Liberal Alliance (Chile) Explained

After the 1891 Chilean Civil War and the dissolution of the coalition between conservatives, radicals and anti-balmacedist liberals the Radical Party, the Democrat Party and several liberal organizations formed the Liberal Alliance (Spanish; Castilian: Alianza Liberal). It was the main opposer of the Coalition. Along with the Coalition, it was one of the two parties of the bipartisan system of that period, the era of the Chilean parliamentary republic. The Alliance would later be called the Liberal Union, during a period in which it was a union of the radicals, the democrats, and all liberal groups (liberals, liberal democrats, nationals and the doctrinary liberals). It dissolved in 1925.

Presidential candidacies supported by the Liberal Alliance

Electoral Results (1891-1924)

Members of the parliament

Year of election of parliament members189118941897190019031906190919121915191819211924
Liberal Alliance546626423853526253676875
Coalition402868525641435665514843
Max number of parliament seats94949494949495118118118116118

Senators

Year of election of senators189118941897190019031906190919121915191819211924
Liberal Alliance2322141697171821242423
Coalition91018162322151916131314
Max number of senators323232323229323737373737

See also

Sources

The original version of this article draws heavily on the corresponding article in the Spanish-language Wikipedia, which was accessed in the version of 8 June 2007.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia . 2021 . 6th . Arturo Alessandri . https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=lkh&AN=134480477&lang=en-gb&site=eds-live&scope=site . EBSCOHost.