had members of the Foro de Sao Paulo as the main opposition parties in their parliaments and or were the second electoral force in the past elections nbsp Dominican Republic Dominican Liberation Party nbsp Uruguay Broad Front nbsp Argentina Justicialist Party Union for the Homeland Formerly ruling party or coalition partners edit nbsp Argentina 2003 2015 Front for Victory coalition with participation of the left wing faction of the Justicialist Party nbsp Argentina 2019 2023 Alberto Fernandez Justicialist Party Frente de Todos nbsp Aruba 2017 2021 Democratic Network coalition with participation of the People s Electoral Movement and Proud and Respected People nbsp Brazil 2003 2016 Workers Party 2010 2016 as part of the coalition With the Strength of the People nbsp Brazil 2007 2016 Democratic Labour Party as a junior government partner 2010 2016 as part of the coalition With the Strength of the People nbsp Chile 2014 2018 New Majority coalition with participation of the Socialist Party Citizen Left and Communist Party nbsp Curacao 2010 2016 Sovereign People coalition with participation of the Movement for the Future of Curacao and Partido MAN nbsp Dominican Republic 2004 2020 Dominican Liberation Party nbsp Ecuador 2007 2021 PAIS Alliance nbsp El Salvador 2009 2019 Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front nbsp Paraguay 2008 2012 Party for a Country of Solidarity and Revolutionary Febrerista Party in coalitions Patriotic Alliance for Change 2008 2010 and Guasu Front 2010 2012 nbsp Peru 2011 2016 Peruvian Nationalist Party Peruvian Communist Party and Socialist Party in the coalition Peru Wins nbsp Peru 2021 2022 Free Peru nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 2010 2012 Movement for Social Justice coalition with participation of the United National Congress Congress of the People Tobago Organisation of the People and National Joint Action Committee nbsp Uruguay 2005 2020 Broad Front Official members edit Country Name Government nbsp Argentina Communist Party of Argentina In opposition Communist Party of Argentina Extraordinary Congress In opposition Revolutionary Communist Party In opposition Evita Movement In opposition Broad Front In opposition Frente Transversal Nacional y Popular In opposition Intransigent Party In opposition Solidary Party In opposition Socialist Party In opposition Freemen of the South Movement Extra parliamentary opposition Humanist Party Extra parliamentary opposition Workers Revolutionary Party Posadista Extra parliamentary opposition Union of Militants for Socialism Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Aruba Democratic Network Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Barbados People s Empowerment Party Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Belize Belize People s Front Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Bolivia Movement for Socialism In government nbsp Brazil Workers Party In government Communist Party of Brazil In government Democratic Labour Party Parliamentary support Brazilian Communist Party Extra parliamentary support nbsp Chile Communist Party of Chile In government Socialist Party of Chile In government Commons In government Libertarian Left In government Humanist Party In government Revolutionary Left Movement Extra parliamentary opposition Allendist Socialism Movement Extra parliamentary support nbsp Colombia Alternative Democratic Pole In government Union Patriotica In government Indigenous and Social Alternative Movement MAIS In government Commons In government Democratic Unity In government Green Alliance Parliamentary support Colombian Communist Party In government Patriotic March In government Presentes por el Socialismo Extra parliamentary support nbsp Costa Rica Broad Front In opposition People s Vanguard Party Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Cuba Communist Party of Cuba One party state nbsp Curacao Sovereign People Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Dominican Republic Modern Revolutionary Party In government Alliance for Democracy In government Country Alliance In opposition Dominican Liberation Party In opposition Dominican Revolutionary Party In opposition People s Force In opposition Communist Labor Party Extra parliamentary opposition Fatherland for All Movement Extra parliamentary opposition Revolution Force Party Extra parliamentary