Liberal Party of Chile (2013)

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Liberal Party of Chile
Partido Liberal de Chile
PresidentVlado Mirosevic
Founded26 January 2013
HeadquartersSantiago de Chile
IdeologyProgressive liberalism
Reformism
Liberal Democracy
Digital Democracy
Laicism
Federalism
Political positionCentre-left
National affiliationBroad Front (2016-present)
International affiliationLiberal International
ColoursBlue and red
Chamber of Deputies
1 / 120
Senate
0 / 38
Website
www.losliberales.cl

Liberal Party of Chile is a political party founded 26 January 2013 in Santiago Chile. The president and main figure of the party is the deputy Vlado Mirosevic.

Ideology

Liberal Party of Chile (Spanish: Partido Liberal de Chile) is a social-liberal party in Chile. The party identifies itself with the egalitarian liberalism, progressive liberalism and social liberalism (with particular reference to the social liberalism in Europe).

The Chilean social liberalism

In Chile the word liberal is after the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet often synonymous with technocracy and neoliberalism since Pinochet based his reforms on the neoliberalism presented by Milton Friedman and the Chicago boys. The Liberal Party of Chile is based on social liberalism and does thus oppose the neoliberalism which still influences many institutions in Chile. Retaking the tradition of the first liberals of the 20th century the Liberal Party of Chile intends to combine the economic policy with a strong social policy. In Latin America the majority of the liberal parties are founded on neoliberalism and therefore Liberal Party of Chile is one of the only social liberal parties in Latin America.

Liberal platform

Liberal Party of Chile defend the freedom of the individual in values such as same-sex marriage,[1] the legalisation of marijuana,[2] the legalisation of abortion[3] and the legalisation of euthanasia.[4] Further they support decentralization[5] which also opposes the heritage of Pinochet who implemented centralism in the country. Finally the party supports the change of the Chilean constitution implemented by Pinochet in 1980.[6]

The tradition of the Chilean social liberalism

Liberal Party of Chile is inspired by the tradition of the Chilean liberals from before the rise of Pinochet and the Chilean neoliberalism. They supported a Federal State, hated tyranny and concentration of power and wanted the secular state to promote social rights such as public education. Liberal Party of Chile is inspired by these ideas and pursue them to a broader extent as they e.g. want free education for all. Among the figures of the liberal party of the 20th century were Ramón Freire, José Miguel Infante, Francisco Bilbao, Pedro León Gallo Goyenechea, Domingo Santa María and José Manuel Balmaceda.

History

The Chilean political context

In Chile the historic Liberal Party ceased to exist in 1966 when it merged with the United Conservative Party giving rise to the National Party which supported the coup d'état of 1973. The label "liberal" were afterwards captured by the economists - also known as the Chicago Boys - that inspired the dictatorship.[7] However the historical liberal ideas such as the defence of civil rights were not practised during the dictatorship while during the governments of the Concertacion, conservatism characterised the Chilean politics. Thus the liberalism present in Chile in the years after Pinochet were predominantly neoliberalism. The system established in Chile during the dictatorship was not challenged much until the middle of 2011. The Chilean student protests of 2011 showed for the first time in 35 years a general discomfort with the Chilean political system which was criticized for excessively favouring the privatization of public benefits.[8] The demonstrations criticized that the market is the main resource allocator and that the private sector manages a lot of the public services. The criticism also targeted the constitution since major legislative changes require super-majorities in the congress while the electoral system favours two political blocs which blocks the political process. Finally the demonstrations also criticized that the Constitutional Court have the power of the veto.

Birth of Liberal Party of Chile

The Liberal party of Chile has its origin in the movement ChileFirst (ChilePrimero). ChileFirst was a political movement created in 2007 by former members of the Party for Democracy (Partido por la Democracia) led by the senator Fernando Flores Labra and supported the candidature of Sebastian Pinera in the presidential election of 2009 and 2010.

