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People's Party (Panama)

The People's Party (Spanish: Partido Popular, until 2001 the Christian Democratic Party of Panama) is a Panamanian Christian democratic political party. Beginning in 1956, as Social Democratic Action, it was made up of middle-class professionals, intellectuals and students, with support from trade unions, particularly the Federation of Christian Workers. It went on to become one of Latin America's most conservative and anti-communist Christian democratic parties.[2] The ideological foundation of the party is based on the social doctrine of the Catholic Church. The PP is a full member of the Christian Democrat International and Christian Democratic Organization of America.[3]

People's Party
Partido Popular
PresidentJuan Carlos Arango
Founded1956 (1956) (AD)
1957 (1957) (UCN)
1960 (1960) (PDC)
2001 (2001) (PP)
HeadquartersMaría Building (floors 2 and 3), Perú Avenue, Plaza Porras. Panama City, Panama
IdeologyChristian democracy
Conservatism
Subsidiarity
Anti-communism
Political positionCentre-right
Regional affiliationChristian Democratic Organization of America
International affiliationCentrist Democrat International
ColoursBlue, green
Seats in the National Assembly
0 / 71
District Mayors[1]
1 / 81
Corregimiento Representatives
7 / 702
Seats in the Central American Parliament (Panamanian seats)
1 / 20
Party flag
Website
partidopopularpanama.com.pa

In 2004, the PP allied with the New Fatherland (PN) and its candidate Martín Torrijos Espino of Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD).[4] In 2009, the PP allied with the One Country for All (UPPT) and its candidate Balbina Herrera of Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD).[5] In 2014, the PP allied with the Panameñista Party and its candidate Juan Carlos Varela to form the El Pueblo Primero alliance, which won the election with 39% of the vote on May 4, 2014. As a result, several members of the party are currently serving in the Varela Administration, highlighted by the party's president Milton Henriquez who serves as Minister of Government.

History

The People's Party traces its origins to the “First Week of Christian Studies,” which met at Las Cumbres in March 1956. Those who participated in this and the “Second Week of Christian Studies” in July 1956 included intellectuals who had expressed their desire for Social Christian action.[6] The group that organized these meetings formally established itself on 12 April 1956 and first called itself Social Democratic Action. From 1957 to 1960 it called itself the National Civic Union for the Christian Democratic Movement.[7] In 1960, the organizers decided on the name the Christian Democratic Party of Panama (Partido Demócrata Cristiano de Panama, PDC).[8]

The PDC's leading figures were middle-class professionals, intellectuals and students, but support also came from the trade union.[9] In particular, the Federation of Christian Workers, established in 1961, was closely aligned with the PDC.[7]

Early in 1964 the party chose its first set of candidates for a national election.[6] For that year's elections, the PDC presented its first presidential candidate, José Antonio Molino, who was supported by Panama's Teachers Union. He received 9,681 votes (2.98%), coming in fourth among seven nominees.[10] That was considered a success for the new party and was enough to assure its registration as a legal party. The Christian Democrats continued to be a small but well-organized element in Panamanian politics in the succeeding years.[6] In the 1968 general election, the PDC candidate, Antonio González Revilla, received 11,371 votes (3.55%). In 1964 and 1968 the PDC won one parliamentary seat.[10]

In 1968, the radical wing of the leadership was expelled, and the increasingly right-wing party supported the government of Arnulfo Arias. It was backed by a tiny electorate consisting of urban professionals and a business group led by the Romero family. Arias chose a member of the PDC as minister of education, but his government lasted only 11 days.[9]

All political parties such as the PDC were banned by Omar Torrijos after the military coup of 1968. During the Torrijos government (1968–1978), the Christian Democrats opposed the military regime and called for a civilian-ruled democracy.[8] In the 1970s and the 1980s, the PDC was generally regarded as a well-organized and binding element of the opposition.[11] The PDC was one of the few parties within National Opposition Front (FRENO) (a coalition of eight opposition parties formed in March 1979) that offered a programmatic alternative to military government policy by calling for substantial social reforms and expanded participation in democratic processes.[12] The PDC advocated for introducing nationalist social reforms to preclude revolutionary action.[7] Its leader, Ricardo Arias Calderón, was the main promoter of the formation of a united opposition against the Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD). The leaders of the party strongly opposed the government, seeing in its actions "a furthering of communist penetration into Central America."[11]

