Andalusian Party

Andalusian Party
Partido Andalucista
Leader Antonio Jesús Ruiz
Founded 1965
Dissolved 2015
Headquarters Seville, Seville Province, Andalusia
Youth wing Andalucista Youth
Ideology Social democracy
Andalusian nationalism
Regionalism
Political position Centre-left
European affiliation European Free Alliance
International affiliation None
European Parliament group No MEPs
Colors Green and White (Colours of the Flag of Andalusia).
Local Government
470 / 9,031
Parliament of Andalusia
0 / 109
Congress of Deputies
0 / 350
Spanish Senate
0 / 264
European Parliament
0 / 50
Party flag
Website
http://www.partidoandalucista.org/

The Andalusian Party (Spanish: Partido Andalucista, PA) was an Andalusian nationalist-regionalist[1] centre-left political party from Andalusia (Spain), with an important presence in provinces such as Cádiz and Seville although in the past they have stood in other provinces and even won seats in Barcelona to the Catalan Regional Assembly.[2]

The party was founded as the Socialist Alliance of Andalusia (Alianza Socialista de Andalucía) in 1965 by Alejandro Rojas-Marcos. In 1976 it took the name Socialist Party of Andalusia (Partido Socialista de Andalucía). In 1979 the name was changed to Socialist Party of Andalusia - Andalusian Party (PSA-Partido Andaluz). The PA party name was adopted in 1984. Its last Secretary-General was Antonio Jesús Ruiz.

A splinter group, led by former leader Pedro Pacheco, was formed in 2001, under the name Socialist Party of Andalusia (Partido Socialista de Andalucía), later rejoined back into Partido Andalucista.

Historically, the party had been strong in the capital city of Andalusia, Seville, as well as other big cities like Jerez de la Frontera or Algeciras, obtaining the cities' mayorship in several times in all three cities. At their 17th Congress on 12 September 2015, the party dissolved.[3]

Ideology

The Andalusian Party considered itself a progressist party, as well as an andalusian nationalist party, having among his goals the self-determination of Andalusia and the recognition of Andalusia as a nation within the Europe of the Peoples.

See also

References

  1. Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko; Matti Mälkiä (2007). Encyclopedia of Digital Government. Idea Group Inc (IGI). pp. 394–. ISBN 978-1-59140-790-4.
  2. Election Resources on the Internet: Elections to the Catalan Parliament - Results Lookup
  3. "El Partido Andalucista pone fin a cuatro décadas de historia". Diario Sur (in Spanish). 2015-09-12. Retrieved 2015-09-12.


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