After a break with the original founders 26 January 2013 the party was founded officially as the Liberal Party of Chile (Partido Liberal de Chile). This performed a name change to the existing ChilePrimero.[9] Young people, among whom the majority was below 35 years old, founded the party. Liberal Party of Chile is inspired by the ideals of the Chilean liberalism from the 19th century[10] and especially by the values of secularism, democratic reforms and freedom of initiative. The majority of the founders were young, a part of the middle class and not previously members of other parties.

15 June 2013 the party announced the formation of an electoral alliance with the Progressive Party (Partido Progresista – PRO) and decided to give its support to Marco Enriquez Ominame as presidential candidate in the election of 2013.[11] The pact was called "If you want Chile changes" (Si tuquires Chile cambia) and included the Liberal party of Chile with deputes, senators as well as regional councillors supporting it. In the parliamentary elections of 2013 the party's President Vlado Milosevic was elected as deputy of the 1. district, the Region of Arica and Parinacota.

Presidential candidates

The following is a list of the presidential candidates supported by the Liberal Party. (Information gathered from the Archive of Chilean Elections).

Electoral results

Parliamentary elections

Parliamentary election results for deputies in District 1 (Arica, Parinacota, General Lagos y Putre)

Election Deputies
Votes % of the votes Seats
2013 14,237 21,25 Vlado Mirosevic

Fuentes: Ministerio del Interior y TRICEL.

Directive

  • President: Vlado Mirosevic (2013–present)
  • Vicepresident: José Carreño (2013–present)
  • Vicepresident (Biobío): Osmán Vásquez (2014–present)
  • Vicepresident (Coquimbo): Kenneth Romero (2014–present)
  • Vicepresident (Arica y Parinacota): Carlos Avilés (2014–2015)
  • Secretary General: Iván Morán (2013–present)

Authorities

Deputies

Name Region District Period
Vlado Mirosevic Region of Arica and Parinacota 1 2014–2018

See also

References

  1. ^ "Grupo de diputados ingresa proyecto de matrimonio igualitario". https://www.facebook.com/teletrece (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 November 2015. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  2. ^ "Diputados piden renuncia del director del Senda por dar 'giro conservador' en debate de la marihuana". www.latercera.com. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  3. ^ "Vlado Mirosevic: "En materia de aborto, Chile está hoy al nivel de Angola" - Zero 97.7". https://www.facebook.com/Zero977. Retrieved 17 November 2015. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  4. ^ "Vlado Mirosevic sobre eutanasia: "Hay una especie de censura que es de la jerarquía de la Iglesia Católica" - CNN Chile". www.cnnchile.com. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  5. ^ Campos, Paula. "Vlado Mirosevic: "Mejor el financiamiento público de las campañas que el lobby de las empresas"". Diario y Radio Uchile. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  6. ^ "Vlado Mirosevic: "La asamblea constituyente es el único mecanismo legítimo para devolver el poder a la ciudadanía"". El Mostrador. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  7. ^ Yaitul Stormansan, Jorge (December 2011). "LOS AÑOS DEL CAPITALISMO RENOVADO: LA INFLUENCIA DE MILTON FRIEDMAN EN CHILE. LA INSTAURACIÓN DEL MODELO ECONÓMICO". Espacio Regional.
  8. ^ "2015 – Los Tiempos de la Politización | en Chile". desarrollohumano.cl. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  9. ^ "ChilePrimero se reconvierte – Revista Qué Pasa". Revista Qué Pasa (in European Spanish). Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  10. ^ Mirosevic, Vlado (2015). Liberales Plebeyos. 978-956-01-0215-7: Ril editores. pp. 37–69.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  11. ^ "ME-O llamó a no comprar "fruta podrida" que ofrece "dupolio" tras proclamación de Partido Liberal". https://www.facebook.com/RadioBioBio. Retrieved 11 November 2015. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)

External links