National Party (Uruguay) Explained

National Party
Native Name:Partido Nacional
Leader:Luis Lacalle Pou
President:Macarena Rubio
Founder:Manuel Oribe
Headquarters:Juan Carlos Gómez 1384, Montevideo
Youth Wing:Juventud Partido Nacional
Position:Centre-right[1]
International:Centrist Democrat International[2]
Affiliation1 Title:Regional affiliation
Affiliation1:COPPPAL[3]
OCDA[4] (observer)
National:Coalición Multicolor
Seats1 Title:Chamber of Deputies
Seats2 Title:Senate
Seats3 Title:Intendencias
Seats4 Title:Mayors
Colors: Blue and White
Slogan:Spanish; Castilian: La unión nos hará fuerza ("Unity makes strength")
Country:Uruguay

The National Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Nacional, PN) also known as the White Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Blanco|links=no), is a major political party in Uruguay. Founded in 1836 by General Manuel Oribe, it is the country's oldest active political party, and along with the Colorado Party, its origin dates back to the establishment of Uruguay as an independent state.

Positioned on the centre-right of the political spectrum, the National Party is ideologically liberal, nationalist, Pan-Americanist and humanist.[5] [6] Considering the interim co-government of the Gobierno del Cerrito headed by Manuel Oribe, and the Defense Government from Montevideo led by the Colorado Joaquín Suarez, in the middle of the Uruguayan Civil War, and with the exception of the current administration of Luis Lacalle Pou, the PN has ruled the country for 35 years interruptedly throughout its history.[7] Although Manuel Oribe is recognized as the party's founder, Aparicio Saravia is considered its idealist and main historical caudillo.[8]

The National Party is a defender of decentralization, and its demographic base skews toward people living in rural areas.[9]

History

The identity of the National Party dates back to 10 August 1836, when the then president Manuel Oribe decreed the use of the white banner with the inscription "Defenders of the Laws", in the battle of Carpintería, Oribe faced the revolutionary army of Fructuoso Rivera and colored badges were used to distinguish between the parties.[10] For this reason, the National Party is also known as the "White Party."[11]

On 7 July 1872, the first Program of Principles was approved, in which respect for freedoms, the maintenance of peace as the supreme good for the Nation, the representation of minorities, the decentralization of the country, the strengthening of justice, and the promotio of education and instruction.

In March 2020, National Party's Luis Lacalle Pou was sworn as the new President of Uruguay, meaning Uruguay got the first conservative government after 15 years of left-wing leadership under the Broad Front coalition.[12]

Ideology and factions

Positioned on the center-right of the political spectrum, the Uruguay National Party encompasses both conservative and liberal tendencies.[13] Ideologically, it has been described as liberal, nationalist, Pan-Americanist and humanist. Additionally, in the party there is a lack of internal agreement on social issues such as the legalisation of abortion, euthanasia, the age of criminal responsibility and same-sex marriage.[14] However, over time, several sectors and the party's youth wing have demonstrated a favorable position on LGBT rights.[15]

Throughout its history, the National Party has had a strong base of votes in the interior of the country and support from rural voters, due to its historical policy of decentralization of power, compared to the capital's centralist and unitary policy of the Colorado Party.[16]

The National Party is composed of numerous sectors that encompass different ideologies that range from the center-right to the right-wing. The three main factions are the centrist and Christian democratic National Alliance, the economic liberal and conservative Herrerism, and the social-liberal Wilsonist Current.[17]

Electoral history

Presidential elections

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Uruguay: El presidente Lacalle Pou y su partido, fortalecidos tras las elecciones locales. 28 September 2020.
  2. Web site: Parties.
  3. Web site: Países y Partidos Miembros de la COPPPAL.
  4. Web site: Partidos | ODCA.cl.
  5. Web site: 2012-01-06. Nuestro Partido > Declaración de Principios. 2021-12-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20120106140215/http://www.partidonacional.com.uy/cgi-bin/DeclaracionPrincipios.asp. 6 January 2012.
  6. Web site: 2019-11-25. El centroderecha acaricia el poder en Uruguay. 2021-12-08. ELMUNDO. es.
  7. Web site: Observador. El. El misterio de los blancos. 2021-12-08. El Observador.
  8. Web site: Aparicio Saravia. 2021-12-08. www.partidonacional.org.uy. es-es.
  9. Web site: ElPais . Triunfo del Partido Nacional: después de 93 años volvió al poder . 2022-03-05 . Diario EL PAIS Uruguay . 2 August 2019 . spanish.
  10. Web site: Identidad e historia del Partido Nacional: para construir futuro, recordar quiénes somos y de dónde venimos.
  11. Web site: Portal FACTUM Uruguay. 2021-12-08. portal.factum.uy.
  12. Web site: Uruguay ushers in first conservative government in 15 years.
  13. Serna . Miguel . 2020-12-29 . La ola conservadora en Uruguay: claves de la derrota electoral de la izquierda en 2019 . Cahiers des Amériques latines . 1 . es . 94 . 229–252 . 10.4000/cal.11685 . 1141-7161. free .
  14. Web site: 2009-03-25 . No al matrimonio homosexual y sí a la unión concubinaria . No to same-sex marriage and yes to concubinal union . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090325053129/http://www.elpais.com.uy/090322/pnacio-406205/nacional/-no-al-matrimonio-homosexual-y-si-a-la-union-concubinaria- . 2009-03-25 . 2024-04-07 . Diario El País . es . Montevideo.
  15. Web site: Debate interno en el Partido Nacional por despliegue de banderas de la diversidad en sede . Internal debate in the National Party over the display of rainbow flags at its headquarters. . 2024-04-07 . Diario El País . 6 October 2020 . es.
  16. Web site: Supervielle . Daniel . 2024-02-17 . Tras el renacer de los colorados . 2024-04-07 . El Observador.
  17. Web site: Silva . Joaquín . 2023-05-23 . Wilsonismo y Herrerismo, la discusión por las etiquetas que divide las aguas en el Partido Nacional . 2024-04-07 . Diario El País.