Colorado Party (Paraguay)
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
National Republican Association – Colorado Party Asociación Nacional Republicana – Partido Colorado | |
---|---|
Leader | Mario Abdo Benítez |
President | Hércules Pedro Lorenzo Alliana Rodríguez |
Founder | Bernardino Caballero |
Founded | 11 September 1887 |
Headquarters | 25 de Mayo N° 842 c/ Tacuary - Asunción, Paraguay |
Ideology | Conservatism National conservatism[1] Economic liberalism |
Political position | Right-wing |
Regional affiliation | Union of Latin American Parties[2] |
International affiliation | International Democrat Union |
Colours | Red, white |
Chamber of Deputies | 42 / 80 |
Senate | 17 / 45 |
Party flag | |
Website | |
www | |
The National Republican Association – Colorado Party (Spanish: Asociación Nacional Republicana – Partido Colorado, ANR-PC) is a right-wing political party in Paraguay, founded on 11 September 1887, by Bernardino Caballero. The presidential candidate of the party was defeated in elections held in April 2008 after 61 years in power, but the party regained the presidency in the 2013 presidential election.
History
1887–1989
It initially ruled the country from 1887 until 1904. In 1946, it rejoined the government, together with the Febreristas, during Higinio Moríñigo's rule as President of Paraguay.
From 1947 until 1962, the Colorado Party ruled Paraguay as a one-party state; all other political parties were illegal.[3] In 1962, all national parties were nominally legalized; the Communist Party being deemed "international" remained illegal and its adherents repressed by the Paraguayan state. During the rule of Alfredo Stroessner all members of the armed forces and government employees were required to be members of the Colorado Party. In the late 1980s, there was a rift in the party between a hardliner faction and a traditionalist faction. This rift was primarily over the issue of Stroessner's succession and was a large contributor to the 1989 coup d'état led by General Andrés Rodríguez, himself a traditionalist.[4]
In practice, however, Paraguay remained a one-party military dictatorship until the overthrow of longtime president Alfredo Stroessner in 1989. It served as one of the "twin pillars" of Stroessner's 35-year rule, one of the longest in history by a non-royal leader.[5]
Since 1989
In 2002 the National Union of Ethical Citizens split from the party.
At the legislative elections of 27 April 2003, the party won 35.3% of the popular vote (37 out of 80 seats) in the Chamber of Deputies of Paraguay and 32.9% (16 out of 45 seats) in the Senate. Its candidate at the presidential elections on the same day, Nicanor Duarte, won 37.1% of the popular vote and was elected President of Paraguay.
Originally, the Colorado Party was conservative, representing those opposed to the Liberal Party.
On 20 April 2008, for the first time in 61 years, the Colorado Party lost the presidential elections to an opposition candidate from the center-left, Fernando Lugo, a Roman Catholic bishop, a first on both accounts (free election of an opposition candidate and of a bishop to the office of president in Paraguay). The Colorado Party was represented in these elections by Blanca Ovelar, the first woman to run for the presidency. Fernando Lugo, who had renounced the cloth before the elections so that he could become eligible under Paraguayan law, was formally released from his vows by the Vatican before his installation as president on 15 August 2008.
According to Antonio Soljancic, a social scientist at the Autonomous University of Asunción, "in order to get a job you had to show you were a party member. The problem Paraguay has is that, although Stroessner disappeared from the political map, he left a legacy that no one has tried to bury".[6]
Electoral history
Presidential elections
Election | Party candidate | Votes | % | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1953 | Federico Chávez | 224,788 | 100% | Elected |
1954 | Alfredo Stroessner | 236,191 | 100% | Elected |
1958 | 295,414 | 100% | Elected | |
1963 | 569,551 | 92.3% | Elected | |
1968 | 465,535 | 71.6% | Elected | |
1973 | 681,306 | 84.7% | Elected | |
1978 | 905,461 | 90.8% | Elected | |
1983 | 944,637 | 91.0% | Elected | |
1988 | 1,187,738 | 89.6% | Elected | |
1989 | Andrés Rodríguez | 882,957 | 76.59% | Elected |
1993 | Juan Carlos Wasmosy | 449,505 | 41.78% | Elected |
1998 | Raúl Cubas Grau | 887,196 | 55.35% | Elected |
2003 | Nicanor Duarte | 574,232 | 38.30% | Elected |
2008 | Blanca Ovelar | 573,995 | 31.75% | Lost |
2013 | Horacio Cartes | 1,104,169 | 48.48% | Elected |
2018 | Mario Abdo Benítez | 1,206,067 | 48.96% | Elected |
Vice presidential election
Election | Party candidate | Votes | % | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Félix Argaña | 587,498 | 48.8% | Lost |
Chamber of Deputies elections
Election | Votes | % | Seats | +/– |
---|---|---|---|---|
1960 | 60 / 60
|
60 | ||
1963 | 569,551 | 92.3% | 40 / 60
|
20 |
1968 | 465,535 | 71.6% | 40 / 60
|
|
1973 | 681,306 | 84.7% | 40 / 60
|
|
1978 | 905,461 | 90.7% | 40 / 60
|
|
1983 | 944,637 | 91.0% | 40 / 60
|
|
1988 | 1,187,738 | 89.6% | 40 / 60
|
|
1989 | 845,820 | 74.5% | 40 / 72
|
|
1993 | 488,342 | 43.4% | 38 / 80
|
2 |
1998 | 857,473 | 53.8% | 45 / 80
|
7 |
2003 | 520,761 | 35.3% | 37 / 80
|
8 |
2008 | 582,932 | 32.96% | 30 / 80
|
7 |
2013 | 919,625 | 40.99% | 44 / 80
|
14 |
2018 | 927,183 | 39.10% | 42 / 80
|
2 |
Senate elections
Election | Votes | % | Seats | +/– |
---|---|---|---|---|
1968 | 20 / 30
|
20 | ||
1973 | 681,306 | 84.7% | 20 / 30
|
|
1978 | 20 / 30
|
|||
1983 | 20 / 30
|
|||
1988 | 20 / 30
|
|||
1993 | 498,586 | 44.0% | 20 / 45
|
|
1998 | 813,287 | 51.7% | 24 / 45
|
4 |
2003 | 508,506 | 34.4% | 16 / 45
|
8 |
2008 | 509,907 | 29.07% | 15 / 45
|
1 |
2013 | 865,206 | 38.50% | 19 / 45
|
4 |
2018 | 766,841 | 32.52% | 17 / 45
|
2 |
References
- ^ "Return of the conservatives". Deutsche Welle. 21 April 2013.
- ^ http://uplalatinoamerica.org/partidos-miembros/
- ^ "Paraguay: Opposition Parties". Library of Congress Country Studies. Archived from the original on 9 January 2009.
- ^ Paraguay: Potential Successors to Stroessner
- ^ "Paraguay: The Twin Pillars of the Stroessner Regime". Library of Congress Country Studies. Archived from the original on 9 January 2009.
- ^ "Horacio Cartes: Millionaire. Criminal. Business titan. Homophobe. The next president of Paraguay?". The Independent. 19 April 2013.
External links
- 1887 establishments in Paraguay
- Conservative parties in South America
- International Democrat Union member parties
- Paraguayan nationalism
- National conservative parties
- Parties of one-party systems
- Political history of Paraguay
- Political parties established in 1887
- Political parties in Paraguay
- Anti-communist parties