Communist Party of Chile

Last updated
Communist Party of Chile
Partido Comunista de Chile
President Lautaro Carmona Soto
Secretary-General Bárbara Figueroa  [ es ]
Chief of DeputiesBoris Barrera
Founded4 June 1912;112 years ago (1912-06-04)
HeadquartersVicuña Mackenna 31
Santiago
Newspaper El Siglo
Youth wing Communist Youth of Chile
Membership (2023)46,031 [1]
Ideology
Political position Left-wing [3] to far-left [4] [5]
National affiliation Chile Digno (since 2020)
Government Alliance (since 2022)
Formerly:
Regional affiliation São Paulo Forum
International affiliation
Colours
  •   Red
  •   Yellow
Chamber of Deputies
10 / 155
Senate
2 / 50
Party flag
Flag of the Communist Party of Chile.svg
Website
www.pcchile.cl OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg

The Communist Party of Chile (Spanish : Partido Comunista de Chile, PCCh) is a communist party in Chile. It was founded in 1912 as the Socialist Workers' Party (Partido Obrero Socialista) and adopted its current name in 1922. The party established a youth wing, the Communist Youth of Chile (Juventudes Comunistas de Chile, JJ.CC), in 1932.

Contents

History

Luis Emilio Recabarren, Communist Party of Chile leader and founder (1912-1924) L.E.Recabarren.jpg
Luis Emilio Recabarren, Communist Party of Chile leader and founder (1912–1924)
Luis Corvalan, Secretary-General of the PCCh (1958-1990) Luis Corvalan cropped portrait.jpg
Luis Corvalán, Secretary-General of the PCCh (1958–1990)

The PCCh was founded on 4 June 1912 by Luis Emilio Recabarren, after he left the Democrat Party. [7] The party was initially known as the Socialist Workers' Party, before adopting its current name on 2 January 1922.

It achieved congressional representation shortly thereafter and played a leading role in the development of the Chilean labor movement. Closely tied to the Soviet Union and the Third International, the PCCh participated in the Popular Front (Frente Popular) government of 1938, growing rapidly among the unionized working class in the 1940s. It then participated to the Popular Front's successor, the Democratic Alliance.

Concern over the PCCh's success at building a strong electoral base, combined with the onset of the Cold War, led to its being outlawed in 1948 by a Radical government, a status it had to endure for almost a decade until 1958 when it was again legalized. By the 1960s, the party had become a veritable political subculture, with its own symbols and organizations and the support of prominent artists and intellectuals such as Pablo Neruda, the Nobel Prize-winning poet, and Violeta Parra, the songwriter and folk artist. [8] At the time, the U.S. State Department estimated the party membership to be approximately 27,500. [9]

It later came to power along with the Socialist Party in the Unidad Popular ("Popular Unity") coalition in 1970. Within the broad Unidad Popular alliance, the communists sided with Allende, a relative moderate from the Socialist Party, and other more moderate forces of that coalition, supporting more gradual reforms and urging to find a compromise with the Christian Democrats. This line was opposed by more radically leftist factions of the Socialist Party and smaller far-left groups. The party was outlawed after the 1973 coup d'état that deposed President Salvador Allende. Much of the Communist leadership went underground, and for a while the party's moderation continued even after the coup had taken place. Also, it has been argued by Mark Ensalaco that crushing the Communist Party was not a top priority for the military junta. [10] In its first statement after the coup, the party leadership still argued that the coup could succeed because the Unidad Popular was too isolated, due to actions of the 'far-left'. Around 1977, the party changed direction. [10] The Communist Party set up a guerrilla organization, the Manuel Rodríguez Patriotic Front. With the restoration of democracy and the election of a new president in 1990, the Communist Party of Chile was legalized again.

As part of the Popular Unity coalition the PCCh advocated a broad alliance; however, it swung sharply to the left after the 1973 coup, regretting the failure to issue arms to the working class and pursuing an armed struggle against Pinochet's regime. Since the restoration of democracy it has acted independently of its previous partners. Between 1983 and 1987 it was a member of the People's Democratic Movement.

In the 1999/2000 presidential elections the party supported Gladys Marín Millie for the national presidential elections. She won 3.2% of the vote in the first round. At the 2005 legislative election, 11 December 2005, the party won 5.1% of the popular vote, but as a result of Chile's binomial electoral rules, no seats. The small but significant support of the PCCh is believed to have aided in the electoral victories of former socialist president Ricardo Lagos in the 2000 elections, and in the more recent victory of Chile's first female president, the socialist Michelle Bachelet in January 2006, both of whom won in competitive second round runoffs.

From 2013 to 2018, the PCCh was a member of New Majority (Spanish : Nueva Mayoría), a leftist coalition led by Michelle Bachelet.

