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Colorado Party (Uruguay)
Political party of Uruguay
Political party of Uruguay
| Field | Value | |||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Colorado Party | |||||||||||||||||
| logo | Logo of the Colorado Party (Uruguay).svg | |||||||||||||||||
| logo_size | 125 | |||||||||||||||||
| colorcode | ||||||||||||||||||
| general_secretary | Andrés Ojeda | |||||||||||||||||
| foundation | ||||||||||||||||||
| ideology | {{ubl | class=nowrap | ||||||||||||||||
| Liberalism (Uruguayan)<ref>{{cite book | title | El batllismo como ideología | last1=Claps | first1=Manuel Arturo | last2=Lamas | first2=Mario Daniel | author-link=Manuel Arturo Claps | publisher=Cal y Canto | year=1999}} | |||||||||
| Conservatism<ref>{{bulleted list | {{Cite news | last | Blair | first=Laurence | date=2024-10-25 | title=Uruguay's 2024 Election: What to Know | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/25/world/americas/uruguay-2024-election-president-candidates.html | access-date=2025-02-19 | work=The New York Times | language=en-US | issn=0362-4331 | quote=Long-shot contenders include Andrés Ojeda, 40, a lawyer, member of the conservative Colorado Party and regular guest on talk shows who has tried to appeal to younger voters.}} | }} | |||||
| Republicanism<ref>{{Cite journal | url | https://www.redalyc.org/journal/3844/384466198008/html/ | title = El "Impulso republicano" del Uruguay del 900: La reforma política del "primer batllismo" (1890-1930) | journal = Varia Historia | volume = 37 | issue = 73 | pages = 217–250 | last1 = Caetano | first1 = Gerardo | year = 2021 | doi = 10.1590/0104-87752021000100008 | s2cid = 233523381 | doi-access = free}} | |||||
| Batllism<ref>{{cite book | title | El nacimiento del batllismo | last1=Nahum | first1=Benjamín | last2=Barrán | first2=José Pedro | author-link=Benjamín Nahum | author-link2=José Pedro Barrán | publisher=Ediciones de la Banda Oriental | year=1982}} | ||||||||
| headquarters | Martínez Trueba 1271, Montevideo | |||||||||||||||||
| website | ||||||||||||||||||
| country | Uruguay | |||||||||||||||||
| native_name | Partido Colorado | |||||||||||||||||
| abbreviation | PC | |||||||||||||||||
| founder | Fructuoso Rivera | |||||||||||||||||
| position | {{ubl | class=nowrap | ||||||||||||||||
| Right-wing<ref>{{bulleted list | {{Cite journal | date | October 2019 | title=Revista Académica | url=https://uspt.edu.ar/web/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/IESPYC-2019.pdf | journal=Universidad de San Pablo | location=Tucumán, Argentina | publisher=Instituto de Estudios Sociales, Política y Cultura | volume= | issue=8 | issn=2525-1600 | quote=Similarly, all voters with an ideological positioning between 5.32 and 7.49 will likely vote for center-right Partido Nacional and all voters positioning between 7.50 and 10 for the right-wing Partido Colorado.}} | }} | |||||
| Centre-left<ref>{{Cite book | last | Di Tella | first=Torcuato | title=Diccionario de Ciencias Sociales y Políticas | date= | publisher=Ariel | year=2006 | isbn=978-950-9122-86-4 | edition=2nd | location=Buenos Aires, Argentina | publication-date=2006 | pages=46}}}} | ||||||
| affiliation1_title | Regional affiliation | |||||||||||||||||
| affiliation1 | COPPPAL | |||||||||||||||||
| national | Republican Coalition | |||||||||||||||||
| seats1_title | Chamber of Deputies | |||||||||||||||||
| seats1 | ||||||||||||||||||
| seats2_title | Senate | |||||||||||||||||
| seats2 | ||||||||||||||||||
| seats3_title | Intendencias | |||||||||||||||||
| seats3 | ||||||||||||||||||
| seats4_title | Mayors | |||||||||||||||||
| seats4 | ||||||||||||||||||
| colors | Red, yellow | |||||||||||||||||
| flag | [[File:Flag of Colorado Party (Uruguay).svg | border | 200px]] |
|Liberalism (Uruguayan) |Conservatism |Historical: |Republicanism |Batllism |Right-wing |Historical: |Centre-left}} The Colorado Party (, , PC) is a major political party in Uruguay. Founded in 1836 by General Fructuoso Rivera, the first president of Uruguay, it is one of the country's oldest active political parties along with the National Party, their origin dates back to the establishment of Uruguay as an independent state.
