List of political parties in Belmonte
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Belmonte |
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This article lists the political parties of Belmonte.
Overview
Belmonte has a multi-party system, with various political parties exerting varying levels of influence in the national political framework which, in turn, are unable to form a supermajority in the National Congress.
The first Belmontese political party was the Federalist Party. After the proclamation of the Republic, the party was dissolved into the Liberal Party and the Conservative Party. Over most of the 19th century, both parties would rule peacefully through the oligarchic Riachuelo Agreement until the dissolution of the Liberal Party in 1906, causing a political crisis that led to the 1913 Coup and the Berquó Era, which saw the abolition of all political groups.
After the establishment of the New Republic in 1935, the National Republican Union (URN) became the largest political party of Belmonte, ruling continously over the next 34 years. The 1969 protests led to massive changes in Belmontese politics, allowing the solidification of the current multi-party regime.
Active parties
Parties with federal representation
Party | Leader | Chamber of Deputies | Senate | Ideology | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
National Republican Union | João Sócrates | 61 / 206
|
13 / 25
|
Sotirian democracy, liberal conservatism | |
Social Democratic Party | Rita Maurino | 92 / 206
|
14 / 35
|
Social democracy, social liberalism, progressivism | |
Socialist Bloc | Graça Fonseca | 11 / 206
|
4 / 35
|
Democratic socialism | |
National Labour Party | Celso Borges | 5 / 206
|
1 / 35
|
Labourism, social democracy, democratic socialism | |
Social Catholic Party | Hélio Sampaio | 7 / 206
|
0 / 35
|
Sotirian democracy | |
Democratic People's Union | Aline Soares | 5 / 206
|
1 / 35
|
Big tent | |
Citizens' Alliance | Jorge Paranhos | 5 / 206
|
0 / 35
|
Liberalism, right-libertarianism | |
Belmontese Section of the Workers' International | Leonardo Rebouças | 4 / 206
|
0 / 35
|
Council communism, syndicalism | |
Green Party | Amélia Bastos | 7 / 206
|
0 / 35
|
Green politics | |
National Movement | Andressa Schneidler | 9 / 206
|
0 / 35
|
Right-wing populism, paleoconservatism |
Other active parties
Party | Ideology | |
---|---|---|
Belmontese Democratic Equalist Party | Democratic equalism | |
Popular Equalist Revolutionary Vanguard | Revolutionary socialism, vanguardism, equalism, tretyakism | |
People's Socialist Unity | Council communism | |
National Indigenous Protection Front | Indigenism, democratic socialism, eco-socialism | |
National Conservative Party | National conservatism, classical conservatism, Sotirian democracy | |
Patriotic Alliance | Functionalism | |
National Renewal | Neo-Berquonism, functionalism |
Defunct parties
Party | Year formed | Year dissolved | Ideology | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Federalist Party | 1786 | 1801 | Federalism, classical liberalism, classical conservatism | |
Conservative Party | 1801 | 1913 | Classical conservatism | |
Liberal Party | 1801 | 1906 | Classical liberalism | |
Reformist Party | 1877 | 1913 | Classical liberalism, classical radicalism, reformism | |
National Workers' Association | 1899 | 1913 | Council communism | |
Liberal Democratic Party | 1906 | 1913 | Classical liberalism | |
Progressive Republican Party | 1906 | 1913 | Social liberalism, reformism, progressivism | |
Radical Party | 1906 | 1913 | Radicalism, liberalism | |
National Patriotic Renewal Alliance | 1907 | 1913 | National conservatism, classical conservatism, Berquonism |