Alternative Democratic Pole Explained

Country:Colombia
Alternative Democratic Pole
Native Name:Polo Democrático Alternativo
Colorcode:yellow
Youth Wing:Polo Jóven
President:Alexander López Maya
Leader1 Title:Senate leader
Leader1 Name:Iván Cepeda Castro
Merger:Independent Democratic Pole
Democratic Alternative
Position:Left-wing
Colours: Yellow
Headquarters:Bogotá, Colombia
Regional:São Paulo Forum
National:Historic Pact for Colombia
Seats1 Title:Chamber of Representatives
Seats2 Title:Senate
Website:www.polodemocratico.net

The Alternative Democratic Pole (Spanish: Polo Democrático Alternativo or PDA) is a left-wing political party in Colombia, active from 2005 to the present. In 2022 it was successful at the polls and formed the Government of Colombia.

It was founded as a political alliance of the Independent Democratic Pole (PDI) and the Democratic Alternative (AD) in December 2005. Both parties opposed the neoliberal economic program, securitization and militarization of Colombia under then-President Álvaro Uribe. Subsequently, it was the only parliamentary party to declare opposition to the government of Juan Manuel Santos, and then joined the opposition against the government of Ivan Duque.

As of 2009, a considerable number of PDA politicians were still former guerrilla fighters who gave up armed struggle and demobilized during the late 1980s and early 1990s. And by 2012, a considerable part of PDA politicians including the former guerrilla fighters were more alligned with the Green Party,[1] the Movimiento Progresistas,[2] or Marcha Patriótica,[3] than the PDA.

Political development

The PDI and AD initially had their own pre-candidates for the 2006 presidential race. PDI had nominated Antonio Navarro (former leader of M-19) and AD had nominated Carlos Gaviria.

In a primary election held on March 12, 2006, Gaviria won the presidential nomination of the PDA.

In the simultaneous legislative elections of 2006, the party won 9 out of 166 Deputies and 11 out of 100 senators.

At the presidential elections of 28 May 2006, Carlos Gaviria came second with 22.04% of the vote, 2,613,157 votes.[4] This was the highest ever result for a left-wing candidate in Colombia's history. Thus, the party replaced the long-standing Liberal Party as the country's second force and main opposition party.

After the election, the PDA was successful in gaining the support of groups representing the indigenous movement affiliated with the coalition. The guerrilla group National Liberation Army (ELN) (at its fourth national congress) commented favorably on the PDA's electoral performance and declared that political action should take precedence over armed struggle. PDA's own founding doctrine repudiates armed guerilla politics: "We oppose war and the exercise of violence as means of political action".[5]

Later the PDA further consolidated its organization and gained support on a local level. In October 2007, the PDA's candidate, Samuel Moreno Rojas won the mayoral election in Colombia's capital Bogotá.

In the 2010 congressional election, PDA's support declined. It won 7.8% of votes and 8 of 100 seats in the Senate, and 5.9% of the vote and 4 of 164 seats in the House of Representatives, demoting it to the sixth rank among parliamentary parties. Before the election, a faction of the PDA had split off and joined the Green Party.

Clara Lopez was the party's candidate for the 2014 presidential election;[6] [7] she placed fourth in the first round of the election, receiving 1,958,414 votes, representing 15.23%.[8]

For the 2022 presidential and parliamentary election, the party joined forces with other left-wing and centre-left parties to form the Historic Pact for Colombia (Spanish PHxC) alliance, whose candidates Gustavo Petro and PDA member Francia Márquez, were victorious in the second round of the presidential election, making them the first leftists to assume the Presidency and Vice-Presidency in Colombian history. In the parliamentary elections, PHxC candidates, including PDA members, won the most votes in both the Chamber of Representatives and Senatorial elections; in both chambers seats are awarded by proportional representation.

Electoral history

Presidential elections

Election yearCandidate
  1. votes
% voteResultNote
2006Carlos Gaviria Díaz2,609,41222.04% (2nd) Defeated
2010Gustavo Petro1,331,2679.14% (4th) Defeated
2014Clara López Obregón1,958,41415.23% (4th) Defeated
2018Sergio Fajardo4,602,91623.78% (3rd) Defeated
2022Gustavo Petro11,291,98650.44% (1st) Winnercoalition with Historic Pact for Colombia

Legislative elections

Election YearHouse of RepresentativesSenate
VotesPercentageSeatsVotesPercentageSeats
2006677,9647,66 (#5)563,0609,71 (#5)
2010563,555 5,86 (#6)824,9487,82 (#6)
2014414,346 3,8 (#10)541,1453,78 (#7)
2018416,766 3,0 (#7)736,3674,80 (#7)
2022With Historic Pact for ColombiaWith Historic Pact for Colombia

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Diario. El Espectador. El M19 está apoderándose del Partido Verde.
  2. News: Diario. El Universal. Gustavo Petro renuncia a filas del Polo Democrático.
  3. News: Revista. Semana. Partido Comunista "sí está fuera del Polo": Comité Ejecutivo Nacional.
  4. National Registry of Civil State, results of the 2006 presidential election. http://www.registraduria.gov.co/resprelec2006/0528/index.htm
  5. Web site: Partido. Polo Democrático Alternativo. Ideario de Unidad. 2015-04-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20150415161924/http://www.polodemocratico.net/index.php/nuestro-partido/ideario-de-unidad. 2015-04-15. dead.
  6. News: Clara López es la candidata a la Presidencia por el Polo Democrático . El Tiempo . Bogotá, Colombia . November 9, 2012 . March 1, 2014. es.
  7. News: Clara López, candidata del Polo para presidenciales de 2014 . El Espectador . Bogotá, Colombia . November 9, 2012 . March 1, 2014. es.
  8. Web site: Resolución No. 10368: Por la cual se establece el calendario Electoral para las elecciones de Presidente y Vicepresidente de la República (primera vuelta) para el período Constitucional 2014–2018 . Registraduría Nacional del Estado Civil . October 10, 2013 . March 1, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131208161853/http://www.registraduria.gov.co/IMG/pdf/res_10368.pdf . December 8, 2013 . dead .