Union Party for the People explained

Union Party for the People
Split:Liberal Party of Colombia
Headquarters:Bogotá, Colombia
International:Liberal International (observer)
Country:Colombia
Native Name:Partido de la Unión por la Gente
President:Dilian Francisca Toro
Leader1 Title:Leader
Leader1 Name:Juan Manuel Santos
National:Team for Colombia
Seats1 Title:Chamber of Representatives
Seats2 Title:Senate
Seats3 Title:Governors
Seats4 Title:Mayors
Colours: Orange

The Union Party for the People (Spanish; Castilian: Partido de la Unión por la Gente), or Party of the U (Spanish; Castilian: Partido de la U), is a liberal political party in Colombia. The Party is led by former president Juan Manuel Santos.

After supporting the presidencies of Álvaro Uribe, Juan Manuel Santos and Iván Duque, the party is currently part of the majority of left-wing president Gustavo Petro.[1]

History

The Party was formed in 2005, with the objective of uniting various congressional supporters of President Alvaro Uribe, also known as Uribistas, into one political party, and to provide a political platform for the 2006 Colombian presidential elections. Most of its members defected from the Colombian Liberal Party, yet it failed to unite all Uribistas: in particular the Radical Change (Cambio Radical) refused to join.

In 2006, the party took part in the parliamentary elections, in which it won 30 out of 166 deputies and 20 out of 100 senators. Three years later, more than half of the congressmen from the Radical Change Party changed their standing towards the Party of the U, which resulted in it becoming Colombia's largest political party.

For the 2010 presidential elections, Party of the U chose former Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos as a presidential candidate and Governor Angelino Garzon as a vice presidential candidate. Juan Manuel Santos was elected with 69% of the vote in the runoff. The Party also obtained 27 seats in the Senate in the 2010 congressional elections.

In 2012, the Uribistas and former President Alvaro Uribe along with Francisco Santos Calderon decided to form their own separate party, the Democratic Center. This was the result of constant intervention and criticism from former President Alvaro Uribe towards his presidential successor Juan Manuel Santos. The announcement of peace negotiations with the FARC and the Colombian Government was a partial factor that led to the fragmentation. Nevertheless, the party did not suffer high-level defections towards the Democratic Center. It came first in the Senate elections, followed in second place by the Democratic Center led by Alvaro Uribe who then became a Senator.

In 2014, President Juan Manuel Santos was re-elected for a second term, in a close race against former cabinet colleague and ex-Finance Minister Oscar Ivan Zuluaga of the Democratic Center.[2]

The party has yet to officially announce its electoral strategy for 2018, but it is widely expected to form an electoral alliance with the Liberal Party.[3]

Ideological platform

The Programmatic Declaration (Declaración Programática) is the official ideological platform of the party.

Since 2012, the party has been an observer member of the Liberal International.[5]

Electoral history

Presidential elections

Election YearCandidateFirst RoundSecond RoundResult
VotesPercentageVotesPercentage
2006Supported Álvaro Uribe7,363,42162.35 (#1)
2010Juan Manuel Santos6,802,04346.68 (#1)9,028,94369.13 (#1)
2014Juan Manuel Santos3,301,81525.69 (#2)7,816,98650.95 (#1)
2018Germán Vargas Lleras1,407,8407.28 (#4)
2022Federico Gutiérrez5,069,44823.94 (#3)

Legislative elections

Election YearHouse of RepresentativesSenate
VotesPercentageSeatsVotesPercentageSeats
20061,453,35316.75 (#2)1,015,52317.49 (#1)
20102,469,48926.11 (#1)2,804,12325.84 (#1)
20142,297,78619.61 (#1)2,230,20819.11 (#1)
20181,840,48112.74 (#4)1,853,05412.80 (#5)
20221,506,5678.87 (#7)1,439,57912.80 (#6)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Osorio . Camila . 2022-07-20 . Gustavo Petro logra a última hora la mayoría en el Congreso . . es-CO.
  2. News: Santos re-elected in Colombian poll. BBC News. June 16, 2014.
  3. Web site: Liberales buscarían coalición para presidenciales del 2018. Casa Editorial El. Tiempo. El Tiempo. January 3, 2017.
  4. Web site: Crowe . Darcy . Colombia Elects Santos as President . The Wall Street Journal . June 21, 2010 . September 13, 2012.
  5. http://www.liberal-international.org/editorial.asp?ia_id=2351 Partido de la U – Colombia