Radical Party of Chile (2018) explained

Radical Party of Chile
Native Name:Partido Radical de Chile
Leader:Carlos Maldonado
Secretary General:Mauricio Andrews
Leader3 Title:Chief of Deputies
Leader3 Name:Alexis Sepúlveda
Foundation: (as Social Democrat Radical Party)
Merger:Radical Party and Social Democracy Party
Headquarters:Miraflores 495 Santiago
Youth Wing:Juventud Radical
Membership Year:2023
Membership:26,327 (10th)[1]
National:Everything for Chile
Democratic Socialism
New Social Pact (2021)
Constituent Unity (2020 to 2021)
Regional:COPPPAL
International:Socialist International[2]
Colours: Red
Seats1 Title:Chamber of Deputies
Seats2 Title:Senate
Seats3 Title:Regional Councils
Seats4 Title:Mayors
Seats5 Title:Communal Councils
Website:partidoradical.cl
Country:Chile

The Radical Party of Chile (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Radical de Chile), is a classical radical[3] political party in Chile. The party has also been referred to as liberal,[4] social-liberal,[5] [3] and social-democratic.[6]

The party is a member of Socialist International and participant in the Permanent Conference of Political Parties of Latin America and the Caribbean.

History

The party was founded as the Social Democrat Radical Party (Spanish; Castilian: Partido Radical Socialdemócrata)[7] on 18 August 1994 out of a union between the Radical Party and the Social Democracy Party, both of which had received poor results in the parliamentary elections. The party re-adopted its historic name in 2018.[8]

The party supported Ricardo Lagos in the 1999–2000 presidential elections, who won 48.0% in the first round and was elected with 51.3% in the second round. At the 2001 legislative elections, the party won as part of the Concertación six out of 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and no seats in the Senate. This changed at the 2005 legislative elections to seven and one, respectively. In 2009, it won five congress seats and one senate seat.

Executive board

The current party executive assumed in August 2018.

Position Name
PresidentCarlos Maldonado
First Vice PresidentAlberto Robles MP
Second Vice PresidentMarcela Hernando
Third Vice PresidentFernando Meza MP
Vice President for WomenJacqueline Castillo
Secretary-GeneralMauricio Andrews
Under-secretary GeneralLeonardo Cubillos
Secretary for Control and OrganisationOscar Araya
Mario Perez
Secretary for RegionsEduardo Vivanco
Electoral SecretaryRosa Fuenzalida
International SecretaryRicardo Navarrete
Secretary for CommunicationsRobert Guevara

Leaders of the PR (1994–present)

Leader Titles in office Took office Left officeNotes
Anselmo Sule Senator for O'Higgins (until 1998)18 August 1994 7 June 2002
(died in office)
First directly elected leader of the PRSD.
Orlando Cantuarias (acting) None7 June 2002 25 October 2002Acting leader after Sule's death
Patricio TomboliniUnder-Secretary for Transport25 October 2002 7 January 2003[9] Second directly elected leader. Resigned after a Corruption scandal (Caso Coimas) as the First Deputy Leader.
Orlando Cantuarias (acting) None7 January 2003 3 April 2004[10] Acting leader after Tombolini's resignation as the First Deputy Leader.
Augusto Parra (acting) Senator appointed by the President of Chile as a former chancellor of the University of Concepción3 April 2004 19 April 2004Appointed as Acting leader by the PRSD National Committee
Enrique Silva Cimma19 April 2004[11] 28 February 2005Appointed as Leader by the PRSD National Committee
José Antonio Gómez Urrutia Senator for Antofagasta28 February 2005 30 December 2009[12] [13] Third directly elected leader. Resigned after the 2009 Chilean parliamentary election
Fernando Meza (acting)MP for Toltén valley30 December 200921 January 2010[14] Acting leader after Gomez's resignation as the First Deputy Leader.
José Antonio Gómez UrrutiaSenator for Antofagasta21 January 201015 March 2014[15] Appointed as Leader by the PRSD National Committee
Ricardo Navarrete (acting)None15 March 201416 May 2014[16] Acting leader after Gomez's resignation as the First Deputy Leader. He resigned to be Chilean ambassador in Colombia.
Iván Mesías Lehu (acting)None16 May 20144 August 2014Acting leader after Navarrete's resignation as the Second Deputy Leader.
Ernesto VelascoNone4 August 2014[17] IncumbentFourth directly elected leader of the party.