Traditionally an ideologically diverse party it nowadays sits in the centre-right side of the political spectrum. Their current position in the Uruguayan political landscape is conditioned by the coalition they have formed with their historic adversary, the National Party, in opposition to the Broad Front (Frente Amplio), the latter being a leftist coalition formed in the early 1970s that has become, since the 1999 election, the most-voted electoral force in the country, reshaping Uruguayan electoral politics and displacing the Colorado Party from its traditional position of dominance to becoming the third party in the country, behind the National Party.
Ideology
The party seeks to unite moderate and liberal groups, although its members have had a diverse set of ideologies since its foundation, including Krausism and liberal conservatism, as well as general pragmatism. It was the dominant party of government almost without exception during the stabilization of the Uruguayan republic.
The Colorado Party has traditionally been an ideologically diverse party, with one study from the 1950s noting that "the liberal ideological position assumed by the Colorado. a half-century ago under the drive of Batlle has forced the Blancos or Nationalists to become more relatively conservative in position. On the part of both major parties, however, many inconsistencies and many ideological subdivisions, temporary or permanent, occur. Each of the large parties has its conservatives and its liberals, and party lines are often difficult to hold in congressional debate.”
History
Its existence can be traced back to the origins of the Uruguayan republic, in the 1830s, and since then until the late 1990s it remained the most dominant political party in the country, holding power almost uninterruptedly (alternating with the National Party, its greatest rival) until its electoral collapse in the 2004 elections, when the Party obtained only 10% of the vote.
During the first third of the 20th century, and under the stewardship and legacy of José Batlle y Ordóñez (1856-1929), the largest sectors of the Colorado Party stood for a radical agenda of social reform, including the promotion of workers’ rights, women’s rights, statism and the ample provision of public services, democratic political reform and regular use of direct democracy mechanisms, secularization, and the establishment of a generous welfare state. During the 1940s and 1950s, led by Luis Batlle Berres (nephew of José Batlle) this Batllista wing of the Colorado Party stood also for state-led industrialization efforts and an economic dirigiste regime. In the late 1960s, though, the Party began to abandon the most radical part of that social agenda (as well as the dirigiste approach to economic matters) and now stands in the center, center-right of the Uruguayan political spectrum.
At the 2004 national elections, the Colorado Party won 10 seats out of 99 in the Chamber of Representatives and 3 seats out of 31 in the Senate. Its presidential candidate, Guillermo Stirling, won 10.4% of the popular vote and placed third, ending the 10-year rule of the Colorado Party and the two-party system.
Since then, the Colorados have been able to recuperate some of their lost support, but as of 2024 they haven’t reached the 20% threshold in any of the elections celebrated in that period (2009, 2014, 2019, 2024).
Current high-profile personalities from the Party include Andrés Ojeda and Pedro Bordaberry.
Earlier history
The Colorado Party was founded in Montevideo, Uruguay, on 17 September 1836.
Some of its significant historical leaders were Fructuoso Rivera, Venancio Flores, José Batlle y Ordóñez, Luis Batlle Berres, Jorge Pacheco Areco, Juan María Bordaberry, Julio María Sanguinetti, Luis Bernardo Pozzolo, and Jorge Batlle.
The party has historically been the most elected party in Uruguayan history with almost uninterrupted dominance during the 20th century. The Colorados were in office from 1865 to 1959, when they were defeated by the Partido Nacional in the 1958 elections. They returned to office after the 1966 elections. They won the first elections at the end of the military dictatorship, in 1984. They went on to win the 1994 and 1999 elections.
Traditional rivals
From its birth until the last decades of the 20th century its traditional rival was the conservative Partido Nacional (also called Partido Blanco).
Post-2004: defeat at polls and rise of Pedro Bordaberry
The Colorado Party suffered its worst defeat ever in the 2004 national elections, with little over 10 per cent of the popular vote for its presidential candidate Guillermo Stirling, and having only three out of thirty national Senators. There were many reasons for the party's failure, including the economic crisis and old party leaders. Subsequently to his defeat in 2004, Guillermo Stirling endorsed Pedro Bordaberry's Vamos Uruguay movement. Bordaberry Herrán became the presidential candidate for the 2009 presidential election, and placed third, with 17 percent of the vote, behind José Mujica and Luis Alberto Lacalle. Bordaberry Herrán placed third again in the 2014 presidential election, with 13% of the vote.