Controversies

The PCCh faced criticism from several parties in Chile after congratulating Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro on his party's victory in the 2020 parliamentary election. Prominent members of the Party for Democracy, Radical Party, and Socialist Party questioned the PCCh's praise of the election as "flawless", echoing criticisms from opposition parties in Venezuela that the election was neither free nor fair. [11] However, some of its leaders have also publicly condemned the human rights abuses that have taken place in Venezuela under the government of Nicolás Maduro. [12]

Leaders

Leaders of the Communist Party of Chile
General SecretaryPeriodPresidentPeriod
Ramón Sepúlveda Leal 1922–1924Non-existent position
Luis A. González ?–?
Galvarino Gil ?–?
Maclovio Galdames ?–?
José Santos Zavala ?–?
Isaias Iriarte ?–1929
Carlos Contreras Labarca 1931–1946
Ricardo Fonseca 1946–1948
Oyarzun Galo González 1948–1958
Elías Lafertte 1956–1961
Luis Corvalán 1958–1990
Non-existent position
Volodia Teitelboim 1990–1994
Gladys Marín 1994–2002
Guillermo Teillier 2002–2005Gladys Marín2002–2005
Lautaro Carmona Soto 2005–2023Guillermo Teillier2005–2023
Bárbara Figueroa  [ es ]2023–presentLautaro Carmona Soto2023–present

Electoral performance

Chamber of Deputies and Senate elections

ElectionVotes%Chamber seatsVotes%Senate seatsPolitical position
1918 1,5480.64%
0 / 118
Extra-parliamentary
1921 4,8142.16%
2 / 118
Opposition
1924 1,2120.49%
0 / 118
Extra-parliamentary
1925 as part of USRACh
7 / 132
as part of USRACh
3 / 45
Opposition
1937 17,1624.16%
6 / 146
7,543
1 / 45
Popular Front government
1941 53,11411.80%
16 / 147
28,44912.18%
4 / 45
1945 46,13310.18%
15 / 147
5 / 45
Coalition (1945–1948)
Banned (1948-1958)
1949 5,7211.25%
1 / 147
Opposition
1953 38,3714.93%
2 / 147
1957 as part of FRAP
6 / 147
1961 157,57211.76%
16 / 147
74,83812.21%
4 / 45
1965 290,63512.73%
18 / 147
142,08810.73%
6 / 45
1969 383,04916.60%
22 / 150
181,48818.04%
6 / 50
Opposition (1969–1970)
Coalition (1970–1973)
1973 593,73816.36%
25 / 150
380,46017.29%
9 / 50
Coalition
1973 Chilean coup d'état
1989 as part of PAIS
0 / 120
as part of PAIS
0 / 38
Extra-parliamentary
1993 336,0344.99%
0 / 120
65,0733.47%
0 / 38
1997 398,5886.88%
0 / 120
357,8258.44%
0 / 38
2001 320,6885.22%
0 / 120
45,7352.64%
0 / 38
2005 339,5475.14%
0 / 120
104,6872.19%
0 / 38
2009 132,3052.02%
3 / 120
Did not participate
0 / 38
Opposition
2013 255,2424.11%
6 / 120
6,4230.14%
0 / 38
Coalition
Changes to electoral system in 2017
2017 274,9354.58%
8 / 155
20,2171.21%
0 / 43
Opposition
2021 464,8857.35%
12 / 155
335,6737.21%
2 / 50
Coalition

Presidential election

Keys
Presidential
YearNomineeNo. of votes % of votes
1920 Luis Emilio Recabarren 6810.41%
1925 José Santos Salas 74,09128.4%
1927 None
1931 Elías Lafertte 2,4340.9%
1932 Elías Lafertte 4,1281.2%
1938 Pedro Aguirre Cerda (RP)222,72050.5%
1942 Juan Antonio Ríos (RP)260,03456.0%
1946 Gabriel González Videla (RP)192,20740.2%
1952 Salvador Allende (SP)51,9755.5%
1958 Salvador Allende (SP)356,49328.9%
1964 Salvador Allende (SP)977,90238.9%
1970 Salvador Allende (PUSP)1,070,33436.61%
1989 Patricio Aylwin (PDC)3,850,57155.17%
1993 Eugenio Pizarro (Ind)327,4024.70%
1999 Gladys Marín 225,2243.19%
2005 Tomás Hirsch (HP)375,0485.40%
2009 Jorge Arrate 433,1956.21%
2013 Michelle Bachelet (NMSP)3,466,35862.15%
2017 Alejandro Guillier (NMInd)3,157,75045.42%
2021 Gabriel Boric (ADSC)4,620,89055.87%

