Nationalist Republican Alliance | |
Native Name: | Alianza Republicana Nacionalista |
Native Name Lang: | es |
Abbreviation: | ARENA |
Leader1 Title: | President |
Leader1 Name: | Carlos García Saade[1] |
Founder: | Roberto D'Aubuisson |
Founded: | 30 September 1981 |
Registered: | 4 December 1981 |
Headquarters: | Prolongación Calle Arce, entre 45 y 47 av N. #2429. Col. Flor Blanca, San Salvador, El Salvador |
Youth Wing: | Nationalist Republican Youth |
Membership Year: | 2019 |
Membership: | 127,543[2] |
Ideology: |
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Position: | Center-right[3] [4] to right-wing Historical: Far-right |
Regional: | Union of Latin American Parties[5] |
International: | International Democracy Union[6] |
Colors: |
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Slogan: |
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Anthem: | Marcha de ARENA |
Seats1 Title: | Seats in the Legislative Assembly |
Seats2 Title: | Municipalities |
Seats3 Title: | Seats in PARLACEN |
Flag: | Alianza Republicana Nacionalista.svg |
Flag Title: | Party flag |
Flag Alt: | Flag of the Nationalist Republican Alliance |
Website: | https://arena.org.sv |
Country: | El Salvador |
The Nationalist Republican Alliance (Spanish; Castilian: Alianza Republicana Nacionalista, abbreviated ARENA) is a conservative, center-right[3] [4] to right-wing political party of El Salvador. It was founded on 30 September 1981 by retired Salvadoran Army Major Roberto D'Aubuisson. It defines itself as a political institution constituted to defend the democratic, republican, and representative system of government, the social market economy system and nationalism.
ARENA controlled the National Assembly of El Salvador until 1985, and its party leader Alfredo Cristiani was elected to the presidency in 1989. ARENA controlled the presidency from 1989 until 2009. The party gained a plurality in the Legislative Assembly in 2012.
The Nationalist Republican Alliance was founded on 30 September 1981 during the Salvadoran Civil War. Its founding leader was Roberto D'Aubuisson, a former major in the Salvadoran Army who was most well-known for commanding various death squads and ordering the assassination of Archbishop Óscar Romero in 1980. At the time, ARENA was considered to be a far-right political party.
The party's initial membership primarily consisted of members of the (MNS) and the (FAN) opposed to the ruling Revolutionary Government Junta (JRG) and the preceding government of the National Conciliation Party (PCN).[7]
The party arose in response to "the insurgency of the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front, FMLN, a group that united peasant farmers, unionists and intellectuals, which tried, through arms, to overthrow the dictatorship and to install a state regime inspired by the governments of revolutionary Cuba and Sandinista Nicaragua".
The ideology the party claims to believe in is a system of democratic and representative government, emphasizing individual rights, the family as the nucleus of society and the respect for private property.
In February 2007, three ARENA politicians were murdered in Guatemala, including Eduardo D'Aubuisson, the son of party founder Roberto D'Aubuisson, in what was considered by the police as a crime related to drugs.[8] [9]
In 2009, ARENA took out a full-page ad in a Salvadoran newspaper calling on President Mauricio Funes to recognise the interim Honduran government of Roberto Micheletti installed after the military had expelled President Manuel Zelaya.
On 21 July 2022, Gustavo López Davidson, the leader of ARENA from August 2019 to February 2020, committed suicide amidst an ongoing investigation against him for embezzlement and arms trafficking.[10] [11]
From 2021 to 2024, the party was the second largest in the Legislative Assembly. Following the election of Nuevas Ideas' Nayib Bukele, the party has lost members of its party delegation to the ruling party.[12]
The highest authority of the party ARENA is the Comité Ejecutivo Nacionalista (COENA, "Nationalist Executive Committee"), which consists of 13 members. The members must be re-elected annually through the General Assembly of ARENA members.
In addition to the COENA, there are 14 Directors-in-Chief, one for each department and departmental councils called "Juntas Directivas Conjuntas" to coordinate political work in their respective department. In each department, a director is chosen who works with a specific member of COENA. The director's role is to organize and co-ordinate electoral campaigns and help the councils form party structures in the municipalities of their departments.
On 19 February 2013, Jorge Velado assumed the position as president of COENA, in a party leadership shake-up aimed at re-energizing a stale organization tainted by its association with the violent death squads of the 1980s, widespread corruption and the switch to the U.S. dollar as the national currency.
At the legislative elections held on 16 March 2003, the party won 32.0% of the popular vote and 27 out of 84 seats in the Legislative Assembly. ARENA's successful candidate in El Salvador's 2004 presidential election was Antonio Saca. On 21 March 2004, Saca defeated Schafik Hándal, the candidate of the left-wing Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), by a margin of 58% to 36% with 70% turnout. He was sworn in as president the following 1 June.
In the 12 March 2006 legislative election, the party won 39.4% of the popular vote and 32 out of 84 seats. At the 18 January 2009 legislative elections, the party received 38.55% of the vote, and again won 32 of the 84 seats.
On 15 March 2009, ARENA candidate Rodrigo Ávila lost the presidential election to Mauricio Funes of the FMLN. After elections, the party president was changed to Alfredo Cristiani.
On 9 March 2014, Salvador Sánchez Cerén of FMLN narrowly defeated the ARENA candidate Norman Quijano by 0.2% in a run-off vote in a controversial election.[13]
ARENA also lost both 2019 presidential election and 2021 legislative election dominated by Nuevas Ideas, the party of current president Nayib Bukele.[14] [15] In 2024 election, ARENA got only two seats in the Legislative Assembly, while Bukele's party Nuevas Ideast got supermajority.[16]
Election | Candidate | First round | Second round | Result | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||
1982 | 17 | Lost | |||||
1984 | 376,917 | 651,741 | |||||
1989 | 505,370 | Elected | |||||
1994 | 641,108 | 818,264 | |||||
1999 | 614,268 | ||||||
2004 | 1,314,436 | ||||||
2009 | 1,284,588 | Lost | |||||
2014 | 1,047,592 | 1,489,451 | |||||
2019 | 857,084 | ||||||
2024 | 177,881 | [17] |
Election | Votes | % | Position | Seats | +/– | Status in legislature | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | 430,205 | 29.28% | 2nd | 19 | ||||
1985 | 286,665 | 29.70% | 6 | |||||
1988 | 447,696 | 48.10% | 1st | 18 | ||||
1991 | 466,091 | 44.33% | 8 | |||||
1994 | 605,775 | 45.03% | 0 | |||||
1997 | 396,301 | 35.40% | 11 | |||||
2000 | 436,169 | 36.04% | 1 | |||||
2003 | 446,233 | 31.90% | 2nd | 1 | ||||
2006 | 620,117 | 39.40% | 7 | |||||
2009 | 854,166 | 38.55% | 2 | |||||
2012 | 620,117 | 39.40% | 2 | [18] | ||||
2015 | 885,374 | 38.90% | 1st | 2 | [19] | |||
2018 | 886,365 | 41.72% | 5 | [20] | ||||
2021 | 305,108 | 12.22% | 2nd | 23 | [21] | |||
2024 | 227,357 | 7.29 | 2nd | 12 | [22] |