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Christian Democratic Party (Bolivia)


FieldValue
colorcode
nameChristian Democratic Party
native_namePartido Demócrata Cristiano
logoPDC Bolivia.png
logo_size125
leaderRodrigo Paz
presidentJose Roberto Castro Peñaranda
foundersRemo Di Natale
Benjamín Miguel Harb
Javier Caballero
Emanuel Andrade
foundation
headquartersLa Paz
membership_year2025
membership42,603
ideologyConservatism
Capitalism
Decentralisation
Historical:
Third Way
positionCentre to centre-right
seats1_titleSenate
seats1
seats2_titleDeputies
seats2
national{{ublist
None<br>(since 2025){{refngroupnbThe party was formerly part of Creemos (2020–2025), Social Democratic Power (2005–2008), Democratic Revolutionary Front – New Alternative (1980) and Revolutionary Nationalist Movement – Alliance (1979) .}}
regionalChristian Democrat Organization of America
coloursTeal
Red
flag[[File:Bandera Partido Democrata Cristiano (PDC) Bolivia.svg180px]]
website
countryBolivia
abbreviationPDC

Benjamín Miguel Harb Javier Caballero Emanuel Andrade Capitalism Decentralisation Historical: Third Way | None (since 2025) Red

The Christian Democratic Party (, PDC) is a political party in Bolivia.

History

Founded on 6 February 1954 as the Social Christian Party (, PSC), it assumed its present name at a party congress in November 1964. Its intellectual foundations were study centres of the Church's social doctrine, the Bolivian Catholic Action and "Integral Humanism" (a centre for the study of the philosophy of Jacques Maritain). It remains a conventionally "tercerista" Party, calling for a third way between capitalism and socialism – a way that would be more humane and truly democratic than either competing sociopolitical system. Founded by Remo Di Natale, Benjamín Miguel Harb, Javier Caballero, and Emanuel Andrade.

The Christian Democratic Party took part in the 1958 and 1962 congressional elections, and in 1962 Benjamín Miguel Harb became its first deputy. It boycotted the 1964 and 1966 presidential votes.

In 1967, the party took part in the Government of the president of René Barrientos Ortuño, being given responsibility for the Ministry of Labour and Social Security and this was a major misjudgment by the PDC leadership. When military forces carried out bloody raids against mining camps, the Christian Democratic Party was forced to withdraw in anger and embarrassment, with severe internal divisions resulting. The party's youth organization had been discontented with the third-road philosophy for some time, and the mine camp invasions helped to crystallize their rebellion; they favored revolutionary socialism as a solution to Bolivia's dilemmas. In the late 1960s, the youth wing seceded to form the Revolutionary PDC which later became the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR). Several discontented members of the party, including Jose Luis Roca Garcia, also left to join General Alfredo Ovando Candía's short-lived nationalist revolutionary government in 1969–1970.

Under the dictatorship of President Hugo Banzer Suárez the Christian Democrats fought for human rights, fundamental freedoms and the holding of elections, but its president Benjamín Miguel Harb was exiled in 1974 and its organizing secretary Felix Vargas forced to leave the country shortly afterwards.

The PDC took part in 1978 general elections, running former Defense Minister General René Bernal Escalante, a leader of the right-wing faction of which supported the Hugo Banzer Suárez regime. After the 1978 election, René Bernal Escalante split from the PDC and founded the Christian Democratic Union.

For the elections held on 1 July 1979, the party joined the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement-Alliance with four other parties — the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR), the Authentic Revolutionary Party (PRA), the Marxist Leninist Communist Party (PCML) and the Tupaj Katari Revolutionary Movement (MRTK). The Alliance ran a MNR's leader Víctor Paz Estenssoro as its presidential candidate and a PDC's leader Luis Ossio Sanjines as its vice-presidential candidate. In 1979 the Christian Democratic Party won nine seats in the Chamber of Deputies and three in the Senate.

In 1980 the PDC took part in an electoral coalition Democratic Revolutionary Front-New Alternative backing ex-President Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas, which polled few votes; the leader of the PDC Benjamín Miguel Harb ran as vice-presidential candidate.

Soon after the restoration of democratic government, in November 1982, Christian Democrats took a seat in the Hernán Siles Zuazo Government, but withdrew from the coalition in October 1984.

The PDC took part in 1985 general elections, running Luis Ossio Sanjines as its presidential candidate and Jaime Ponce García as vice-presidential candidate, and won three seats in the Chamber of Deputies. Although winning no legislative seats as an ally of the Nationalist Democratic Action in May 1989, Luis Ossio Sanjines, was elected vice-president of the Republic as a result of its adherence to the Nationalist Democratic Action – Revolutionary Left Movement pact (Patriotic Agreement) in August. The PDC campaigned as a member of the Patriotic Agreement in 1993 elections. The Christian Democratic Party was one of the founding components of Social and Democratic Power (PODEMOS), for which it provided its electoral registration. Following the 2005 election, this alliance led the parliamentary opposition to President Evo Morales.

The party joined Creemos for the 2020 Bolivian general election.

