National Encounter Party Explained

Native Name:Partido Encuentro Nacional
Leader:Fernando Camacho
Foundation:26 October 1991
Ideology:Social democracy
Third Way
Position:Centre-left
Seats1 Title:Chamber of Deputies
Seats2 Title:Senate
Headquarters:Asunción
National:Concertación
Country:Paraguay

The National Encounter Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Encuentro Nacional, PEN) is a political party in Paraguay.

History

The National Encounter Movement was established on 26 October 1991. Prior to the 1993 elections the National Encounter Party was established as a coalition of the Revolutionary Febrerista Party, the Christian Democratic Party, Asuncion for All and a breakaway faction of the Colorado Party. The elections saw the party receive 17.9% of the national vote, becoming the country's third largest party with nine seats in the Chamber of Deputies and eight in the Senate. Together with the Authentic Radical Liberal Party (PLRA), it held a majority in the Chamber of Deputies opposed to the ruling Colorado Party. Its candidate in the presidential election, Guillermo Caballero Vargas, received 24.1% of the vote.

For the 1998 general elections the party formed an alliance with the PLRA named the Democratic Alliance, with the party's president, Carlos Filizzola, providing the alliance's vice-presidential candidate. However, the PEN was reduced to eight seats in the Chamber and seven in the Senate as the Colorado Party regained their majority in both houses, and the alliance's presidential candidate, Domingo Laino finished second with 43.9% of the vote.[1] In 2000 Filizzola, who had been the party's president from April 1996 to March 1999, led his Movimiento Participación Amplia, Integración Solidaridad (PAIS) faction out of the party to form the Party for a Country of Solidarity.[1] By the 2003 elections support for the party had dwindled, and it won only one seat in the Senate and none in the Chamber of Deputies, whilst its presidential candidate, Diego Abente Brun received just 0.6% of the vote. For the 2008 elections the party joined the Patriotic Alliance for Change, which won two seats in the Chamber.

Electoral history

Presidential elections

ElectionParty candidateVotes%Result
1993Guillermo Caballero Vargas262,40724.39%Lost
1998Supported Domingo Laíno (PLRA)703,37943.88%Lost
2003Diego Abente Brun8,7450.58%Lost
2008Supported Fernando Lugo (PDC) 766,50242.40%Elected

Chamber of Deputies elections

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–
1993199,05317.7% 9
1998681,91742.8% 26
200339,3722.7% 35
200814,2270.80%
2013108,6624.84% 2
201875,5143.18%

Senate elections

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–
1993203,21317.9% 8
1998661,764 42.1% 12
200331,2122.1% 19
200820,8431.19%
201378,4603.49% 1
201830,3651.29% 1

Notes

The Democratic Alliance was an alliance of the Authentic Radical Liberal Party and the National Encounter Party

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: . Senador Carlos Alberto Filizzola Pallarés . https://web.archive.org/web/20070515202306/http://www.senado.gov.py/?pagina=cv&id=53 . dead . 2007-05-15 . Spanish.