The PDC re-registered on 28 August 1980.[13] The PDC won 20.6% of the vote and two seats in the 1980 legislative elections (to 19 of the 56 seats in the newly formed National Legislative Council, the other 37 being filled by nominees of a non-party National Assembly of Community Representatives established in 1972).[8]

In December 1981, Calderón was elected president of the Organization of Christian-Democratic Parties of America.[11]

In 1984, it was part of the Democratic Opposition Alliance (ADO), which supported the presidential candidacy of Arnulfo Arias of Authentic Panameñista Party (PPA). Ricardo Arias Calderón was a Second Vice-Presidential candidate.[14] The ADO lost the presidential and legislative elections following suspected widespread fraud by the military. In 1987, the PDC became increasingly involved in confrontations with the government, openly campaigning by strikes (supported mainly by businesses rather than labor unions) and street demonstrations (which were often violently repressed) for the resignation or removal of General Manuel Noriega. Ricardo Arias Calderón referring to charges against Manuel Noriega of murder, drug trafficking, corruption, and electoral fraud, described him as "virtually a dictator and gangster".[8]

For the 1989 elections, the PDC was the main component of the Democratic Alliance of Civic Opposition (ADOC), with the Guillermo Endara as the coalition's presidential candidate.[9] Calderón was viewed as a likely successor to Arias as the principal spokesman for the opposition, eventually accepting nomination as ADOC First Vice-Presidential candidate in 1989.[14]

The PDC polled 261,598 votes (40.18%), coming in first among twelve nominees.[15] After the official ratification of the results following the US military invasion in December 1989, Calderón became First Vice-President and Interior and Justice Minister, and the PDC became the largest party in the Legislative Assembly with 28 of the 67 seats.[9] Emboldened by a plurality within the Legislative Assembly, the PDC was estranged from its coalition partners in September 1990 when they joined with the opposition PRD to reject its nominees for chamber officials. The party stayed within the ADOC until April 1991, when its ministerial delegation was ousted by President Guillermo Endara for displaying "disloyalty and arrogance."[14] That had followed months of infighting during which Calderón had publicly described Guillermo Endara's economic program, which advocated severe austerity measures and the privatization of state enterprises, as "senseless." Its withdrawal from the ADOC coalition government caused a political crisis.

In succeeding months, the PDC became the leader of the opposition, to such an extent that it was exerting strong influence within such organizations as the Civic Crusade, an organization from which Endara had drawn his strongest support and called for a plebiscite to decide on his desirability of Endara remaining in office.[3] In September 1991, the PDC was judged[by whom?] firmly to have secured its political influence on parliamentary committees as a direct result of facilitating the victory of a dissident Authentic Liberal Party (PLA) candidate in the election of a new President of the Legislative Assembly.[3] Calderón resigned as First Vice-President of the Republic in December 1992 in a move that was seen as reflecting a desire to distance himself from Endara.[14]

In 1994, Eduardo Vallarino, the candidate of PDC, unsuccessfully ran in the presidential elections, obtaining only 25,476 votes (2.39%). As a result, the party only managed to gain one seat in the legislative elections.[15] For the 1999 elections, the PDC was the main component of the Opposition Action Alliance (AAO), with the PDC's Alberto Vallarino Clement as the coalition's presidential candidate. He polled 221,459 votes (17.38%) and came fourth (the PDC – 140,824 and 11.05%). The PDC won 5 legislative seats.[4]

On 10 September 2001, the PDC changed its name to People's Party.[13] In 2004, the PP allied with the New Fatherland (PN) and its candidate Martín Torrijos Espino of Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD).[4] In 2009, the PP allied with the One Country for All (UPPT) and its candidate Balbina Herrera of Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD).[5]

In 2014, the PP allied with the Panameñista Party and its candidate Juan Carlos Varela to form the El Pueblo Primero alliance, which won the election with 39% of the vote on May 4, 2014. As a result, several members of the party are currently serving in the Varela Administration, highlighted by the party's president Milton Henriquez who serves as Minister of Government.