For the 2025 Bolivian general election, the PDC nominated senator from Tarija Rodrigo Paz as its presidential candidate. In a major upset, Paz advanced to the second round of voting, where he defeated former President Jorge Quiroga, becoming Bolivia's first President to belong to the PDC. The party also won 16 seats in the Senate and 49 seats in the Chamber of Deputies.

Election results

Presidential elections

ElectionPresidential nomineeVotes%Votes%ResultFirst roundSecond round19781979198019851989199319972002200520092014201920202025
René Bernal Escalante167,1318.63%Lost
Víctor Paz Estenssoro (MNR)527,18435.87%6444.44%Lost
Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas (OID)39,4013.01%Lost
Luis Ossio24,0791.60%Lost
Hugo Banzer (ADN)357,29825.24%Lost
346,86521.05%Lost
484,70522.26%11879.73%Elected
Did not contest
Jorge Quiroga (PODEMOS)821,74528.59%Lost
Did not contest
Jorge Quiroga467,3119.04%Lost
Chi Hyun Chung539,0818.78%Annulled
Luis Fernando Camacho (Creemos)862,18614.00%Lost
Rodrigo Paz1,717,53232.06%3,506,45854.89%Elected

Chamber of Deputies and Senate elections

ElectionParty leaderVotes%Chamber seats+/-PositionSenate seats+/-PositionStatus195819601962196419661979198019851989199319972002200520092014201920202025
Benjamín Miguel Harb2,8880.66%New4thNew4th
Did not contest00
Benjamín Miguel Harb19,8251.90%14th02nd
2280.02%04th02nd
Boycotted10
Luis OssioAs part of MNRA94th33rd
As part of FDR–NA45th35th
24,0791.60%28th04th
In coalition with ADN36th05th
As part of AP09th05th
In coalition with ADN and NFR08th06th
Did not contest00
As part of PODEMOS432nd132nd
Did not contest4313
Jorge Quiroga454,2339.06%103rd23rd
522,5828.80%13rd24th
As part of Creemos73rd44th
Roberto Castro Peñaranda1,683,89132.15%291st121st

Notes

References

  1. https://web.oep.org.bo/organizaciones/partido-democrata-cristiano-pdc/ Información general de la organización política
  2. (25 February 2025). "Ranking: ¿Qué partido tiene más militantes en Bolivia?".
  3. Martin, Nik. (2025-08-11). "Bolivia: New president Paz vows free market reforms". [[Deutsche Welle]].
  4. Röhrs, Christine-Felice. (22 October 2025). "Capitalism for all".
  5. (18 August 2025). ""Capitalismo para todos": En qué consiste el plan de Rodrigo Paz, el inesperado ganador de la primera vuelta en Bolivia".
  6. (27 June 2025). "Rodrigo Paz propone modelo de ‘capitalismo para todos’, que incluye hasta legalizar los autos ‘chutos’".
  7. (19 October 2025). "Rodrigo Paz, el heredero político nacido en el exilio que busca su propio lugar en la historia de Bolivia".
  8. (18 August 2025). "Paz or 'Tuto'? Meet the two candidates who will duel for Bolivian Presidency".
  9. Stanco, Jenna. (18 November 2025). "Bolivia Enters New Era As Rodrigo Paz Promises "Capitalism For All"".
  10. Crabtree, John. (22 October 2025). "Bolivia’s age of experiments".
  11. (1 September 2025). "Presidential hopeful Rodrigo Paz sees ‘capitalism for all’ as answer to Bolivia’s crisis". [[Associated Press]].
  12. (20 October 2025). "Bolivia elects center-right president Rodrigo Paz, ending two decades of socialism".
  13. Political parties of the Americas: Canada, Latin America, and the West Indies. Greenwood Press, 1982. P. 131.
  14. (2025-08-19). "El candidato Rodrigo Paz vence a Jorge Quiroga con el voto de los bolivianos en el exterior". EFE.
  15. (2025-08-18). "Elecciones en Bolivia: quién es Rodrigo Paz Pereira, sorpresivo ganador de la primera vuelta {{!}} Buscará la presidencia en el balotaje".
  16. Political parties of the world. Longman, 1980. P. 28.
  17. Political parties of the world. Longman, 1988. P. 66.
  18. Political handbook of the world 1981. New York, 1981. P. 70.
  19. Elections in the Americas : a data handbook / ed. by Dieter Nohlen, Vol. 2. [Oxford] [u.a.]: Oxford Univ. Press, 2005. P.151.
  20. Political handbook of the world 2005-2006. New York, 2006. P. 126.
  21. Political handbook of the world 2008. New York, 2008. P. 138.
  22. Luizaga, Dennis. (2013-12-10). "Cinco fuerzas de la democracia pactada buscan reflotar en 2014". La Razón.
  23. (2025-08-18). "Rodrigo Paz es el candidato a la presidencia por el PDC".
  24. (19 August 2025). "Three Things to Know About Bolivia's 2025 First-Round Election Results | AS/COA".
  25. "Centrist Rodrigo Paz wins Bolivian presidency, ending nearly 20 years of leftist rule". Reuters.
  26. (26 August 2025). "PDC y Libre liderarán el Parlamento en Bolivia y el MAS quedará solo con dos diputados".
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