United Left (Spain) Explained

Country:Spain
United Left
Native Name:Izquierda Unida
Leader1 Title:General Coordinator
Leader1 Name:Antonio Maíllo
Foundation:April 1986
2 November 1992
Membership Year:2023
Membership: 18,000[1]
Ideology:Communism[2]
Socialism
Republicanism[3]
Position:Left-wing to far-left
Youth Wing:Área de Juventud de Izquierda Unida
Wing3 Title:LGBT wing
Wing3:ALEAS
Seats1 Title:Congress of Deputies
Seats2 Title:Spanish Senate
Seats5 Title:Local Government
Seats4 Title:Regional Parliaments
Seats3 Title:European Parliament
National:The Left (2009–2014)
Plural Left (2011–2015)
Plural Left (2014–2019)
Popular Unity (2015–2016)
Unidas Podemos (2016–2023)
Sumar (since 2023)
European:Party of the European Left
Colours: Red
Website:izquierdaunida.org
International:IMCWP

United Left (Spanish; Castilian: Izquierda Unida pronounced as /es/, IU) is a federative political movement in Spain that was first organized as a coalition in 1986, bringing together several left-wing political organizations, grouped primarily around the Communist Party of Spain.[4]

IU was founded as an electoral coalition of seven parties, but the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) is the only remaining integrated member of the IU at the national level. Despite that, IU brings together other regional parties, political organizations, and independents.[4] It currently takes the form of a permanent federation of parties. IU took part of the Unidas Podemos coalition and the corresponding parliamentary group in the Congreso de los Diputados between 2016 and 2023. Since January 2020, it participated for the first time in a national coalition government, with one minister. For the 2023 general election, IU took part of the Sumar platform.[5]

History

Following the electoral failure of the PCE in the 1982 (from 10% to 4%), PCE leaders believed that the PCE alone could no longer effectively challenge the electoral hegemony of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) on the left.[4] With this premise, the PCE began developing closer relations with other left-wing groups, with the vision of forming a broad left coalition.[4] IU slowly improved its results, reaching 9% in 1989 (1,800,000 votes) and nearly 11% in 1996 (2,600,000 votes). The founding organizations were: Communist Party of Spain, Progressive Federation, Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain, PASOC, Carlist Party, Humanist Party, Unitarian Candidacy of Workers, and Republican Left.

In contrast to the PCE prior to the formation of IU, which pursued a more moderate political course, the new IU adopted a more radical strategy and ideology of confrontation against the PSOE.[6] IU generally opposed cooperating with the PSOE, and identified it as a "right-wing party", no different from the People's Party (PP).[4]

After achieving poor results in the 1999 local and European elections, IU decided to adopt a more conciliatory attitude towards the PSOE, and agreed to sign an electoral pact with the PSOE for the upcoming general election in 2000.[4] They also adopted a universal policy in favor of cooperating with the PSOE at local level.[4]

IU currently has around 18,000 members, a decrease from 70,000 in 2012.[1] [7]

Composition

PartyNotes
Communist Party of Spain (PCE)
The Dawn Marxist Organization (La Aurora (OM))Joined in 1998
Republican Left (IR)Left in 2002, rejoined in 2011
Unitarian Candidacy of Workers (CUT)Left in 2015, rejoined in 2018
Feminist Party of Spain (PFE)Joined in October 2015, expelled in February 2020 due to stances on transgender rights.
bgcolor=Humanist Party (PH)April–July 1986
Carlist Party (PC)Expelled in 1987
Progressive Federation (FP)Left in December 1987
Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain (PCPE)Left in 1988
Socialist Action Party (PASOC)Dissolved in 2001
Red Current (CR)Joined in 2002, left in 2004
Anti-capitalist Left (IA)Joined in 1995, left in 2008
Coalition for Melilla (CpM)Joined in 2008, left in 2013
Open Left (IzAb)Formed in February 2012, left in December 2018.

Federations of IU

Izquierda Unida Los Verdes - Convocatoría por Andalucía (United Left/The Greens - Assembly for Andalusia)

Izquierda Unida Aragón (United Left of Aragon)

Izquierda Xunida de Asturies (United Left of Asturias)

Esquerra Unida de les Illes Balears (United Left of the Balearic Islands)

Izquierda Unida Canaria (Canarian United Left)

Izquierda Unida de Cantabria (Cantabrian United Left)

Izquierda Unida de Castilla-La Mancha (United Left of Castilla-La Mancha)

Esquerra Unida Catalunya (United Left Catalonia, Founded in July 2019; suspended in June 2019 Esquerra Unida i Alternativa)[8]

