From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Democratic Action (Venezuela)
Political party in Venezuela
Political party in Venezuela
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| logo_size | 200 |
| colorcode | |
| name | Democratic Action |
| native_name | Acción Democrática |
| logo | Acción Democrática.svg |
| flag | Ve-ad.gif |
| president | (de jure) |
| Rubén Antonio Limas Telles (de facto) | |
| leader2_title | General Secretary |
| leader2_name | Henry Ramos Allup (*de jure*) |
| José Bernabé Gutiérrez (*de facto*) | |
| founder | Rómulo Betancourt |
| foundation | |
| headquarters | La Florida, Caracas, Venezuela |
| ideology | Social democracy |
| Left-wing nationalism | |
| Progressivism | |
| **Historical:** | |
| Socialism | |
| position | Centre-left |
| national | Democratic Alliance |
| Unitary Platform | |
| international | Socialist International |
| affiliation1_title | Regional affiliation |
| affiliation1 | COPPPAL |
| seats1_title | National Assembly |
| seats1 | |
| seats2_title | Governors |
| seats2 | |
| seats3_title | State legislatures |
| seats3 | |
| seats4_title | Mayors |
| seats4 | |
| colors | White (official) |
| website | |
| country | Venezuela |
Rubén Antonio Limas Telles (de facto) José Bernabé Gutiérrez (de facto) Left-wing nationalism Progressivism Historical: Socialism Unitary Platform
Democratic Action (, AD) is a Venezuelan social democratic and centre-left political party established in 1941. The party played an important role in the early years of Venezuelan democracy, leading the government during Venezuela's first democratic period (1945–1948). A decade of dictatorship under Marcos Pérez Jiménez followed, which saw AD excluded from power. With the advent of democracy in 1958, four Presidents of Venezuela came from Acción Democrática from the 1950s to the 1990s during the two-party period with COPEI.
Since 2000, the party's general secretary has been Henry Ramos Allup. In the 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary election, AD backed the opposition electoral alliance Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), which managed to grasp a supermajority. AD won 26 constituency representatives out of 167 seats in the unicameral National Assembly, making it the second-largest party in opposition to Nicolás Maduro. In July 2018, AD left the Democratic Unity Roundtable opposition coalition.
History
Early years: 1931–1958
The party had a chaotic early history. The Agrupación Revolucionaria de Izquierda (ARDI) was founded in 1931 in Colombia by Rómulo Betancourt and other exiled Venezuelans. In 1936 this became the Movimiento de Organización Venezolana (ORVE), which was then dissolved into the Partido Democrático Nacional (PDN). Finally, in 1941, after Isaías Medina Angarita legalized all political parties in Venezuela, Acción Democrática was founded by Betancourt and others. These included Rómulo Gallegos, Andrés Eloy Blanco, Luis Beltrán Prieto, Juan Oropeza, Luis Lander, Raúl Ramos Jiménez, Medardo Medina Febres, Enrique H. Marín, Rafael Padrón, Fernando Peñalver, Luis Augusto Dubuc, César Hernández, José V. Hernández and Ricardo Montilla. Gallegos was a highly prestigious writer, author of the iconic novel, Doña Bárbara (1929), while Eloy Blanco was a celebrated Venezuelan poet and witty humorist.
After the October 1945 revolution, Betancourt was President of Venezuela until Rómulo Gallegos won the 1947 election, generally believed to be the first free and fair elections in Venezuelan history. The party won a vast majority of seats in the municipal elections the following year. Gallegos governed until being overthrown in the 1948 Venezuelan coup d'état. The 1945–48 period is known as the trienio. Many of AD's founders and early members went into exile during the subsequent dictatorship of Marcos Pérez Jiménez, and returned for the restoration of democracy in 1958.
Political dominance: 1958–1999
After the restoration of democracy, AD joined the 1958 Puntofijo Pact, initiating a forty-year period of two-party dominance by AD and COPEI. Betancourt won the 1958 election, and Raúl Leoni won the following 1963 elections. AD also won in 1973 (Carlos Andrés Pérez), 1983 (Jaime Lusinchi), and 1988 (Carlos Andrés Pérez again). From 1958 to 1999, AD's candidates only lost four out of nine presidential elections (two to COPEI, in 1968 and 1978, two to third-party candidates in 1993 and 1998), and one of those occurred during a major split in AD.
Splits
The 1968 presidential election was shaped by the internal split of Democratic Action, with a substantial leftist faction breaking away to form the Movimiento Electoral del Pueblo (MEP). The split was the result of Luis Beltrán Prieto Figueroa's victory in the 1967 AD primary election, only to see his nomination overturned by the party's reformist social democrat faction (led by Betancourt) in favor of Gonzalo Barrios, with the Betancourt faction considering Prieto too far left.
Prieto Figueroa, at the time President of the Venezuelan Senate as well as President of AD, split from AD over the affair along with a substantial number of his supporters. The result was that the 1968 election marked AD's first-ever electoral loss, when COPEI's Rafael Caldera won the Presidency with less than 30% of the vote, just ahead of AD's Barrios. Prieto Figueroa attained nearly 20%, attaining fourth place behind the Unión Republicana Democrática's Miguel Ángel Burelli Rivas.
