People's Vanguard Party (Costa Rica)
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Vanguardia Popular | |
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President | Trino Barrantes Araya |
General Secretary | Humberto Vargas Carbonell |
Founded | 1943 |
Headquarters | Desamparados, Calle Fallas, Ciudadela Cucubres, de la plaza de deportes 50 metros sur, casa Nº 11 |
Ideology | Communism Marxism-Leninism |
Political position | Far-left |
International affiliation | IMCWP[1] |
Legislative Assembly | 0 / 57 |
Website | |
Periódico Libertad | |
Costa Rica portal |
The People's Vanguard Party, or Popular Vanguard Party (in Spanish: Partido Vanguardia Popular) is a communist party in Costa Rica. PVP was founded in 1931 as the Workers and Farmers Party, but was soon renamed to the Communist Party of Costa Rica (Partido Comunista de Costa Rica).
From 1931 to 1947, the party published Trabajo as a communist newspaper.[2] The PVP's current publication is El Popular.
History
In 1943 the party was renamed as PVP, in order to facilitate its alliance with the Catholic Church and the government, whose reformist policies the party supported.[3]
In 1949 the party was banned. Its militants began working under the name 'Partido Acción Socialista Obrera'.[4]
In the mid-1960s the U.S. State Department estimated the party membership to be approximately 300.[5]
In 1970, the party again could contest elections.[4]
In 1984, a severe internal crisis appeared in the party. At the 14th party congress, two of the party MPs, Arnoldo Ferreto Segura and Humberto Vargas Carbonell took over the party leadership and deposed Mora (who had led the party since 1934). Mora's followers continued to use the name PVP, thus there were two parties with the same name. In 1984 Mora's party took the name Costa Rican People's Party.[4]
Electoral performance
Presidential
See also
References
- ^ "Communist and Workers' Parties". IMCWP. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (help) - ^ La Hoz y el Machete. San Jose, Costa Rica: Editorial Universidad Estatal a Distancia. 1986. p. 416. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
- ^ Aguilar Hernández, Marielos. Costa Rica en el siglo XX: Luchas sociales y conquistas laborales. San José: Editoral Universidad de Costa Rica, 2001. p. 22
- ^ a b c Rouquié, Alain/Arnaud, Hélène. Les Forces politiques en Amérique centrale. KARTHALA Editions, 1991. p. 39-40
- ^ Benjamin, Roger W.; Kautsky, John H.. Communism and Economic Development, in The American Political Science Review, Vol. 62, No. 1. (Mar. 1968), pp. 122.
External links
Election | Leader | First round | Coalition | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Position | Result | |||||
1936 | Manuel Mora Valverde | 4,594 | 5.3% | 3/3 | Lost | - | ||
1940 | Manuel Mora Valverde | 10,825 | 9.8% | 2/3 | Lost | - | ||
1944 | Teodoro Picado Michalski | 52,830 | 75.1% | 1/2 | Won | Victory Bloc | ||
1948 | Rafael Ángel Calderón Guardia | 44,438 | 44.7% | 2/2 | Lost | Victory Bloc | ||
1953 | Banned | |||||||
1958 | ||||||||
1958 | ||||||||
1962 | ||||||||
1966 | ||||||||
1970 | ||||||||
1974 | ||||||||
1978 | Rodrigo Gutiérrez Sáenz | 22,740 | 2.7% | 3/8 | Lost | United People | ||
1982 | Rodrigo Gutiérrez Sáenz | 32,186 | 3.3% | 4/6 | Lost | United People | ||
1986 | Rodrigo Gutiérrez Sáenz | 9,099 | 0.8% | 3/6 | Lost | Peoples' Alliance | ||
1990 | Víctor Daniel Camacho Monge | 9,217 | 0.7% | 3/7 | Lost | United People | ||
1994 | Did not participate | |||||||
1998 | Norma Vargas Duarte | 3,075 | 0.2% | 10/12 | Lost | United People | ||
2002 | Walter Coto Molina | 3,970 | 0.2% | 8/13 | Lost | Change 2000 | ||
2006 | Humberto Vargas Carbonell | 2,291 | 0.1% | 13/14 | Lost | United Left | ||
2010 | Did not participate | |||||||
2014 | ||||||||
2006 | Humberto Vargas Carbonell | 12,309 | 0.6% | 11/13 | Lost | Workers’ Party |
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