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More; Campanella; Saint-Simon; Buonarroti; Saint-Just; Owen; Fourier; Cabet; Leroux; Sue; Blanqui; Proudhon; Greeley; Herzen; Bakunin; Marx; Kingsley; Engels; Wallace ...
El Estado Catalán La Alianza de los Pueblos El Iris del Pueblo La Igualdad La Discusión El Pueblo Español: Ideology: Federal republicanism Progressivism Radical liberalism Republicanism Secularism [1] Social liberalism Factions: Cantonalism [2] Catalanism Localism Mutualism (Francesc Pi i Margall) Political position: Left-wing: Colours Purple
[1] for the think tank Policy Network and in his subsequent book The Strange Non-Death of Neo-Liberalism. The term may also denote a general conception of a post-democratic system that may involve other structures of group decision-making and governance than the ones found in contemporary or historical democracy. [2] [3] [4]
At the time both main political parties allowed various candidates to stand, and while Callejas gained the highest vote of any candidate with 42.6%, the PLH candidates gained 51.5% of the total vote, and therefore it was their most voted for candidate, José Azcona del Hoyo, with 27.5% of the vote, who became president.
Dissidents expelled from the Liberal Party of Puerto Rico (then led by Antonio R. Barceló) founded the PPD in 1938. [6] Many of them were part of the old socialist movement of Puerto Rico. The dissident faction, initially calling themselves the Partido Liberal, Neto, Auténtico y Completo (" Clear, Net, Authentic, and Complete Liberal Party ...
The Party of the Democratic Revolution (Spanish: Partido de la Revolución Democrática, pronounced [paɾˈtiðo ðe la reβoluˈsjon demoˈkɾatika], PRD) is a state-level [15] social democratic [16] [17] political party in Mexico (previously national, until 2024). [18]
FDN poster, published after the election. Slogan reads: Everyone in the defense of the popular will! The People voted - Cárdenas won. The “National Democratic Front” (Spanish: Frente Democrático Nacional) was a coalition of Mexican left-wing political parties created to compete in the 1988 presidential elections, being the immediate predecessor of the Party of the Democratic Revolution ...
Issue 140 (2/2007) of Patria Nueva mentioning Jaime Hurtado, the MPD's assassinated Presidential candidate The principles of the party can be summarized in its slogan: the "conquest of a popular government, patriotic, democratic, and revolutionary that resolutely applies its program and lays the groundwork for the conquest of socialism."