1932 Costa Rican general election explained

Country:Costa Rica
Flag Year:state
Election Date:14 February 1932
Module:
Embed:yes
Election Name:Presidential election
Type:presidential
Previous Election:1928 Costa Rican general election
Previous Year:1928
Next Election:1936 Costa Rican general election
Next Year:1936
Image1:Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno.jpg
Nominee1:Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno
Party1:National Republican Party (Costa Rica)
Popular Vote1:35,408
Percentage1:46.65%
Party2:Republican Union
Color2:4169e1
Popular Vote2:22,077
Percentage2:29.09%
Image3:3x4.svg
Party3:Republican Party (Costa Rica)
Popular Vote3:17,316
Percentage3:22.82%
President
Before Election:Cleto González Víquez
Before Party:National Union Party (Costa Rica)
After Election:Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno
After Party:National Republican Party (Costa Rica)

General elections were held in Costa Rica on 14 February 1932.[1]

Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno of the National Republican Party won the presidential election, whilst the party also won the parliamentary election, in which they received 47% of the vote.[2] Voter turnout was 64%.[3]

Campaign

In 1931 Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno was proclaimed in absentia presidential nominee in the National Republican Party’s convention, where an incident happens; four people shout "Long live the Communist Party!"[4]

When informed he has been elected candidate Jiménez said he would consider it. He was reluctant, he had withdrawn from politics to his farm, saying he would accept only if he had enough citizen support and economic support from others. The diverse republican factions (all claiming to be heirs of the historic Republican Party of Máximo Fernández) were divided looking for candidates. Alberto Echandi Montero of the Agricultural Party and León Cortés Castro of the Republican were rumored as possible candidates, but in the end they decided not to run.

The plenipotentiary minister in the United States, Manuel Castro Quesada, asked for a license and returns to the country with political aspirations. This generated a protest inside the cabinet of Cleto González Víquez that voted in favor of dismissing Castro, with a negative vote from the Secretary of Public Safety and son-in-law of González, Arturo Quirós Carranza. The matter is brought into the public light, which provokes the resignation of the secretaries who led the ousting of Castro; Tomás Soley Güell, Gregorio Escalante and Octavio Beeche. Gonzalez's resignation was rumored, but it did not happen.

The oppositionist Leon Cortes raised strong accusations against the government and against Castro whom he accused of being a puppet of the government. Castro replied:

Following the scandal and the ministerial crisis, Jiménez Oreamuno announced that he would not be pursuing his candidacy. This generated new interested in politics. The Agricultural, Republican and Constitutional parties offer the candidacy to Carlos María Jiménez Ortiz, who nevertheless declines.

Castro Quesada is a candidate for the Republican Union Party,[5] supported by the presidents Máximo Fernández Alvarado and Alfredo González Flores, bankers, ranchers (including future presidential candidate Fernando Castro Cervantes), intellectuals and the vestiges of the Reformist Party. On the other hand, Jiménez Oreamuno accepts the candidacy finally on July 16, which generates a manifestation of spontaneous celebration in Cartago. He accepted after reaching an agreement with Echandi and Cortés, his former political adversaries.

Meanwhile, the Republican Club selects Carlos María Jiménez as its candidate. In addition, the new Nationalist Party of the businessman of German descent, Maximiliano Koberg Bolandi, participates.

The campaign was impregnated with attacks referring to the actions of the parties during the Tinoquista coup of 1917. Jiménez Oreamuno was accused of not having been a real opponent of Tinoco, while Castro Quesada and his ally González Flores (the president overthrown by Tinoco), Jiménez accused them of seeking US intervention.

Jorge Volio Jiménez affirms to be in favor of returning to the public vote (which had been abolished in 1925 and replaced by the secret vote) what many liberals consider a step backwards in democratic reforms. Volio also affirms to be in favor of the Female Suffrage to which Jiménez is opposed assuring that the women are not freethinkers and they will vote by who says the Church.

Results

Parliament

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Nohlen, p166
  3. Nohlen, p156
  4. Book: Oconitrillo García. Eduardo. Cien años de política costarricense: 1902-2002, de Ascensión Esquivel a Abel Pacheco.. 2004. EUNED. 9789968313605.
  5. Book: Rodríguez Vega. Eugenio. Costa Rica en el siglo veinte. 2004. EUNED. 9789968313834.