List of political parties in Pulacan: Difference between revisions
Line 41: | Line 41: | ||
| [[File:Station yellow.svg|75px]] | | [[File:Station yellow.svg|75px]] | ||
|align=center|1954 | |align=center|1954 | ||
|Conservatism<br/>''Factions:''<br/>[[Kabaya'an]] | |Conservatism<br/>''Factions:''<br/>[[Kabaya'an]]<br/>anti-Kabaya'anism | ||
|Tepiltzin Tecuanhuehue | |Tepiltzin Tecuanhuehue | ||
|align=center|58 / 327 | |align=center|58 / 327 | ||
Line 55: | Line 55: | ||
|align=center|50 / 327 | |align=center|50 / 327 | ||
|Big tent | |Big tent | ||
|Founded | |Founded in 2011, the League was at first marginalized due to its association with the terrorist group known as the [[Djebe Liberation Army]]. When then-Chief Minister Iuitl Mogorosi moved to expand the Juwa majority via the 2022 snap election, they were upset by a huge loss of seats as many Ozerosi skeptics switched to the rising LLC, led by defecting Juwa faction leader Keabetswe Ngele. The surge brought the LLC into the mainstream, and the party continues to grow in popularity as a shake-up of the establishment system. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|style="background-color:#ADD8E6"| | |style="background-color:#ADD8E6"| |
Revision as of 07:04, 20 June 2023
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
The Union State of Pulacan is a multi-party democracy, with numerous regional parties holding tribal, class, and ideological loyalty. Though these parties are typically most active in the national-level Pulatec Union Legislative Assembly, some are active within the internal politics of the tribal nations, where they push for grassroots change through the dikgotla direct democratic system. The dominant party in the House of Delegates, the Republic's assigned lower house, elects a Chief Minister, who is then approved by the President to act as head of government and to form a cabinet. The Chief Minister is typically the leader or chief spokesman of the largest party in government.
Parties recognized by the Federal Election Certification Commission
These are all of the political parties registered with Federal Election Certification Commission and are eligible to run candidates in federal elections.
Parties currently represented in the House of Delegates
Name | Logo | Founded | Ideology | Leader | Delegates | Political position | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nguzo | 1966 | Kabaya'an Progressivism Factions: Social democracy Neoliberalism |
Moctezuma Tshireletso* | 92 / 327** | Center-left to left-wing | Formed in the south of Pulacan, Nguzo finds most of its loyalty around Cuicatepec and among the Ngwato people across the dikgosi lands. Formed from a merger of other southern center-left progressive parties, Nguzo stands to this day as the largest of Pulatec parties by active membership. Though made of different party-like factions, the Nguzo party base is broadly united around a progressive yet more business-friendly vision for Calpollism, Pulacan's economic system. Nguzo is also the mainstream party most strongly advocating for Kabaya'an, or the ideology of Ozerosi integration and close cooperation. | ||
Juwa | 1912 | Democratic socialism Union State primacy Factions: Soft anti-Kabaya'anism Cozauist socialism |
Iuitl Mogorosi | 77 / 327 | Center-left to left-wing | Named for the ShiMzanzi word for "Sun," the Juwa party is the largest party advocating stronger ties with Zacapican taking primacy over the AON and Pulau Keramat. Founded as a moderated adaptation of foreign socialist ideas from Phansi Uhlanga, the party now serves as a disparate collection of factions; most of these factions wish to create a socialistic reinterpretation of Calpollism. Their most recent manifesto under the faction of Iuitl Mogorosi, "Governing for the People through Divine Fire and Water," contains the party's most explicit use of religious imagery in outlining its platform. | ||
National Jubilee | 1954 | Conservatism Factions: Kabaya'an anti-Kabaya'anism |
Tepiltzin Tecuanhuehue | 58 / 327 | Center-right | Formed from a merger of multiple conservative parties, the NJ serves as the vanguard for old-style conservatism in Pulacan. It finds most of its supporters in X. | ||
League for Liberty and Change | 2011 | Pan-Ozerosi skepticism, pro-integration, nationalist populism | Keabetswe Ngele | 50 / 327 | Big tent | Founded in 2011, the League was at first marginalized due to its association with the terrorist group known as the Djebe Liberation Army. When then-Chief Minister Iuitl Mogorosi moved to expand the Juwa majority via the 2022 snap election, they were upset by a huge loss of seats as many Ozerosi skeptics switched to the rising LLC, led by defecting Juwa faction leader Keabetswe Ngele. The surge brought the LLC into the mainstream, and the party continues to grow in popularity as a shake-up of the establishment system. | ||
United in Humanity | 1977 | Technocratic socialism, directorial socialism, Pan-Ozerosi cooperation | Megawati Sudionoputri | 26 / 327 | Left-wing | UH is a coalition of former AON guest workers in Pulau Keramat and Pulaui immigrants who wish to replicate the technocratic socialism of Pulau and Tsurushima in Pulacan and replace the current political order. This group garners most of the pro-AON vote in northern Pulacan. | ||
Incorruptible Justice | Anti-corruption, pro-integration, criminal justice reform, populism | 20 / 327 | Single-issue | Founded by X after the 1992 death of her son Y in police custody, Incorruptible Justice is the oldest single-issue party in Pulacan. | ||||
Majambazi Party | pirate party, satire politics | 2 / 327 | Single-issue | |||||
Landless Peoples' Movement | Social democracy, progressivism, land reform, environmentalism | 2 / 327 | xKhasi ethnic politics |
*Chief Minister
**Also the party of the President