See also

Footnotes

  1. "Total de afiliados a partidos políticos". Servicio Electoral de Chile (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  2. Córdoba, Andrea Aguilar (14 December 2020). "Izquierda radical y populista en Chile, ¿realidad o especulación de Piñera?". Anadolu Agency (in Spanish). Retrieved 13 August 2021.
  3. "Historia Política". bcn.cl. 2020.
  4. Sanders, Philip (24 May 2021). "Communist Contender Vaults Atop New Poll of Chile's Presidential Race". Bloomberg News. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  5. Cristóbal Rovira: "El Partido Republicano no es de extrema derecha; es derecha populista radical" Revista Pauta. October 31, 2021. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  6. "Communist and Workers' Parties". SolidNet. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  7. Rubio, José Luis. Las internacionales obreras en América. Madrid: 1971. p. 61
  8. "Chile – The Parties of the Left". countrystudies.us.
  9. Benjamin, Roger W.; Kautsky, John H. (1968). "Communism and Economic Development". American Political Science Review . 62 (1): 122. doi:10.1017/S0003055400115679. JSTOR   1953329.
  10. 1 2 Ensalaco, Mark (2000). Chile Under Pinochet: Recovering the Truth. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 7. ISBN   0-8122-3520-7.
  11. Vargas, Felipe; Romero, Maria Cristina (10 December 2020). "Dirigentes políticos rechazan "congratulaciones" del PC a Maduro por elecciones legislativas en Venezuela". Emol (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 October 2022.
  12. "Camila Vallejo: El informe de Bachelet sobre Venezuela es lapidario". Cooperativa (in Spanish). 5 July 2019. Retrieved 24 November 2023.

Further reading

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christian Democratic Party (Chile)</span> Political party in Chile

The Christian Democratic Party is a Christian democratic political party in Chile. There have been three Christian Democrat presidents in the past, Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle, Patricio Aylwin, and Eduardo Frei Montalva.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Socialist Party of Chile</span> Political party in Chile

The Socialist Party of Chile is a centre-left political party founded in 1933. Its historic leader was President of Chile Salvador Allende, who was deposed in a coup d'état by General Augusto Pinochet in 1973. The military junta immediately banned socialist, Marxist and other leftist political parties. Members of the Socialist party and other leftists were subject to violent suppression, including torture and murder, under the Pinochet dictatorship, and many went into exile. Twenty-seven years after the 1973 coup, Ricardo Lagos Escobar won the Presidency as the Socialist Party candidate in the 1999–2000 Chilean presidential election. Socialist Michelle Bachelet won the 2005–06 Chilean presidential election. She was the first female president of Chile and was succeeded by Sebastián Piñera in 2010. In the 2013 Chilean general election, she was again elected president, leaving office in 2018.

<i>Concertación</i> Former Chilean political coalition

The Concertación, officially the Concertación de Partidos por la Democracia, was a coalition of center-left political parties in Chile, founded in 1988. Presidential candidates under its banner won every election from when military rule ended in 1990 until the conservative candidate Sebastián Piñera won the Chilean presidential election in 2010. In 2013 it was replaced by New Majority coalition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Popular Unity (Chile)</span> Political alliance in Chile

Popular Unity was a left-wing political alliance in Chile that stood behind the successful candidacy of Salvador Allende for the 1970 Chilean presidential election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gabriel González Videla</span> Chilean politician (1898–1980)

Gabriel Enrique González Videla was a Chilean politician and lawyer who served as the 24th president of Chile from 1946 to 1952. He had previously been a member of the Chamber of Deputies from 1930 to 1941 and senator for Tarapacá and Antofagasta from 1945 to 1946. A long-time member and leader in the Radical Party, he left the party in 1971 over its support for socialist president Salvador Allende. From 1973 until his death in 1980 he became an active collaborator and participant in the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, acting as vice president of the Council of State from 1976 onwards. As vice president of the council, he helped draft the current Chilean constitution of 1980.

Juntos Podemos Más por Chile was a political coalition created in 2003, consisting of the Communist Party of Chile, the Humanist Party, the Christian Left Party of Chile, and several other smaller left-wing organizations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Citizen Left</span> Political party in Chile

The Citizen Left Party of Chile, known until 2013 as Christian Left Party of Chile was a Chilean left-wing political party. Founded in 1971, in its early days it was suppressed by the Pinochet dictatorship. It was part of the Nueva Mayoría coalition, supporting the presidential candidacy president Michelle Bachelet in 2013.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Communist Party of Venezuela</span> Political party in Venezuela

The Communist Party of Venezuela is a communist party in Venezuela. Founded in 1931, it is the oldest active political party in Venezuela, and was the country's main leftist party until it fractured into rival factions in 1971. The PCV currently opposes the government of Nicolás Maduro.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Revolutionary Communist Party (Chile)</span> Political party

