Nationalist Liberal Party Explained

Nationalist Liberal Party
Native Name:Partido Liberal Nacionalista
Native Name Lang:Spanish
Flag:23Flag(Plain)R.svg
Colorcode:
  1. FF0000
Abbreviation:PLN
Chairman:-->
Founder:Anastasio Somoza García
Legalized:-->
Predecessor:Liberal Party
Headquarters:Managua
Ideology:Nominal:
Liberalism
De facto:
Authoritarianism
National conservatism
Personalism
Somocismo
Position:Right-wing to far-right
Colors: Red and Blue
Seats15:-->
Country:Nicaragua

The Nationalist Liberal Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Liberal Nacionalista, PLN) was a political party in Nicaragua.

When Anastasio Somoza García took power in 1936, the party aligned itself with the United States and other caudillos in Latin America, like Rafael Trujillo, Oswaldo López Arellano, and Fulgencio Batista.

From 1936 to 1979, the office of President of Nicaragua was held by members of the Nationalist Liberal Party. When the first phase of the Nicaraguan Revolution was won by the FSLN, the PLN was dissolved by the new government. Many Somoza loyalists later supported or joined Contras rebel groups.

History of the party

Whilst initially it still featured a liberal agenda (the Liberals having been one of the two main parties of Nicaragua since the 19th century along with the Conservatives), the Nationalist Liberal Party later developed into little more than a political vehicle for the kleptocracy of the Somoza clan.

The party suffered several splits: in 1944, opposing Anastasio Somoza García's intentions to re-run for the presidency, dissident party members such as Manuel Cordero Reyes, Roberto González Dubón, Carlos Morales, Gerónimo Ramírez Brown (minister of public education from 1939 to 1944) and Carlos Pasos formed the new Independent Liberal Party, that functioned for decades to come as a legal, centrist opposition party and briefly sided with the Sandinistas to overthrow Somoza Debayle and cement the victory of the Nicaraguan Revolution. In 1968, another group of members, led by Ramiro Sacasa Guerrero (former minister for labor), split from the Nationalist Liberal Party, disagreeing with Anastasio Somoza Debayle's ambition to re-run. They formed the Constitutionalist Liberal Movement, which later evolved into the Constitutionalist Liberal Party.[1]

The party was banned after the FSLN takeover in 1979.[2]

Notable members

Electoral history

Presidential elections

ElectionParty candidateVotes%Result
1936Anastasio Somoza García112,81299.83%Elected
1947Leonardo Argüello Barreto104,80461.76%Elected
1950Anastasio Somoza García153,29775.63%Elected
1957Luis Somoza Debayle316,99889.25%Elected
1963René Schick408,13190.48%Elected
1967Anastasio Somoza Debayle380,16270.30%Elected
1974733,66291.71%Elected

National Assembly elections

ElectionParty leaderVotes%Seats+/–Position
1936112,812 99.83% 7 1st
1947104,804 61.76% 6 1st
1950153,297 75.63% 4 1st
1957316,998 89.25% 1st
1963408,131 90.48% 1st
1967380,162 70.30 7 1st
1972534,171 75.33% 25 1st
1974733,662 91.71% 18 1st

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: El Nuevo Diario . https://web.archive.org/web/20191002123928/https://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/opinion/256017-genesis-vida-movimiento-liberal-constitucionalista/ . 2019-10-02.
  2. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_World_Factbook_(1982)/Nicaragua The World Factbook (1982)/Nicaragua