opposition United Left Movement Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Ecuador Revolucion Ciudadana In opposition Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement New Country In opposition Socialist Party Broad Front of Ecuador In opposition Ecuadorian Communist Party Extra parliamentary opposition Communist Party of Ecuador Extra parliamentary opposition Marxist Leninist Communist Party of Ecuador Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp El Salvador Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front In opposition nbsp Guatemala Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity Extra parliamentary support 27 Winaq In government 28 Tejiendo Pueblo Extra parliamentary support nbsp Haiti Struggling People s Organization In opposition nbsp Honduras Liberty and Refoundation In government nbsp Mexico National Regeneration Movement In government Labor Party In government Party of the Democratic Revolution In opposition nbsp Nicaragua Sandinista National Liberation Front In government nbsp Panama Democratic Revolutionary Party In government nbsp Paraguay Guasu Front In opposition Party for a Country of Solidarity In opposition Citizen Participation Party In opposition Tekojoja People s Party In opposition Popular Socialist Convergence Party In opposition Revolutionary Febrerista Party Extra parliamentary opposition Paraguayan Communist Party Extra parliamentary opposition Popular Patriotic Movement Party Extra parliamentary opposition Party of the Movement Towards Socialism Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Peru Free Peru In opposition Peruvian Communist Party In opposition Peruvian Humanist Party In opposition Communist Party of Peru Red Fatherland Extra parliamentary opposition Socialist Party Extra parliamentary opposition Peruvian Nationalist Party Extra parliamentary opposition Land and Liberty Extra parliamentary opposition United People s Party Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Puerto Rico Communist Party of Puerto Rico Extra parliamentary opposition Hostosian National Independence Movement Extra parliamentary opposition Revolutionary Nationalist Movement Extra parliamentary opposition Socialist Front Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Saint Lucia Saint Lucia Labour Party In government nbsp Trinidad and Tobago Movement for Social Justice Extra parliamentary opposition nbsp Uruguay Broad Front In opposition March 26 Movement Extra parliamentary opposition Uruguay Assembly In opposition Movement of Popular Participation In opposition Communist Party of Uruguay In opposition Artiguist Tendency In opposition Revolutionary Workers Party In opposition People s Victory Party In opposition Socialist Workers Party In opposition Socialist Party of Uruguay In opposition nbsp Venezuela United Socialist Party of Venezuela In government Fatherland for All In government Movement We Are Venezuela In government Communist Party of Venezuela In opposition Former members edit Country Name Notes nbsp Brazil Popular Socialist Party Withdrew from the Foro in 2004 due to the Foro s support of the Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez governments in Cuba and Venezuela 29 Brazilian Socialist Party Withdrew from the Foro in 2019 due to the Foro s support of the Nicolas Maduro government in Venezuela 30 nbsp Ecuador PAIS Alliance Left the Foro in 2021 following the renaming as the MOVER Movement Meetings and organization editMeetings were held in Sao Paulo 1990 Mexico City 1991 Managua 1992 Havana 1993 Montevideo 1995 San Salvador 1996 Porto Alegre 1997 Mexico City 1998 Managua 2000 Havana 2001 Antigua Guatemala 2002 Quito 2003 Sao Paulo 2005 San Salvador 2007 Montevideo 2008 Mexico City 2009 Buenos Aires 2010 Managua 2011 Caracas 2012 Sao Paulo 2013 La Paz 2014 Mexico City 2015 San Salvador 2016 Managua 2017 Havana 2018 Caracas 2019 and Brasilia 2023 The Foro s chief authority is its meeting itself Between meetings the Foro is represented by an Executive Group Grupo de Trabalho composed of a sample of its overall membership that usually meets thrice a year as well as by an Executive Secretariat Secretariado Executivo 31 See also editCOPPPAL Parliamentary Group of the Left Pink tideReferences edit Gonzalez Mike The Marxist Influence of the Sao Paulo Forum in Latin America The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 