The Revolutionary Communist Party was a Chilean clandestine communist party of Maoist ideology founded in 1966 from a split in the Communist Party of Chile (PCCH). During the Popular Unity government, he adopted a critical stance towards the government of Salvador Allende. In 1972 the party faced an internal discussion over differences in revolutionary strategy, between those who defended the "people's war" (Maoists) and those who promoted the "mass insurrection" (Marxist-Leninists), causing the party to split into two factions, both disappearing in the early 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Popular Unitary Action Movement</span> Political party in Chile

The Popular Unitary Action Movement or MAPU was a small leftist political party in Chile. It was part of the Popular Unity coalition during the government of Salvador Allende. MAPU was repressed during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. In this period, some of its most radical members formed the Movimiento Juvenil Lautaro, whose leaders were political prisoners during the dictatorship and with the return to democracy. Another faction of the former members of the party joined the social democratic Party for Democracy in 1987.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Radical Party of Chile</span> Chilean political party

The Radical Party was a Chilean political party. It was formed in 1863 in Copiapó by a split in the Liberal Party. Not coincidentally, it was formed shortly after the organization of the Grand Lodge of Chile, and has maintained a close relationship with Chilean Freemasonry throughout its life. As such, it represented the anticlericalist position in Chilean politics, and was instrumental in producing the "theological reforms" in Chilean law in the early 1880s. These laws removed the cemeteries from the control of the Roman Catholic Church, established a civil registry of births and death in place of the previous recordkeeping of the church, and established a civil law of matrimony, which removed the determination of validity of marriages from the church. Prior to these laws, it was impossible for non-Catholics to contract marriage in Chile, and meant that any children they produced were illegitimate. Non-Catholics had also been barred from burial in Catholic cemeteries, which were virtually the only cemeteries in the country; instead, non-Catholics were buried in the beaches, and even on the Santa Lucia Hill in Santiago, which, in the 19th century, functioned as Santiago's dump.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">United Socialist Party of Venezuela</span> Socialist political party in Venezuela

The United Socialist Party of Venezuela is a socialist political party which has been the ruling party of Venezuela since 2007. It was formed from a merger of some of the political and social forces that support the Bolivarian Revolution led by President Hugo Chávez.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Luis Emilio Recabarren</span> Chilean politician (1876–1924)

Luis Emilio Recabarren Serrano was a Chilean political figure. He was elected several times as deputy, and was the driving force behind the worker's movement in Chile.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">FRAP (Chile)</span> Political party in Chile

The FRAP was a Chilean left-wing coalition of parties from 1956 to 1969. It presented twice a common candidate, Salvador Allende, for the 1958 and the 1964 presidential elections. Succeeding to the FRENAP formed the preceding year, the FRAP itself was succeeded by the Popular Unity coalition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">MAPU Obrero Campesino</span> Political party in Chile

The MAPU Obrero Campesino was a leftist political party in Chile that was formed after a split of MAPU in March 1973. It claimed to represent the political legacy of Rodrigo Ambrosio, the principal founder of the original MAPU, who had died in May 1972.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Democratic Unity Roundtable</span> Political coalition of Venezuelan opposition parties

The Democratic Unity Roundtable was a catch-all electoral coalition of Venezuelan political parties formed in January 2008 to unify the opposition to President Hugo Chávez's United Socialist Party of Venezuela in the 2010 Venezuelan parliamentary election. A previous opposition umbrella group, the Coordinadora Democrática, had collapsed after the failure of the 2004 Venezuelan recall referendum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nueva Mayoría</span> Chilean political coalition

The Nueva Mayoría, also translated in English as New Majority, was a Chilean centre-left electoral coalition from 2013 to 2018, composed mainly of centre-left political parties supporting the presidential candidacy of Michelle Bachelet in the 2013 election.

El Comunista was a daily newspaper published from Antofagasta, Chile. The publication was founded by Luis Emilio Recabarren. It was published between 1916 and 1927. The newspaper was known as El Socialista until 1922. The name change followed the transformation of the Socialist Workers Party into the Communist Party of Chile. José Vega Diaz served as typographer, editor and director of El Socialista. As of 1926 Pedro Caballero was the director of El Comunista.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Allendism</span>

Allendism is an ideological current that bases its positions and lines on the government of Salvador Allende, former president of Chile who, together with the Popular Unity, ruled the country until the coup d'état of 1973, headed by Augusto Pinochet. Within the political spectrum, it is located between the left and the center-left, basing its principles on democratic socialism, institutionalism, and reformism. The followers of this current are called allendistas.