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The PP's motto was "Que el pueblo decida", (Let the people decide). The motto was obviously directed at Muñoz Marín, who denied Sánchez Vilella a chance to compete in a party primary. With Sánchez Vilella and Negrón López competing as candidates for different – but nearly identical – parties, the electorate split their votes.
Al pasar por el panteón, me encontré un calaverón. As I passed by the cemetery, I came across a skull. 43 La campana: the bell: Tú con la campana y yo con tu hermana. You with the bell and I with your sister. 44 El cantarito: the little water pitcher: Tanto va el cántaro al agua, que se quiebra y te moja las enaguas.
The Democratic Party (Spanish: Partido Demócrata, PD) is a conservative political party in Argentina created in 1931. Founded as the National Democratic Party (Spanish: Partido Demócrata Nacional, PDN), it was generally known simply as Conservative Party (Spanish: Partido Conservador). [7]
The Democratic Party of Puerto Rico (Spanish: Partido Demócrata de Puerto Rico) [4] is the local affiliate of the U.S. National Democratic Party in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Party membership consists of supporters of both the current Commonwealth status and those who favor statehood for Puerto Rico.
Ruben Costas, governor of Santa Cruz department, announced the party's formation in March 2013. [12] Twenty leaders gathered to launch the party in April 2013, including Costas, Beni governor Carmelo Lens and his predecessor Ernesto Suarez, Senator Bernard Gutierrez (PPB-Cochabamba), and Cochabamba council member Ninoska Lazarte.
The Democratic Party of the City of Buenos Aires (Spanish: Partido Demócrata de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires) is a provincial conservative political party in Buenos Aires City, Argentina. It was founded around 1930. It was member of the national Recreate for Growth electoral alliance led by Ricardo López Murphy.
Es el asunto al que te referías = "It is the matter to which you were referring" After multisyllabic prepositions and prepositional phrases ( a pesar de , debajo de , a causa de , etc.), however, el cual is often preferred entirely:
Following the adoption of the Sáenz Peña Law (which established universal and compulsory suffrage for native-born male citizens) in 1912, the conservative elite that had ruled Argentina saw itself in need of a strong, centralized and organic party in order to compete against the growing threat of the Radical Civic Union and the Socialist Party.