2024 03 05 The Marxist Hurricane in South America The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 2024 03 05 Fantini Ellen 2023 02 05 The Sao Paulo Forum and the Future of Latin America An Interview with Alejandro Pena Esclusa europeanconservative com Retrieved 2024 03 05 Cf Carlos Baraibar amp Jose Bayardi Foro de San Pablo que es y cual es su historia 23 August 2000 No Se Encontraron Resultados Para Va Internacionales Noticias 7026753 Asp Archived from the original on 2016 03 09 Retrieved 2014 02 13 a b Fundacao Perseu Abramo Archived from the original on 20 November 2007 Retrieved 16 December 2014 Cf Folha de S Paulo May 31 2005 See for instance William I Robinson The Sao Paulo Forum is there a new Latin American left Monthly Review December 1992 available at 1 cf Ines Hayes XIV Sao Paulo Forum Left parties debate the current historic conjuncture available at 2 G1 gt Mundo NOTICIAS Foro de Sao Paulo ajudou a democratizar esquerda latino americana diz Lula Retrieved 16 December 2014 Such as the material found at 3 Archived 2011 05 11 at the Wayback Machine organized by Unoamerica a coalition of conservative Latin American political groups see also Luisa Roxo Barja A face obscura da politica governo e eleicoes no Midia Sem Mascara Aurora Revista de Arte Midia e Politica no 4 2009 available at 4 retrieved July 20 2014 and Angelo Kirst Adami Hugo Chavez o ditador o discurso da revista Veja sobre o presidente da Venezuela B Sc Monography IN Communications Jornalism UFRGS 2008 available at 5 retrieved July 20 2014 Cf Kenneth Maxwell Brazil Lula s Prospects The New York Review of Books December 5 2002 available at 6 cf e g Venezuela s El Universal August the 17th 2010 FARC causan polemica en debate de candidatos brasilenos Bruno de Paula Castanho e Silva THE SAO PAULO FORUM AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF LATIN AMERICAN REGIONAL INTEGRATION Paper presented at the XXIInd World Congress of Political Science Madrid 2012 Available at 7 Retrieved July 20 2014 Oliveira A Marques T Carvalho F REDES PARTIDARIAS TRANSNACIONAIS NA AMERICA LATINA COERENCIA IDEOLoGICA ENTRE PARTIDOS E CANDIDATURAS PRESIDENCIAIS 2000 2015 Transnational Party Networks in Latin America Ideological coherence between parties and presidential candidates 2000 2015 Mural Internacional Rio de Janeiro Vol 13 e66621 2022 DOI 10 12957 rmi 2022 66621 e ISSN 2177 7314 Available at 8 Retrieved Dec 23 2022 Cf Brazilian Workers Party Site Cf Brazilian Workers Party site Pagina nao encontrada iG Archived from the original on 29 February 2012 Retrieved 16 December 2014 Foro de San Pablo abre debates entre las viejas banderas y nuevos desafios LARED21 23 May 2008 Retrieved 16 December 2014 Frum de So Paulo discutir sobre Honduras Retrieved 16 December 2014 Cf Prensa Latina El XV Foro de Sao Paulo contra Honduras por Alejandro Pena Esclusa Diario La Tribuna Archived from the original on 2 December 2010 Retrieved 16 December 2014 DEMOS Desarrollo de Medios S A de C V 20 August 2009 La Jornada Hoy reunion regional de izquierdas Retrieved 16 December 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link cf EUROPEAN LEFT European Left convenes third congress in Paris Archived from the original on 2011 06 13 Retrieved 2010 04 02 13 January 2010 Kerson Roger 21 September 2021 Democratic Socialists of America Make a Strategy for the Biden Era In These Times FELICITACIONES AL 30 ANIVERSARIO FUNDACIoN DEL FORO de PRM Republica Dominicana PDF forodesaopaulo org Primer ministro sanvicentino destaca importancia de Foro de Sao Paulo Trabajadores 13 July 2018 Retrieved 6 April 2020 Alianza a la vista definir las candidaturas es lo mas dificil todos quieren su espacio 21 September 2022 Alianza a la vista definir las candidaturas es lo mas dificil todos quieren su espacio 21 September 2022 Blog do PPS Algumas verdades sobre o Foro de Sao Paulo o PT e os tiranetes que enxovalham a esquerda democratica Blog do PPS 20 October 2014 Retrieved 18 December 2018 Morais Esmael 2019 08 30 PSB aprova saida de Foro de Sao Paulo e critica Maduro Blog do Esmael in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 2022 03 28 Cf Brazilian Workers Party site External links editWebsite of Foro de Sao Paulo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sao Paulo Forum amp oldid 1216358289, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.