Blue Party (Dominican Republic) Explained

Blue Party
Native Name:Partido Azul
Leader1 Title:Historic leaders
Headquarters:Santo Domingo
Ideology:National liberalism
Radicalism
Secularism
Position:Centre
Colors: Blue
Country:the Dominican Republic

The Blue Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Azul), also known as the National Liberals[1] and nicknamed together The Tailless (Spanish; Castilian: Los Bolos), was a historical Dominican political party from the late 19th century to the mid 20th century. Ulises Heureaux and Juan Isidro Jimenes Pereyra were the main leaders of this party in the 20th century,[2] and were opposed to or Red Party, led by Horacio Vásquez.[3] [4]

The name of the party came from the popularity of rooster fighting in the late 19th and early 20th century, and Bolos literally means Tailless. The Blue Party was banned in 1930 after Rafael Trujillo’s coup. Founded by intellectuals, Santo Domingo liberals, merchants and large peasant proprietors, it does not technically have an ideological heir, although the Liberal Party of the Dominican Republic tends to identify with a similar type of liberalism.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Tejada, A. M. (1975). El partido rojo, el partido azul y el partido verde. Eme Eme : Estudios Dominicanos, 3(16), 21-42
  2. Web site: Camino a la intervención norteamericana. Fundacion Global. Spanish. 2010-12-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20101028053047/http://www.dominicanaonline.org/portal/espanol/cpo_intervencion.asp#. 2010-10-28. dead.
  3. Web site: El bipartidismo histórico en RD. Listin Diario. Soto Jimenez. Jose Miguel. Spanish. 2008-11-14. 2010-12-23.
  4. Web site: Los Partidos Politicos Dominicanos. ArribaSantoDomingo.com. Sierra. Jimmy. Spanish. 2010-12-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20110707163717/http://www.arribasantodomingo.com/partidos.php#. 2011-07-07. dead.