Liberals of Andorra explained

Country:Andorra
Abbreviation:L'A
UL
PLA
Liberals of Andorra
Native Name:Liberals d'Andorra
Founder:Marc Forné Molné
Foundation:1992
President:Cristina Rico[1]
Position:Centre-right[2]
Seats1 Title:General Council
Headquarters:Carrer de la Unió, Edifici Eland, 5è 3a AD500 Andorra la Vella
Native Name Lang:cat
International:Liberal International
European:Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
Website:www.liberals.ad

The Liberals of Andorra (Catalan; Valencian: Liberals d'Andorra, LA) is a conservative-liberal[3] political party in Andorra. It is a member of the Liberal International and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe.

History

The party was established as the Liberal Union in 1992 by Marc Forné Molné. In the 1993 elections it received 22% of the vote and won five seats, making it the second largest party in the General Council.[4] Although the party was in opposition after Òscar Ribas Reig formed a progressive coalition government, Ribas was forced out of office after losing a vote of no confidence and Forné became Prime Minister on 7 December 1994.[5]

After two votes of no confidence, Forné called early elections in 1997.[5] In the run-up to the elections the Union formed alliances with several local parties, including the Liberal Union–Liberal Group of Encamp, the Liberal Opinion Group (GOL), Unity and Renewal (UiR) and the Lauredian Union (UL), with the local parties contesting only at the parish level.[6] The Union won 16 seats of which GOL took four, UL two and the UiR two, with Forné remaining Prime Minister.

Shortly before the 2001 elections the party was renamed the Liberal Party of Andorra It won 46.1% of the popular vote and 15 seats, with Forné again remaining Prime Minister. In the 2005 elections the party lost another seat, but was still able to form a government, this time led by Albert Pintat. Pintat resigned the leadership, which passed to Joan Gabriel, before the 2009 elections.

In the elections the party was part of the Reformist Coalition alongside the Lauredian Union, Century 21, and two other political parties. The Coalition won 11 seats, whilst the Social Democrats won 14 seats and gained control of the government.

In the run up to the 2011 parliamentary election, the Liberal Party and the other members of the Reformist Coalition gave support to the Democrats for Andorra (DA). The new party chose Antoni Martí as leader and won the election on 3 April 2011 a landslide with 20 of the General Council's 28 seats.

Half way through the first term in office of Democrats for Andorra, a group of party activists started to actively work in order to run again separately in the 2015 elections.[7] They presented their new name, Liberals of Andorra, and they announced their intention to stand candidates in the next parliamentary election.[8]

In the 2015 parliamentary election held on 1 March 2015, the Liberal Party received 27.7% of the vote and 8 seats in the General Council.[9]

Election results

General Council elections

ElectionLeaderVotes%Seats+/–PositionStatus
1993Marc Forné Molné1,59122.02nd
19973,54340.5 11 1st
20014.73944.1 1 1st
20055,10041.2 1 1st
2009align=center Joan Gabriel i Estany4,74732.3 3 2nd
2011Did not run
2015align=center Josep Pintat Forné4,07327.7 82nd
2019align=center Jordi Gallardo Fernández2,21912.5 43rd
2023align=center Josep Maria Cabanes8934.7 4 5th

Local elections

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–Position
19951,53121.82nd
19993,18738.1 14 1st
20035.22447.7 27 1st
20076,07846.6 5 1st
2011Did not contest
20153,49826.1 102nd
20194,46931.4 34th

Notable members

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://liberals.ad/coneix-nos/elpartit/ L’executiva
  2. Book: Tom Lansford. Political Handbook of the World 2013. 15 April 2013. SAGE Publications. 978-1-4522-5825-6. 38.
  3. Book: Wolfgang Ismayr. Die politischen Systeme Westeuropas. 21 December 2013. Springer-Verlag. 978-3-322-97575-1. 762.
  4. [Dieter Nohlen|Nohlen D]
  5. Nohlen & Stöver, p166
  6. Nohlen & Stöver, p162
  7. Web site: El PLA comença les reunions per reactivar-se . Diari d'Andorra . December 18, 2011 . June 12, 2012 . April 2, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402130025/http://www.diariandorra.ad/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=17067 . dead .
  8. Web site: El PLA concorrerà en solitari a les generals del 2015 . Diari d'Andorra . March 4, 2012 . June 12, 2012 . April 2, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402102117/http://www.diariandorra.ad/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=18600 . dead .
  9. Web site: Eleccions al Consell General 2019.