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Copei

Political party in Venezuela


Political party in Venezuela

FieldValue
colorcode
nameCOPEI
logoLogo of the Copei.png
logo_size200px
leaderJuan Carlos Alvarado
(ad-hoc)
Roberto Enríquez
(de jure)
secretary_generalJuan Carlos Alvarado
(ad-hoc)
Robert García
(de jure)
founderRafael Caldera
foundation13 January 1946
headquartersAvenida La Gloria, El Bosque, Caracas
youth_wing*Juventud Demócrata Cristiana*
ideologySocial conservatism
Christian democracy
Economic liberalism
positionCentre to centre-right
internationalCentrist Democrat International
nationalDemocratic Alliance
regionalChristian Democrat Organization of America
seats1_titleNational Assembly
seats1
seats2_titleStates' Governors
seats2
seats3_titleMayors
seats3
colorsDark green (customary)
Lime green
website
countryVenezuela

(ad-hoc) Roberto Enríquez (de jure) (ad-hoc) Robert García (de jure) Christian democracy Economic liberalism Lime green COPEI, also referred to as the Social Christian Party () or Green Party (), is a Christian democratic party in Venezuela. The acronym stands for Comité de Organización Política Electoral Independiente (), but this provisional full name has fallen out of use. The party was influential during the twentieth century as a signatory of the Puntofijo Pact and influenced many politicians throughout Latin America at its peak.

History

20th century

COPEI was founded on 13 January 1946 by Rafael Caldera. COPEI, Democratic Action (AD) and Democratic Republican Union (URD) signed the Puntofijo Pact in October 1958, establishing themselves as the dominant political parties in the country. Signatories and supporters of the Pact stated that it was created to preserve democracy and to share governorship between parties. Critics believed that the Pact allowed signing parties to limit control over Venezuela's government to themselves. URD would later leave the pact in 1962 following Cuba's removal from the Organization of American States, leaving governing of Venezuela to COPEI and AD. The Puntofijo system ultimately created a network of patronage for both parties.

Caldera was elected president in December 1968 and for the first time in Venezuela's history, opposition parties transferred power peacefully. COPEI was also the first Venezuelan political party to assume power peacefully on its first attempt. The only other COPEI member to become president of Venezuela was Luis Herrera Campins, from 1979 to 1983. However, Herrera Campins fell from grace due to a drop in oil revenue, leading to AD candidate Jaime Lusinchi winning the presidency in 1984.

Governing by COPEI and AD would continue through the rest of the century. Dissatisfaction with the established governmental system of patronage increased, culminating in the 1992 Venezuelan coup d'état attempts led by Hugo Chávez. For the 1993 Venezuelan general election, COPEI passed over choosing Caldera as their candidate. Caldera would afterwards win the election through his newly founded National Convergence party. Soon after being elected, Caldera freed Chávez, who became Caldera's successor following the 1998 Venezuelan presidential election.

21st century

With the election of Chávez, Venezuela entered into a period of a dominant-party system led by his United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV). In the 2000 legislative elections COPEI won a meager five of 165 seats in the National Assembly, with the party receiving 5.10% of valid votes. In the 2005 legislative elections COPEI staged an electoral boycott and did not win any seats in the National Assembly. In the 2010 parliamentary election, COPEI was part of the broad oppositional Coalition for Democratic Unity and won eight of the 165 seats.

Prior to the 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary election, the pro-government Supreme Tribunal of Justice designated new leaders of COPEI, leading some to state that the party was infiltrated by the PSUV. By 2017, Caracas Chronicles said the party was "dying an undignified death" as infighting among leaders could not agree on a path for the party.