Electoral history
Presidential elections
| Election | Party candidate | Running mate | Votes | % | Votes | % | Result | First Round | Second Round | Elections under the Ley de Lemas system | Elections under single presidential candidate per party |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1938 | Alfredo Baldomir | César Charlone | 121,259 | 33.9% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| Eduardo Blanco Acevedo | Eugenio Martínez Thedy | 97,998 | 27.4% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Lema | 54 | 0.0% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 219,311 | 61.4% | — | — | |||||||
| 1942 | Juan José de Amézaga | Alberto Guani | 234,127 | 40.7% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| Eduardo Blanco Acevedo | Carlos Vilaró Rubio | 74,767 | 13.0% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Williman | Mermot | 670 | 0.1% | — | — | ||||||
| Lema | 66 | 0.0% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 309,630 | 57.2% | — | — | |||||||
| 1946 | Tomás Berreta | Luis Batlle Berres | 185,715 | 28.6% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| Rafael Schiaffino | Daniel Castellanos | 83,534 | 12.9% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Alfredo Baldomir | Juan Carlos Mussio Fournier | 40,875 | 6.3% | — | — | ||||||
| Lema | 372 | 0.0% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 310,496 | 47.8% | — | — | |||||||
| 1950 | Andrés Martínez Trueba | Alfeo Brum | 161,262 | 19.6% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| César Mayo Gutiérrez | Lorenzo Batlle Pacheco | 150,930 | 18.3% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Eduardo Blanco Acevedo | Cyro Giambruno | 120,949 | 14.7% | — | — | ||||||
| Lema | 313 | 0.0% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 433,454 | 52.6% | — | — | |||||||
| 1966 | Óscar Diego Gestido | Jorge Pacheco Areco | 262,040 | 21.3% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| Jorge Batlle | Julio Lacarte Muró | 215,642 | 17.5% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Amílcar Vasconcellos | Renán Rodríguez | 77,476 | 6.3% | — | — | ||||||
| Zelmar Michelini | Aquiles Lanza | 48,992 | 4.0% | — | — | ||||||
| Justino Jiménez de Aréchaga | Nilo Berchesi | 4,064 | 0.0% | — | — | ||||||
| Lema | 389 | 0.0% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 607,633 | 49.3% | — | — | |||||||
| 1971 | Juan María Bordaberry | Jorge Sapelli | 379,515 | 22.8% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| Jorge Batlle | Renán Rodríguez | 242,804 | 14.6% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Amílcar Vasconcellos | Manuel Flores Mora | 48,844 | 2.9% | — | — | ||||||
| Juan Luis Pintos | Torialli | 5,402 | 0.3% | — | — | ||||||
| Juan Pedro Ribas | Gorlero | 4,025 | 0.2% | — | — | ||||||
| Lema | 604 | 0.0% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 681,624 | 41.0% | — | — | |||||||
| 1984 | Julio María Sanguinetti | Enrique Tarigo | 588,143 | 31.2% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| Jorge Pacheco Areco | Carlos Pirán | 183,588 | 9.7% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Lema | 5,970 | 0.3% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 777,701 | 41.2% | — | — | |||||||
| 1989 | Jorge Batlle | Jorge Sanguinetti | 291,944 | 14.20% | — | — | Lost | ||||
| Jorge Pacheco Areco | Pablo Millor | 289,222 | 14.06% | — | — | ||||||
| Hugo Fernández Faingold | Enrique Vispo | 14,482 | 0.70% | — | — | ||||||
| Lema | 1,316 | 0.06% | — | — | |||||||
| Total votes | 596,964 | 29.03% | — | — | |||||||
| 1994 | Julio María Sanguinetti | Hugo Batalla | 500,760 | 24.7% | — | — | Elected | ||||
| Jorge Batlle | Federico Bouza | 102,551 | 5.1% | — | — | Lost | |||||
| Jorge Pacheco Areco | Eduardo Ache | 51,935 | 2.6% | — | — | ||||||
| Total votes | 656,426 | 32.3% | — | — | |||||||
| 1999 | Jorge Batlle | Luis Antonio Hierro López | 703,915 | 32.8% | 1,158,708 | 54.1% | Elected | ||||
| 2004 | Guillermo Stirling | Tabaré Viera | 231,036 | 10.36% | — | — | Lost | ||||
| 2009 | Pedro Bordaberry | Hugo de León | 392,307 | 17.02% | — | — | Lost | ||||
| 2014 | Pedro Bordaberry | Germán Coutinho | 305,699 | 12.89% | — | — | Lost | ||||
| 2019 | Ernesto Talvi | Robert Silva | 300,177 | 12.80% | — | — | Lost | ||||
| 2024 | Andres Ojeda | Robert Silva | 392,592 | 16.89% | — | — | Lost |
Note
Under the electoral system in place at the time called Ley de Lemas system, each political party could have as many as three presidential candidates. The combined result of the votes for a party's candidates determined which party would control the executive branch, and whichever of the winning party's candidates finished in first place would be declared President this system was used form the 1942 election until the 1994 election until in 1996, a referendum amended the constitution to restrict each party to a single presidential candidate, effective from the 1999 elections.
