Democratic Party of the New Left explained

Democratic Party of the New Left
Native Name:Partido Democrático de la Nueva Izquierda
President:Cristina Almeida
Secretary General:Diego López Garrido
Founded: [1]
Split:United Left
Merged:Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE)
Ideology:Social democracy
Ecologism
Progressivism
National:PSOE (1999-2001)
Seats1 Title:Congress of Deputies (1997-2000)
Seats2 Title:Congress of Deputies (2000-2001)
Seats2:Within the PSOE
Seats3 Title:European Parliament (1999-2001)
Seats3:Within the PSOE
Affiliation1 Title:Union affiliation
Affiliation1:Comisiones Obreras (CCOO)
State:Spain

Democratic Party of the New Left (in Spanish: Partido Democrático de la Nueva Izquierda; PDNI) was a social democratic and ecologist political party in Spain. It was created in 1996[1] by a group that split from the United Left (IU) led by Cristina Almeida and Diego López Garrido.

History

PDNI was founded after the "Nueva Izquierda" (New Left, NI) internal current of IU that was critical with the leadership of Julio Anguita and his confrontational attitude with the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) were expelled from the governing bodies of the coalition. This happened after the MPs linked with this current distanced themselves from the rest of the parliamentary group and refused to reject a labor reform that created a new type of contract, with a cheaper dismissal than the ordinary ones.[2] The MPs of NI left IU and remained in Congress as part of the Mixed Group.[3] In September of the same year the party was officially founded.

In 1999, PDNI sealed an electoral agreement with the Socialists to participate jointly in the next elections. Thanks to this agreement PDNI elected three MPs in Congress, about twenty in the autonomic parliaments, two in the European Parliament, and about 300 town councilors PDNI in socialist lists.

In October 2000, the party integrated itself organically into the structures of the PSOE.[4] This decision was ratified at the Second Federal Congress of the organization, in March 2001 (65% of the vote in favour).[5] With this decision, the party disappeared and fully integrated itself into the Socialist Party. However, small sectors did not accept this decision and formed two small independent ecologist parties, Green Network in Madrid and Green Left - Initiative for the Valencian Country.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lansford, Tom. 2013. Political Handbook of the World 2013. CQ Press. 1343. 978-1452258256.
  2. Rodolfo Serrano. IU expulsa de su ejecutiva a Nueva Izquierda y reclama las actas a sus tres diputados. EL País, Madrid 17 JUN 1997.
  3. Rodolfo Serrano. Nueva Izquierda se pasa al Grupo Mixto. Madrid 28 SEP 1997.
  4. Anabel Díez. http://elpais.com/diario/2000/10/07/espana/970869625_850215.html El País, Madrid 7 OCT 2000.
  5. Carlos E. Cué. Nueva Izquierda aprueba su disolución para ingresar en el PSOE con más del 32% de votos en contra. El País, Madrid 1 ABR 2001.
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20120902183340/http://www.alfonselmagnanim.com/MEDIA/dicci_pol_val.pdf Biografías de políticos valencianos. Peris García, Joan Francesc, page 439