1928 Costa Rican general election

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1928 Costa Rican general election

12 February 1928
Presidential election
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1932 →
 
Nominee Cleto González Víquez Carlos María Jiménez Ortiz [es]
Party PUN Republican
Popular vote 42,765 29,475
Percentage 59.20% 40.80%

President before election

Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno
Republican

Elected President

Cleto González Víquez
PUN

General elections were held in Costa Rica on 12 February 1928.[1] Cleto González Víquez of the National Union won the presidential election, whilst the party also won the parliamentary election, in which they received 53% of the vote.[2] Voter turnout was 62% in the presidential election and 73% in the parliamentary election.[3]

Background[edit]

On 6 January 1926 the delegates of the Agricultural Party, which was the second most voted party in the previous elections, met at the Moderno Theater of San Jose where they met the resignation of their leader and presidential candidate Alberto Echandi Montero, deciding to constitute a new political organization called the National Union Party, a name that had previously been used to bring Ascension Esquivel Ibarra to power, but which preserves the agricultural green flag (since Esquivel had used a white flag). The party nominated former President Cleto González Víquez, who had also been a diplomat and minister during the Esquivel administration.[4] González also receives the adhesion of the Reformist Party and of the supporters of Máximo Fernández, self-styled "Historical Republicans".[4]

For his part, the candidate of the Republican Party is Carlos María Jiménez Ortiz, deputy and chief of action, proclaimed on 7 January 1927 at the Teatro América by the Republican convention. Once the candidates have been designated, the Diario de Costa Rica emphasizes that the ideological differences between both are virtually null.[4]

There is also a reelection movement that sought to reform the Constitution to allow the consecutive re-election of Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno, to which Don Ricardo emphatically rejected: "... what would remain the preachings of my whole life in defense of democratic and republican principles? . I prefer a mediocre president of the Republic to the most brilliant of dictators."[4]

Campaign[edit]

The Republicans attacked González Víquez accusing him of belonging to "The Olympus", the generation of intellectuals who had dominated the country for several decades and of having been an illegitimate ruler in his first election. They signaled him as a dark and conspiratorial figure in politics, who had squandered state resources and received bribes when he held public office and even that he was too old to be president.[4]

But Jimenez Ortiz also has his adversaries, especially the Reformists because he and Father Jorge Volio, the head of reformism, were enemies, and this causes that Jiménez Ortiz can't give a speech in Santa Ana for the boycott of the Reformists. Neither did he have the full support of all Republicans, some of whom were inclined towards González Víquez.[4]

Don Ricardo Jimenez Oreamuno, as president, had the power to organize the elections. Jiménez promised to make them as transparent as possible. The secret ballot had recently been approved and was implemented for the first time in this election. It was also established that the use of the telegraph would be free that day to file electoral complaints.[4]

Results[edit]

President[edit]

CandidatePartyVotes%
Cleto González VíquezNational Union Party42,76559.20
Carlos María Jiménez Ortiz [es]Republican Party29,47540.80
Total72,240100.00
Valid votes72,24098.84
Invalid/blank votes8451.16
Total votes73,085100.00
Registered voters/turnout116,98362.47
Source: Nohlen

Parliament[edit]

PartyVotes%
National Union Party45,19853.26
Republican Party39,66246.74
Total84,860100.00
Valid votes84,86099.69
Invalid/blank votes2610.31
Total votes85,121100.00
Registered voters/turnout116,98372.76
Source: Nohlen

References[edit]

  1. ^ Dieter Nohlen (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p155 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. ^ Nohlen, p165
  3. ^ Nohlen, p156
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Oconitrillo García, Eduardo (2004). Cien años de política costarricense: 1902-2002, de Ascensión Esquivel a Abel Pacheco. EUNED. ISBN 9789968313605.