The PP is a full member of the Christian Democrat International and Christian Democratic Organization of America.[3]

References

  1. ^ "ALCALDES, REPRESENTANTES Y CONCEJALES 2019-2024" (PDF).
  2. ^ Ameringer, p. 481
  3. ^ a b c d Political parties of the world. 5th ed. Edited by Alan J. Day. Harlow: Longman. 2002. Pp 367. ISBN 978-0953627875.
  4. ^ a b c Nohlen, p. 534
  5. ^ a b Electoral Tribunal
  6. ^ a b c Latin American Political Parties. By Robert J. Alexander. (New York: Praeger Publishers,. 1973. Pp. 366.
  7. ^ a b c Political parties of the Americas: Canada, Latin America, and the West Indies. V. 1. Edited by Robert J. Alexander. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1982. Pp. 564.
  8. ^ a b c d Political parties of the world. 3rd edn. Edited by Alan J. Day. Harlow: Longman. 1988. Pp 353.
  9. ^ a b c d The Dictionary of Contemporary Politics of Central America and the Caribbean. Gunson, Phil. New York, NY: Academic Reference Division, Simon & Schuster, 1993. Pp.81.
  10. ^ a b Nohlen, p. 532
  11. ^ a b c JPRS Report: Soviet Union International Affairs (PDF). Vol. JPRS-UIA-88-012. Foreign Broadcast Information Service. 1988. p. 28. (PDF) from the original on May 24, 2019.
  12. ^ Library of Congress, Federal Research Division. Panama: A Country Study. Ed. Sandra W. Meditz and Dennis M. Hanratty. Washington: GPO, 1989. Pp. 314.
  13. ^ a b Electoral Tribunal, Reseñas de Juntas Directivas por Partido 2010-01-09 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ a b c d Banks, p. 637.
  15. ^ a b Nohlen, p. 533

Sources

External links

  • Official website (in Spanish)

