Country: | Peru |
Go on Country – Social Integration Party | |
Native Name: | Avanza País – Partido de Integración Social |
Abbreviation: | AvP |
President: | Aldo Borrero |
Foundation: | April 10, 2000 May 10, 2017 |
Headquarters: | Lima |
Seats1 Title: | Congress |
Seats2 Title: | Governorships |
Seats3 Title: | Regional Councillors |
Seats4 Title: | Province Mayorships |
Seats5 Title: | District Mayorships |
Website: | http://avanzapais.org.pe/ |
Go on Country – Social Integration Party (Spanish; Castilian: Avanza País – Partido de Integración Social) is a Peruvian political party. Founded in the northern city of Santiago de Chuco, La Libertad in 2000, the party nominated Ulises Humala, brother of future President Ollanta Humala, for the presidency in the 2006 general election, in the election, the party won 1.1% of the popular vote but no seats in the Congress of the Republic. The presidential ticket itself attained 0.2%, placing fourteenth nationally and subsequently lost its registration.
In 2020, almost 15 years since its last participation in a general election, economist Hernando de Soto registered in the party in order to run for the presidency at the 2021 general election.[1] He placed fourth in the election.[2] [3]
In early 2005, the party registered in the National Elections Jury and participated in the 2006 general election, launching Ulises Humala as its presidential nominee.[4] At the legislative elections held on 9 April 2006, the party won 1.1% of the popular vote but no seats in the Congress of the Republic. The presidential ticket itself attained 0.2%, placing fourteenth nationally.[5]
After losing its formal registration as a political organization, the party began a re-founding stage on May 10, 2017, culminating in a new registration on the same year.[6]
In the legislative election held on 26 January 2020, the party won 2.5% of the popular vote but no seats in the Congress of the Republic, as it failed to pass once again the 5% electoral threshold.[7] In the legislative election held on 11 April 2021, the party won 7.5% of the popular vote and 7 seats in the Congress of the Republic.
In December 2021, Hernando de Soto left the party following a dispute for its control between Aldo Borrero Rojas, the leader of the party, and Edwin de la Cruz Ponce, the general secretary, who was previously removed but continued to denounce his removal.[8] [9]
Go on Country described itself as a syncretic party in support of social democracy and social conservatism upon its founding, while Infobae described it as ultranationalist in 2006. However, since Hernando de Soto’s presidential run in 2021, the party moved to the other side of the political spectrum, embracing free markets and libertarianism. According to Georgetown University political scientist Eliana Carlín, de Soto was the one who chose the party for his election run, and the party welcomed him due to his international prominence in the economic academia. In Carlin's opinion, the party is an "electoral vehicle" that reached an agreement with de Soto and that "they are not interested in ideology".[10]
The party does not have an official stance on social issues as it once did, as can be evidenced by the fact that the respective leading figures for de Soto's presidential campaign, Instituto Politico para la Libertad Peru (IPL) vice president, Beltrán Gomez Hijar, and IPL member and congressman Alejandro Cavero, have supported pro-LGBT and pro-choice causes, whereas congresswoman Adriana Tudela, daughter of former Vice President Francisco Tudela, is opposed to abortion.[11] [12]
Representatives of the party signed in 2023 the Madrid Charter, an anti-leftist manifesto organized by the conservative Spanish party Vox.[13] [14] [15]
Go on Country, in a journalistic column of RPP, was accused of surrogacy due to the incorporation of members who had no relationship with the party months prior.[16] Despite this, party president Pedro Cenas rejected the notion of his party functioning as a surrogate and stated that "politics is not a commodity, but an act of faith and integration".[17]
Year | Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage | Outcome | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Ulises Humala | 157x157px | Advance Country – Social Integration Party | 24,518 | 14th | ||
2021 | Hernando de Soto | 145x145px | Advance Country – Social Integration Party | 1,674,201 | 4th |
Year | Votes | % | Seats | / | Position | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | 122,653 | 1.1% | Extra-parliamentary | |||
2020 | 373,113 | 2.5% | Extra-parliamentary | |||
2021 | 969,059 | 7.5% | 7 | Minority |