Political parties

From Bolivian Politics

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(Contemporary political parties, civic associations, and electoral alliances)
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''Semi-Complete list:'' [[ACP]], [[ARENA]], [[ASP]], [[AUR]], [[FNP]], [[FPU]], [[FSN]], [[FULKA]], [[Independent]], [[M-17]], [[MFD]], [[MKN]], [[MPP]], [[MRTK]], [[PDB]], [[PS-1]], [[VSB]].
''Semi-Complete list:'' [[ACP]], [[ARENA]], [[ASP]], [[AUR]], [[FNP]], [[FPU]], [[FSN]], [[FULKA]], [[Independent]], [[M-17]], [[MFD]], [[MKN]], [[MPP]], [[MRTK]], [[PDB]], [[PS-1]], [[VSB]].
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= See also =
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* [[Political party system]]

Revision as of 23:38, 25 July 2006

Bolivia has a multiparty system. This is page is SLOWLY being updated as I have time.

Bolivia's political party system was, until recently, dominated by three parties: MNR, ADN, MIR. These three provided presidents in each post-transition election; they occupy a centrist position. The poor showing of 2002 ADN brought questions about the party's continued relevance.

Three major neopopulist parties emerged in the 1990s: CONDEPA, UCS, NFR. The 2002 Condepa showing suggests the party has no future.

Bolivia's ideological left is traditionally weak, and split into three broad categories: katarista, syndicalist, social-democrat. By the 2000s, the most significant party in the syndicalist tradition was MAS; the most significant party in the katarismo tradition was MIP; the most significant party in the social-democrat tradition was MBL.

Contents

Contemporary political parties, civic associations, and electoral alliances

Currently registered parties

Parties that lost their registration in 2006

Parties that lost their registration in 2005

Parties that lost their registration in 2002-2003

Historical political parties



Semi-Complete list: ACP, ARENA, ASP, AUR, FNP, FPU, FSN, FULKA, Independent, M-17, MFD, MKN, MPP, MRTK, PDB, PS-1, VSB.

See also

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