Izquierda Unida de Castilla y León (United Left of Castile and León)

Izquierda Unida de Ceuta (United Left of Ceuta)

Izquierda Unida - Los Verdes: Ezker Anitza (United Left - The Greens: Plural Left)

Izquierda Unida Extremadura (United Left Extremadura)

Esquerda Unida (United Left of Galicia)

Izquierda Unida La Rioja (United Left-La Rioja)

Izquierda Unida-Madrid (United Left-Madrid).[9] Izquierda Unida de la Comunidad de Madrid (United Left of the Community of Madrid) was expelled in 2015. The new federation, IU-M, was created in 2016.[10]

Izquierda Unida - Federación de Melilla (United Left - Melilla Federation)

(United Left - Greens of the Region of Murcia)

Izquierda Unida de Navarra - Nafarroako Ezker Batua (United Left of Navarra)

Esquerra Unida del País Valencià (United Left of the Valencian Country)

Leaders

NamePeriod
Gerardo Iglesias1986
Julio Anguita1986–1999
Francisco Frutos1999-2001
Gaspar Llamazares2001–2008
2008–2016
Alberto Garzón2016–2023
Antonio Maíllo2024–present

Electoral performance

Cortes Generales

Cortes Generales
ElectionLeading candidateCongressSenate
Votes%Seats+/–Seats+/–
1986Gerardo Iglesias935,5044.65th30Opposition
1989Julio Anguita1,858,5889.13rd101Opposition
19932,253,7229.63rd11Opposition
19962,639,77410.53rd30Opposition
2000Francisco Frutos1,263,0435.43rd130Opposition
2004Gaspar Llamazares1,284,0815.03rd31Confidence and supply
2008969,9463.83rd30Opposition
2011Cayo Larawith Plural Left51Opposition
2015Alberto Garzónwith Popular Unity50New election
2016with Unidos Podemos62Opposition
Confidence and supply
Apr-2019with Unidas Podemos32New election
Nov-2019with Unidas Podemos00Coalition (PSOEUP)
2023with Sumar00Coalition (PSOESumar)

European Parliament

European Parliament
ElectionLeading candidateVotes%Seats+/–
1987Fernando Pérez Royo1,011,8305.34th
1989961,7426.14th1
1994Alonso Puerta2,497,67113.43rd5
19991,221,5665.83rd5
2004Willy Meyer643,1364.14th2
2009with The Left0
2014with Plural Left2
2019Sira Regowith UPCE2
2024Manu Pinedawith Sumar2

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: La hegemonía de la izquierda también se mide en cifras: Sumar alcanza los 70.000 inscritos, en Podemos votan 55.000 e IU tiene 18.000 afiliados. Por David. Fernández. November 27, 2023. infobae.
  2. Web site: Spain. Parties and Elections in Europe. Wolfram. Nordsieck. 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20181023082620/http://www.parties-and-elections.eu/spain.html. 23 October 2018. 18 February 2019. live. dmy-all.
  3. Web site: European Social Survey 2012 - Appendix 3 (in English). European Science Foundation. 1 January 2014. 6 May 2014.
  4. Web site: Electoral incentives and organizational limits. The evolution of the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) and the United Left (IU) (in English). Institute of Political and Social Sciences. 2002. 11 May 2014.
  5. Web site: RTVE.es . 2023-06-09 . IU alcanza un acuerdo con Sumar para concurrir juntos a las elecciones . 2023-08-09 . RTVE.es . es.
  6. Topaloff, L (2012) Political Parties and Euroscepticism, pp192-193
  7. http://www.aecpa.es/uploads/files/recp/02/textos/08.pdf Entre coalición y partido, la evolución de modelo organizativo en IU, Luis Ramiro
  8. Following the tradition of the Spanish left since the formation of the Unified Socialist Party of Catalonia (PSUC) in 1936 (when communists and socialists joined forces in Catalunya), IU doesn't have any organization of its own in Catalonia. Until 1998, the referent of IU in Catalonia was Initiative for Catalonia (Iniciativa per Catalunya, now known as IC-V). But IC eventually broke relations with IU. A split in PSUC followed, and a new Catalan alliance, United and Alternative Left (Esquerra Unida i Alternativa, EUiA), was formed as the new Catalan referent of IU.
  9. http://www.eldiario.es/politica/direccion-IU-desvincular-federacion-madrilena_0_398610178.html IU rompe "a todos los efectos" con su federación madrileña.
  10. http://www.publico.es/politica/militancia-iu-madrid-elige-mauricio.html La militancia de IU Madrid elige a Mauricio Valiente y Chus Alonso al frente de la nueva formación.