People's Countryside Party

The People's Countryside Party (PCP) was an Argentinean political party founded in 2008. This party has been formed by the union of the Movement for Dignity and Independence (Modin, active in Buenos Aires and San Luis) founded by the carapintada (English: painted face) Aldo Rico and the regional party Cordoba's Patriotic Movement.

People's Countryside Party
Partido del Campo Popular
LeaderJosé Alejandro Bonacci
Founded2008
Dissolved2017
Merger ofMovement for Dignity and Independence
Movimiento Patriótico de Córdoba
Succeeded byUnite! Por la Libertad y la Dignidad
HeadquartersRosario (Junta Electoral Nacional)[1]
IdeologyNationalism
Orthodox Peronism
Neofascism
Political positionFar-right
International affiliationnone
Website

Political activity

The PCP is recognized as a district-level party by the National's Electoral Chamber in Buenos Aires and in the province of Santa Fe.[2] This party is also politically active in Buenos Aires, Misiones, Formosa, San Luis and Cordoba. The PCP was present in two national elections (2009 and 2011) and in several province elections.

History

The PCP was founded in 2008. In 2010, the PCP[3] districts of Santa Fe and Capital Federal were integrated with the Movement for Dignity and Independence (Modin, active in Buenos Aires and San Luis) founded by the carapintada (English: painted face) Aldo Rico and the regional party Cordoba's Patriotic Movement. The possible union with Social Alternative, chaired by Mario Puértolas was not possible due to juridic and political reasons. The Social Alternative party takes part in the Buenos Aires autonomic city elections with its own candidates, while the PCP integrated the Citizens Front. For the 2011 elections, the party launched a political platform known as New Democracy and presented José Bonacci as presidential candidate. In the primary elections the formula Bonacci-Villena reached the 0,24% (without reaching the 1.5% threshold required by the law to participate in the general elections).[4]

Ideology

In its doctrine basis, the party has popular nationalism as a resistance against globalization. According to its program for the 2011 elections the party rejects the actual democracies in which “the political parties are mere advertisement agencies”.[5] In July 2011, PCP candidates for representatives visited the Seprin company where they declared: “Our party has as a cornerstone combat against drugs traffic, defense of our nation, the respect for our country institutions, in particular the Army, the security forces and the church so much discredited by the stateless people that nowadays govern us. And, most importantly, is that we defend the family to the maximum”.[6] On August 1, facing accusations of being a radical party,[7] the PCP released a statement saying that “there are no agreements, alliances or political relations with the Social Alternative Party from the Argentinean Federal district (Spanish: Capital Federal). The PCP also has not join this party due to the political and juridic failure of the conversations and the ideological differences with the mentioned party. We endorse the need to go deeper into the democracy, as the actual model is limited and enclosed, but we are not a xenophobic or restrictive group and our ideology is based on popular nationalism and democracy.”[8] By mistake it has been published that José Bonacci, the PCP leader, is under investigation for the falsification of approximately 2000 signatures of young people to make them appear as affiliated with his party in order to enter the elections.[9] Rosario 3, the news website, agreed that it provided wrong information.[10] Nevertheless, the newspaper "La Capital de Rosario" did not publish the requested rectification of the defamation.

References

  1. Junta Electoral Archived 2014-07-15 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Cámara Nacional Electoral Partidos reconocidos (PDF), 3 de mayo de 2011
  3. Otro santafesino a la Rosada, El Ciudadano, 30 de junio de 2011
  4. Dirección Nacional Electoral (15 August 2011). "Elecciones Primarias 2011" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 23 August 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2011.
  5. Plataforma Electoral Nueva Democracia Archived 2014-07-14 at the Wayback Machine, pcp.org.ar
  6. "EL PARTIDO DEL CAMPO POPULAR VISITÓ SEPRIN". Archived from the original on 2012-04-25. Retrieved 2014-06-11.
  7. A cara lavada y pasado renovado, Página/12, 15 de julio de 2010
  8. Comunicado del PCP
  9. Investigan a Bonacci por falsificar avales.
  10. Bonacci aclaró que no lo investigan por falsificación de avales Archived 2014-07-14 at the Wayback Machine, Rosario 3
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.