Chamber of Deputies and Senate elections
| Election | Votes | % | Chamber seats | +/– | Senate seats | ± | Position | Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1916 | 60,420 | 41.2% | 87 | 2nd | ||||
| 1917 | 63,617 | 49.4% | Unknown | 1st | ||||
| 1919 | Ran as various factions, see 1919 Uruguayan parliamentary election | |||||||
| 1922 | Ran as various factions, see 1922 Uruguayan parliamentary election | |||||||
| 1925 | Ran as various factions, see 1925 Uruguayan parliamentary election | |||||||
| 1928 | Ran as various factions, see 1928 Uruguayan general election | |||||||
| 1931 | Ran as various factions, see 1931 Uruguayan parliamentary election | |||||||
| 1933 | Ran as various factions, see 1933 Uruguayan Constitutional Assembly election | |||||||
| 1934 | 139,832 | 56.1% | 5 | 15 | 1st | |||
| Senate | 125,981 | 57.0% | ||||||
| 1938 | 219,362 | 58.4% | 9 | 0 | 1st | |||
| Senate | 219,375 | 60.6% | ||||||
| 1942 | 328,596 | 57.1% | 6 | 4 | 1st | |||
| Senate | 328,599 | 57.2% | ||||||
| 1946 | 310,556 | 46.3% | 11 | 4 | 1st | |||
| Senate | 310,390 | 46.3% | ||||||
| 1950 | 433,628 | 52.3% | 6 | 2 | 1st | |||
| Senate | 433,440 | 52.9% | ||||||
| 1954 | 444,429 | 50.6% | 2 | 0 | 1st | |||
| 1958 | 379,062 | 37.7% | 13 | 5 | 2nd | |||
| 1962 | 521,231 | 44.5% | 6 | 2 | 2nd | |||
| 1966 | 607,633 | 49.3% | 6 | 2 | 2nd | |||
| 1971 | 681,624 | 41.0% | 9 | 3 | 1st | |||
| 1984 | 777,701 | 41.2% | 0 | 0 | 1st | |||
| 1989 | 596,964 | 29.03% | 11 | 4 | 2nd | |||
| 1994 | 656,426 | 32.3% | 2 | 2 | 1st | |||
| 1999 | 703,915 | 32.8% | 1 | 1 | (PC–PN) | 2nd | ||
| 2004 | 231,036 | 10.36% | 23 | 7 | 3rd | |||
| 2009 | 392,307 | 17.02% | 7 | 2 | 3rd | |||
| 2014 | 305,699 | 12.89% | 4 | 2 | 3rd | |||
| 2019 | 300,177 | 12.80% | 0 | 0 | (PN–PC–CA–PG–PI) | 3rd | ||
| 2024 | 392,592 | 16.89% | 4 | 1 | 3rd |
National Council of Administration and National Council of Government elections
| Election | Votes | % | Council seats | ± | Position | Abolished in 1933, reestablished as National Council of Government | National Council abolished in 1966, presidential system reestablished |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1925 | Ran as various factions, see 1925 Uruguayan parliamentary election | ||||||
| 1926 | Ran as various factions, see 1926 Uruguayan general election | ||||||
| 1928 | Ran as various factions, see 1928 Uruguayan general election | ||||||
| 1930 | 165,069 | 52.1% | Unknown | 1st | |||
| 1932 | 107,664 | 67.0% | Unknown | 1st | |||
| 1954 | 444,429 | 50.6% | 6 | 1st | |||
| 1958 | 379,062 | 37.7% | 3 | 2nd | |||
| 1962 | 545,029 | 521,231 | 2nd |
References
References
- (1999). "El batllismo como ideología". Cal y Canto.
- Blair, Laurence. (2024-10-25). "Uruguay's 2024 Election: What to Know". Taylor & Francis.
- (2021). "El "Impulso republicano" del Uruguay del 900: La reforma política del "primer batllismo" (1890-1930)". Varia Historia.
- (1982). "El nacimiento del batllismo". [[Ediciones de la Banda Oriental]].
- Martínez, Magdalena. (October 2019). "Revista Académica". Instituto de Estudios Sociales, Política y Cultura.
- Di Tella, Torcuato. (2006). "Diccionario de Ciencias Sociales y Políticas". Ariel.
- "Países y Partidos Miembros de la COPPPAL – Copppal".
- Uruguay: Portrait of a Democracy By Russell Humke Fitzgibbon, 1956 P.148-149
- "elmundo.es - Uruguay elige por primera vez a un presidente de izquierdas".
- Di Tella, Torcuato. (2006). "Diccionario de Ciencias Sociales y Políticas". Ariel.
- X. (2004-11-01). "Uruguayans Give Resounding Win to First Leftist President".
- "Lista de Bordaberry ganó la interna partidaria, pero no tendrá más peso en Senado colorado".
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