An earlier split, in 1960, saw the Revolutionary Left Movement break away from AD. Its subsequent engagement in armed struggle against the government meant the split posed less of a partisan problem compared the later MEP split.
Chávez/Maduro era: 1999–present
The Puntofijo Pact and AD-COPEI duopoly over Venezuelan politics collapsed in the early 1990s in the face of a severe economic and political crisis, culminating in the impeachment of AD member and President of Venezuela Carlos Andrés Pérez for corruption and the 1993 election of former COPEI leader Rafael Caldera on a National Convergence coalition platform. Caldera's failure to resolve the economic crisis created the political environment for the 1998 election of Hugo Chávez. In the 2000 elections for the new National Assembly of Venezuela, AD won 29 out of 165 seats; four additional seats were won by an AD-COPEI alliance. At the 2005 legislative elections Democratic Action staged an electoral boycott and consequently did not win any seats.
During the 2010 and 2015 elections, AD was part of the Democratic Unity Roundtable. In the 2015 elections where the Roundtable won the National Assembly in a 109-seat majority, AD won 25 seats. The Roundtable parties boycotted the 2017 elections to the Constituent Assembly and participated in an unofficial referendum against its formation. In July 2018, AD left the Democratic Unity Roundtable, citing "operative problems inside the organization" and difficulties in electing the new secretary general of the coalition.
Acción Democrática's Secretary General is Henry Ramos Allup. The trade union confederation CTV is closely linked to AD. AD is a member of the Socialist International, and a member of COPPPAL.
Venezuelan Presidents from AD
| President | Term | Form of entry | Occupation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[File:Rómulo Betancourt, 1946.JPG | 50px]] | **Rómulo Betancourt** | 1945–1948 | Coup d'état |
| [[File:Rómulo Gallegos 1940s (cropped).jpg | 50px]] | **Rómulo Gallegos** | 1948 | Direct elections |
| [[File:Foto oficial Rómulo Betancourt 1959 (cropped-gray).jpg | 50px]] | **Rómulo Betancourt** | 1959–1964 | Direct elections |
| [[File:Raúl Leoni 1965.jpg | 50px]] | **Raúl Leoni** | 1964–1969 | Direct elections |
| [[File:Carlos Andrés Pérez - World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 1989.jpg | 50px]] | **Carlos Andrés Pérez** | 1974–1979 | Direct elections |
| [[File:Lusinchi 89.JPG | 50px]] | **Jaime Lusinchi** | 1984–1989 | Direct elections |
| [[File:Carlos Andrés Pérez - World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 1989.jpg | 50px]] | **Carlos Andrés Pérez** | 1989–1993 | Direct elections |
| [[File:Ramón J. Velásquez, 2009.jpg | 50px]] | **Ramón José Velásquez** | 1993–1994 | Interim president |
References
References
- (6 February 2021). "Rubén Limas (AD-Gutiérrez): Una verdadera unidad nacional debe estar por encima de todo cálculo y de toda mezquindad…".
- (13 September 2021). "AD de Ramos Allup no pactará con "usurpadores de su tarjeta"". El Universal.
- (16 June 2020). "TSJ suspendió directiva de AD y designó una mesa ad hoc presidida por Bernabé Gutiérrez". El Nacional.
- "Is Social Democracy Possible in Latin America?".
- (2006). "Historical Dictionary or Socialism". Scarecrow Press.
- (1979-01-01). "Partido Acción Democrática. Postulados doctrinarios {{!}} Nueva Sociedad".
- Rivas, Darlene. (2002). "Missionary Capitalist: Nelson Rockefeller in Venezuela". University of North Carolina Press.
- Derham, Michael. (2010). "Politics in Venezuela: Explaining Hugo Chávez". Peter Lang.
- "¿Qué es Acción Democrática? » Su Definición y Significado [2022]".
- "Venepress".
- Buckman, Robert T.. (2012). "The World Today Series, 2012: Latin America". Stryker-Post.
- (2018-07-05). "Ramos Allup confirmó la salida de Acción Democrática de la MUD". [[El Nacional (Caracas).
- David L. Swanson, Paolo Mancini (1996), ''Politics, media, and modern democracy: an international study of innovations in electoral campaigning and their consequences'', Greenwood Publishing Group. p244
- "Opposition parties pull out of Venezuela elections". The Irish Times.
- (2017-08-05). "Clashes as new body meets in Venezuela". BBC News.
- [[Socialist International]] [http://www.socialistinternational.org/viewArticle.cfm?ArticlePageID=931 MEMBER PARTIES of the SOCIALIST INTERNATIONAL], accessed 10 June 2012
- {{in lang. es [[COPPPAL]], [http://www.copppal.org.ar/institucional/partidos-miembros Partidos Miembros] {{webarchive. link. (5 June 2014, accessed 10 June 2012)
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Democratic Action (Venezuela) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report