Political parties

From Bolivian Politics

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(The party system)
(The party system)
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== The party system ==
== The party system ==
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Bolivia has historically had multiparty system. Until 2002, the party system was dominated by a three to five medium-sized parties. Recently, the [[party system]] is dominated by two parties: [[MAS]] and [[PODEMOS]]. Seats in the [[national parliament]] are (since 1997) elected in a [[mixed-member proportional electoral system]]. Before the [[2005 general election]], no presidential candidate was able to win a simple majority, and [[coalition governments]] were the norm.
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Bolivia historically had a multiparty system. Until 2002, the [[party system]] was dominated by a three to five medium-sized parties. Recently, the party system is dominated by two parties: [[MAS]] and [[PODEMOS]]. Seats in the [[national parliament]] are (since 1997) elected in a [[mixed-member proportional electoral system]]. Before the [[2005 general election]], no presidential candidate was able to win a simple majority, and [[coalition governments]] were the norm.
== Categorizing Bolivia's political parties ==
== Categorizing Bolivia's political parties ==

Revision as of 02:06, 26 July 2006

This page is under construction.

Contents

The party system

Bolivia historically had a multiparty system. Until 2002, the party system was dominated by a three to five medium-sized parties. Recently, the party system is dominated by two parties: MAS and PODEMOS. Seats in the national parliament are (since 1997) elected in a mixed-member proportional electoral system. Before the 2005 general election, no presidential candidate was able to win a simple majority, and coalition governments were the norm.

Categorizing Bolivia's political parties

Major parties

The following political parties, civic associations, or electoral alliances won seats in the 2005 general election and the 2006 constituent assembly election.

National parties

The following political parties have presence in all nine departments.

Regional parties

The following parties have presence in only one department. They are listed by department, followed by a brief description.

La Paz

Cochabamba

Oruro

Potosí

Tarija

Santa Cruz

Minor parties

The following parties did not elect delegates in the most recent 2006 constituent assembly elecion.

Need to edit

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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