people, party, panama, confused, with, communist, people, party, panama, people, party, spanish, partido, popular, until, 2001, christian, democratic, party, panama, panamanian, christian, democratic, political, party, beginning, 1956, social, democratic, acti. Not to be confused with the communist People s Party of Panama The People s Party Spanish Partido Popular until 2001 the Christian Democratic Party of Panama is a Panamanian Christian democratic political party Beginning in 1956 as Social Democratic Action it was made up of middle class professionals intellectuals and students with support from trade unions particularly the Federation of Christian Workers It went on to become one of Latin America s most conservative and anti communist Christian democratic parties 2 The ideological foundation of the party is based on the social doctrine of the Catholic Church The PP is a full member of the Christian Democrat International and Christian Democratic Organization of America 3 People s Party Partido PopularPresidentJuan Carlos ArangoFounded1956 1956 AD 1957 1957 UCN 1960 1960 PDC 2001 2001 PP HeadquartersMaria Building floors 2 and 3 Peru Avenue Plaza Porras Panama City PanamaIdeologyChristian democracyConservatismSubsidiarityAnti communismPolitical positionCentre rightRegional affiliationChristian Democratic Organization of AmericaInternational affiliationCentrist Democrat InternationalColoursBlue greenSeats in the National Assembly0 71District Mayors 1 1 81Corregimiento Representatives7 702Seats in the Central American Parliament Panamanian seats 1 20Party flagWebsitepartidopopularpanama com paPolitics of PanamaPolitical partiesElectionsIn 2004 the PP allied with the New Fatherland PN and its candidate Martin Torrijos Espino of Democratic Revolutionary Party PRD 4 In 2009 the PP allied with the One Country for All UPPT and its candidate Balbina Herrera of Democratic Revolutionary Party PRD 5 In 2014 the PP allied with the Panamenista Party and its candidate Juan Carlos Varela to form the El Pueblo Primero alliance which won the election with 39 of the vote on May 4 2014 As a result several members of the party are currently serving in the Varela Administration highlighted by the party s president Milton Henriquez who serves as Minister of Government Contents 1 History 2 References 3 Sources 4 External linksHistory EditThe People s Party traces its origins to the First Week of Christian Studies which met at Las Cumbres in March 1956 Those who participated in this and the Second Week of Christian Studies in July 1956 included intellectuals who had expressed their desire for Social Christian action 6 The group that organized these meetings formally established itself on 12 April 1956 and first called itself Social Democratic Action From 1957 to 1960 it called itself the National Civic Union for the Christian Democratic Movement 7 In 1960 the organizers decided on the name the Christian Democratic Party of Panama Partido Democrata Cristiano de Panama PDC 8 The PDC s leading figures were middle class professionals intellectuals and students but support also came from the trade union 9 In particular the Federation of Christian Workers established in 1961 was closely aligned with the PDC 7 Early in 1964 the party chose its first set of candidates for a national election 6 For that year s elections the PDC presented its first presidential candidate Jose Antonio Molino who was supported by Panama s Teachers Union He received 9 681 votes 2 98 coming in fourth among seven nominees 10 That was considered a success for the new party and was enough to assure its registration as a legal party The Christian Democrats continued to be a small but well organized element in Panamanian politics in the succeeding years 6 In the 1968 general election the PDC candidate Antonio Gonzalez Revilla received 11 371 votes 3 55 In 1964 and 1968 the PDC won one parliamentary seat 10 In 1968 the radical wing of the leadership was expelled and the increasingly right wing party supported the government of Arnulfo Arias It was backed by a tiny electorate consisting of urban professionals and a business group led by the Romero family Arias chose a member of the PDC as minister of education but his government lasted only 11 days 9 All political parties such as the PDC were banned by Omar Torrijos after the military coup of 1968 During the Torrijos government 1968 1978 the Christian Democrats opposed the military regime and called for a civilian ruled democracy 8 In the 1970s and the 1980s the PDC was generally regarded as a well organized and binding element of the opposition 11 The PDC was one of the few parties within National Opposition Front FRENO a coalition of eight opposition parties formed in March 1979 that offered a programmatic alternative to military government policy by calling for substantial social reforms and expanded participation in democratic processes 12 The PDC advocated for introducing nationalist social reforms to preclude revolutionary action 7 Its leader Ricardo Arias Calderon was the main promoter of the formation of a united opposition against the Democratic Revolutionary Party PRD The leaders of the party strongly opposed the government seeing in its actions a furthering of communist penetration into Central America 11 The PDC re registered on 28 August 1980 13 The PDC won 20 6 of the vote and two seats in the 1980 legislative elections to 19 of the 56 seats in the newly formed National Legislative Council the other 37 being filled by nominees of a non party National Assembly of Community Representatives established in 1972 8 In December 1981 Calderon was elected president of the Organization of Christian Democratic Parties of America 11 In 1984 it was part of the Democratic Opposition Alliance ADO which supported the presidential candidacy of Arnulfo Arias of Authentic Panamenista Party PPA Ricardo Arias Calderon was a Second Vice Presidential candidate 14 The