Election results

Due to its membership in the Concert of Parties for Democracy, the party has endorsed the candidates of other parties on several occasions. Presidential elections in Chile are held using a two-round system, the results of which are displayed below.

Presidential elections

+ Elections for President of ChileDateCandidatePartyRound IRound IIResult
%%
1999Ricardo LagosPPD48.051.3
2005Michelle BacheletPS46.053.5
2009Eduardo Frei Ruiz-TaglePDC29.648.4
2013Michelle BacheletPS46.762.2
2017Alejandro GuillierIndependent22.745.4
2021Yasna ProvostePDC11.6

See also

References

Attribution

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Total de afiliados a partidos políticos – Servicio Electoral de Chile .
  2. Web site: Partidos miembros de la Internacional Socialista . es . Member parties of the Socialist International . 16 April 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141129012732/http://www.lainternacionalsocialista.org/viewArticle.cfm?ArticlePageID=931 . 29 November 2014.
  3. Web site: Análisis del Discurso del Partido Radical Socialdemócrata . es . Analysis of the Radical Social Democratic Party Speech . Daniela Andrea . Fuentes . María Ovalle . Jara . Karim Pavez . Carpim . Sofía . Pollmann . 2002.
  4. Book: John L. Rector Ph.D. . The History of Chile, 2nd Edition . 2019 . 23 . ABC-CLIO .
  5. Web site: Radicalismo Chileno: Historia y Doctrina del Partido Radical . Peter G. . Snow . https://web.archive.org/web/20150923191815/http://www.blest.eu/biblio/snow/cap4.html . 2015-09-23.
  6. Alberto . Aggio . 2008 . La Cultura Política del Radicalismo Chileno en clave de la Revolución pasiva . es . The Political Culture of Chilean Radicalism in the Key of the Passive Revolution . Política y culturas políticas en América Latina . 70 . 1134-2277 . 141–168 . 41320072.
  7. Book: Siavelis, Peter . 2006 . Chapter 1: Accommodating Informal Institutions and Democracy in Chile . Helmke . Gretchen . Levitsky . Steven . Informal Institutions and Democracy: Lessons from Latin America . Baltimore . Johns Hopkins University Press . 44 . 9780801883514 . 62282010.
  8. Web site: 2018-08-24 . Extracto . https://web.archive.org/web/20180828172942/https://www.servel.cl/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/20180827_RO_0323_2018_EXTRACTO_REFORMA_ESTATUTOS_PARTIDO_RADICAL_SOCIALDEMOCRATA.pdf . 28 August 2018 . 2022-12-21 .
  9. Web site: . Tombolini renunció a la presidencia del PRSD . 7 January 2003 . 20 May 2012.
  10. Web site: Renuncia presidente del PRSD por traspié en Consejo Nacional . Nacion.cl . 4 April 2004 . 28 June 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140819083729/http://www.lanacion.cl/noticias/pais/notas/renuncia-presidente-del-prsd-por-traspie-en-consejo-nacional/2004-04-04/140816.html . 19 August 2014 .
  11. Web site: . Silva Cimma quedó en la presidencia del PRSD . 20 May 2004 . 18 March 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140819085245/http://www.lanacion.cl/noticias/site/artic/20040419/pags/20040419213632.html . 19 August 2014 .
  12. Web site: Tras dura crítica de Frei, Gómez renuncia a presidencia del Partido Radical . EMOL . 30 December 2009 . 16 March 2014.
  13. Web site: José Antonio Gómez renunció a la presidencia del Partido Radical . EMOL . 30 December 2009 . 16 March 2014.
  14. Web site: Meza oficializa renuncia y Gómez reasumirá presidencia del PRSD . EMOL . 21 January 2010 . 16 March 2014.
  15. Web site: Ricardo Navarrete asume presidencia del PRSD . Partido Radical Socialdemócrata . 16 March 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150512180559/http://www.partidoradical.cl/v1/?p=4473 . 12 May 2015 .
  16. Web site: Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores de Chile - Presidenta Bachelet designa nuevo Embajador en Colombia.
  17. http://impresa.elmercurio.com/Pages/NewsDetail.aspx?dt=2014-08-05&dtB=05-08-2014%200:00:00&PaginaId=2&bodyid=3 Ernesto Velasco asume presidencia del PRSD