Democratic and Social Centre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 
Centro Democratico y Social
 
leader = Fabian Villalaibeitia
 
 
Founded 1982
Headquarters Madrid
 
Ideology Social democracy,
Centrism
Official colours Green, White
 
Website
CDS web site

Democratic and Social Centre (in Spanish: Centro Democrático y Social) is a Spanish moderate, social democratic and centrist political party, which was founded in 1982. The party's young organization is named Democratic and Social Centre Youngs.


[edit] History

CDS was founded July 29, 1982 by Adolfo Suárez, who had been the principal architect of the transition to a democratic system after the death of Francisco Franco and served as head of Government from 1976 to 1981. The followers of CDS claimed that their party was the inheritor of the political legacy of Unión de Centro Democrático (UCD).

After resigning both as prime minister of Spain and president of the UCD in January 1981, Suarez continued to struggle for control of the party machine. When he failed in his bid to regain party leadership in July 1982, he abandoned the party he had created and formed the CDS. The new centrist party fared poorly in the October general elections, gaining only two parliamentary seats.

By 1986 the party's fortunes had improved dramatically under the leadership of the former prime minister. In the June elections, the CDS more than tripled its share of the vote, which was 9.2 percent in 1986, compared with 2.9 percent in 1982, indicating that many who had previously voted for the UCD had transferred their support to the CDS. In the electoral campaign, Suarez had focused on his own experience as head of the government; he had criticized the PSOE for not fulfilling its 1982 election promises, had advocated a more independent foreign policy, and had called for economic measures that would improve the lot of the poor. This strategy enabled him to draw some votes from those who had become disillusioned with the PSOE.

In the municipal and the regional elections held in June 1987, the largest gains were made by the CDS. A poll taken at the end of 1987 revealed even stronger support for the party, and it gave Suarez a popularity rating equal to that of Gonzalez. Suarez's call for less dependence on the United States appealed to the latent anti-Americanism in the populace, and his advocacy of a greater role for the state in providing social services and in ensuring a more equitable distribution of income struck a responsive chord among the workers, who were growing increasingly impatient with Gonzalez's economic policies, which some perceived as more conservative than expected.

From 1988 onwards, the party was a member of the Liberal International. On March 25, 1995 the Centrist Union (UC) was born as a federation consisting of the CDS and some liberal and green groups. Subsequently, from November 1995, the party was called UC-CDS. In October 2002 the party reverted to its original name, CDS. A party congress held in 2005 decided, under the presidency of Teresa Gómez-Limón, to merge with the Partido Popular (PP). At that point, CDS had 54 municipal councillors and around 3,000 members. The merger of CDS with the PP took place on February 18, 2006.

But In the Spanishs Local Elections of the year 2007. Unexpectedly, appeared diferents Candidacies of the Democratic and Social Center (CDS) headed by the "suarista", Fabian Villalabeitia Copena and Carlos Fernandez García, that they refused to lose the above mentioned initials and they organized a Extraordinary Congress XII, following all the steps that were needing the Bylaws of the CDS, obtaining almost the ownership of the same ones and appearing in almost all the provinces of Spain. In this Congress Speaker was elected Mr. Villalabeitia with the mission to lead to the party to a Congress, for the celection of the National President. Before they had met in Logrono, with the Executive Committee and the Federal differed President with the integration in the PP.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

This article contains material from the Library of Congress Country Studies, which are United States government publications in the public domain.