ADO lost the presidential and legislative elections following suspected widespread fraud by the military In 1987 the PDC became increasingly involved in confrontations with the government openly campaigning by strikes supported mainly by businesses rather than labor unions and street demonstrations which were often violently repressed for the resignation or removal of General Manuel Noriega Ricardo Arias Calderon referring to charges against Manuel Noriega of murder drug trafficking corruption and electoral fraud described him as virtually a dictator and gangster 8 For the 1989 elections the PDC was the main component of the Democratic Alliance of Civic Opposition ADOC with the Guillermo Endara as the coalition s presidential candidate 9 Calderon was viewed as a likely successor to Arias as the principal spokesman for the opposition eventually accepting nomination as ADOC First Vice Presidential candidate in 1989 14 The PDC polled 261 598 votes 40 18 coming in first among twelve nominees 15 After the official ratification of the results following the US military invasion in December 1989 Calderon became First Vice President and Interior and Justice Minister and the PDC became the largest party in the Legislative Assembly with 28 of the 67 seats 9 Emboldened by a plurality within the Legislative Assembly the PDC was estranged from its coalition partners in September 1990 when they joined with the opposition PRD to reject its nominees for chamber officials The party stayed within the ADOC until April 1991 when its ministerial delegation was ousted by President Guillermo Endara for displaying disloyalty and arrogance 14 That had followed months of infighting during which Calderon had publicly described Guillermo Endara s economic program which advocated severe austerity measures and the privatization of state enterprises as senseless Its withdrawal from the ADOC coalition government caused a political crisis In succeeding months the PDC became the leader of the opposition to such an extent that it was exerting strong influence within such organizations as the Civic Crusade an organization from which Endara had drawn his strongest support and called for a plebiscite to decide on his desirability of Endara remaining in office 3 In September 1991 the PDC was judged by whom firmly to have secured its political influence on parliamentary committees as a direct result of facilitating the victory of a dissident Authentic Liberal Party PLA candidate in the election of a new President of the Legislative Assembly 3 Calderon resigned as First Vice President of the Republic in December 1992 in a move that was seen as reflecting a desire to distance himself from Endara 14 In 1994 Eduardo Vallarino the candidate of PDC unsuccessfully ran in the presidential elections obtaining only 25 476 votes 2 39 As a result the party only managed to gain one seat in the legislative elections 15 For the 1999 elections the PDC was the main component of the Opposition Action Alliance AAO with the PDC s Alberto Vallarino Clement as the coalition s presidential candidate He polled 221 459 votes 17 38 and came fourth the PDC 140 824 and 11 05 The PDC won 5 legislative seats 4 On 10 September 2001 the PDC changed its name to People s Party 13 In 2004 the PP allied with the New Fatherland PN and its candidate Martin Torrijos Espino of Democratic Revolutionary Party PRD 4 In 2009 the PP allied with the One Country for All UPPT and its candidate Balbina Herrera of Democratic Revolutionary Party PRD 5 In 2014 the PP allied with the Panamenista Party and its candidate Juan Carlos Varela to form the El Pueblo Primero alliance which won the election with 39 of the vote on May 4 2014 As a result several members of the party are currently serving in the Varela Administration highlighted by the party s president Milton Henriquez who serves as Minister of Government The PP is a full member of the Christian Democrat International and Christian Democratic Organization of America 3 References Edit ALCALDES REPRESENTANTES Y CONCEJALES 2019 2024 PDF Ameringer p 481 a b c d Political parties of the world 5th ed Edited by Alan J Day Harlow Longman 2002 Pp 367 ISBN 978 0953627875 a b c Nohlen p 534 a b Electoral Tribunal a b c Latin American Political Parties By Robert J Alexander New York Praeger Publishers 1973 Pp 366 a b c Political parties of the Americas Canada Latin America and the West Indies V 1 Edited by Robert J Alexander Westport Conn Greenwood Press 1982 Pp 564 a b c d Political parties of the world 3rd edn Edited by Alan J Day Harlow Longman 1988 Pp 353 a b c d The Dictionary of Contemporary Politics of Central America and the Caribbean Gunson Phil New York NY Academic Reference Division Simon amp Schuster 1993 Pp 81 a b Nohlen p 532 a b c JPRS Report Soviet Union International Affairs PDF Vol JPRS UIA 88 012 Foreign Broadcast Information Service 1988 p 28 Archived PDF from the original on May 24 2019 Library of Congress Federal Research Division Panama A Country Study Ed Sandra W Meditz and Dennis M Hanratty Washington GPO 1989 Pp 314 a b Electoral Tribunal Resenas de Juntas Directivas por Partido Archived 2010 01 09 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Banks p 637 a b Nohlen p 533Sources EditAmeringer Charles D 1992 Political parties of the Americas 1980s to 1990s Canada Latin America and the West Indies Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 27418 3 Banks Arthur S 1993 Political Handbook of the World 1993 CSA Publications ISBN 978 0 933199 09 5 Nohlen Dieter 2005 Elections in the Americas a data handbook North America Central America and the Caribbean Volym 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 928358 3 External links EditOfficial website in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title People 27s Party Panama amp oldid 1161017714, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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