Presidents of Venezuela

PortraitPresident (Birth–Death)StateTerm of officeTerm3941
[[File:Rafael_Caldera_1969.jpgborder50px]]**Rafael Caldera** (1916–2009)Yaracuy11 March 196928 ([1968](1968-venezuelan-general-election))
[[File:Luis_Herrera_Campins.jpgborder50px]]**Luis Herrera Campins** (1925–2007)Portuguesa12 March 197930 ([1978](1978-venezuelan-general-election))

References

References

  1. (2021-08-31). "En 5 puntos: Plataforma Unitaria anuncia su participación en las regionales con la tarjeta de la MUD".
  2. (2021-08-31). "Plataforma Unitaria anuncia que participará en las elecciones del 21-N".
  3. Salojärvi, Virpi. (2016). "The Media in the Core of Political Conflict: Venezuela During the Last Years of Hugo Chávez's Presidency".
  4. (30 November 2007). "Q&A: Venezuela's referendum". [[BBC News]].
  5. (2003). "Christian Democracy in Latin America: Electoral Competition and Regime Conflicts". Stanford University Press.
  6. Linares, Rodrigo. (2017-03-27). "Requiem for COPEI".
  7. (2003). "The Rise and Decline of COPEI in Venezuela". Stanford University Press.
  8. "Document #22: "Pact of Punto Fijo," Acción Democrática, COPEI and Unión Republicana Democrática (1958) {{!}} Modern Latin America".
  9. Corrales, Javier. (2001-01-01). "Strong Societies, Weak Parties: Regime Change in Cuba and Venezuela in the 1950s and Today". Latin American Politics and Society.
  10. Kozloff, Nikolas. (2007). "Hugo Chávez: Oil, Politics, and the Challenge to the U.S.". Palgrave Macmillan.
  11. (2009-02-12). "Jóvito Villalba, URD y Margarita".
  12. Karl, Terry Lynn. (1987-01-01). "Petroleum and Political Pacts: The Transition to Democracy in Venezuela". Latin American Research Review.
  13. Buxton, Julia. (2005-07-01). "Venezuela's Contemporary Political Crisis in Historical Context". Bulletin of Latin American Research.
  14. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeD5L7sjOq4&t=3s Guillermo Aveledo Coll: Christians in Politics - YouTube]
  15. [[Dieter Nohlen. Nohlen, D]] (2005) ''Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume II'', p555 {{ISBN. 978-0-19-928358-3
  16. [[Hugo Chávez#Mar07. Marcano and Tyszka 2007]]. pp. 107–08.
  17. [[Hugo Chávez#Jon07. Jones 2007]]. pp. 182–86.
  18. (12 February 1999). "Venezuela's 1998: Presidential, Legislative, and Gubernatorial Elections: Election Observation Report". International Republican Institute.
  19. Musil, Pelin Ayan. (2015-01-02). "Emergence of a Dominant Party System After Multipartyism: Theoretical Implications from the Case of the AKP in Turkey". [[Taylor & Francis]].
  20. "Elecciones 30 de Julio de 2000 VOTOS DIPUTADOS LISTAS A LA ASAMBLEA NACIONAL".
  21. Forero, Juan. (30 November 2005). "3 Anti-Chávez Parties Pull Out of Election".
  22. (26 September 2010). "Divulgación Elecciones Parlamentarias - 26 de Septiembre de 2010".
  23. (2015-07-31). "Enrique Mendoza: Candidatos de Copei deben tener el aval de las direcciones regionales".
  24. For the purposes of numbering, a presidency is defined as an uninterrupted period of time in office served by one person. For example, [[Carlos Soublette]] was both the 8th and 10th President because the two periods where he was president were not consecutive. A period during which a vice-president temporarily becomes acting president under the Constitution is not a presidency, because the president remains in office during such a period.
  25. For the purposes of numbering, a term is a period between two presidential elections. Some terms might be longer than originally expected due to [[coup d'état]]s or the installation of military dictatorships, thus extending the time between two elections. Venezuela's unique history has allowed several presidents to serve during a single term, as well as some presidents, such as [[Jose Maria Vargas]], serving twice during a single term.
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