You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish. (March 2009)Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Independent Moralizing Front Frente Independiente Moralizador | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | FIM |
Leader | Fernando Olivera |
Founded | 1990 |
Dissolved | 2007 |
Ideology | Reformism [1] |
Political position | Centre [1] |
The Independent Moralizing Front (Spanish : Frente Independiente Moralizador) was a Peruvian political party. At the legislative elections, 8 April 2001, the party won 11.0% of the popular vote and 11 out of 120 seats in the Congress of the Republic. Its presidential candidate at the elections of the same day, Luis Fernando Olivera Vega, won 9.9% of the vote. It was allied with former Peruvian president Alejandro Toledo's party, Peru Possible.
At the legislative elections held on 9 April 2006, the party won 1.5% of the popular vote but no seats in Congress. Some months after the awkward results in the 2006 elections, the party became disbanded and most of its last standing members pursued other goals.
Date [2] [3] | Candidates | Result (% of valid votes) |
---|---|---|
2001 (first round) | President: Fernando Olivera Vice President: Ricardo Belmont Second Vice President: Eduardo Iriarte | 9.85 % (Did not proceed to second round) |
2006 | President: Fernando Olivera | Candidacy was withdrawn |
After the dismissal of Alberto Fujimori as president of the Republic of Peru and after Valentín Paniagua assumed the position of transitional President, he called general elections for April 8, 2001. In these new elections, the Moralizing Independent Front presented, for the first time, the candidacy of Fernando Olivera Vega for the presidency of the Republic of Peru. Accompanying him on the presidential ticket were Ricardo Belmont, as First Vice President, and Eduardo Iriarte, as Second Vice President. Soon, the candidacy of Fernando Olivera became of central importance, since, during the 15 years he was in parliament in opposition (1985-2000), the issue of public integrity and the fight against corruption characterized his public work, becoming an investigator of well known cases of corruption, during the governments of Garcia and Fujimori, which earned him sympathy with a large sector of the electorate. [4]
The results arrived on April 8, 2001 and placed Olivera in fifth place, with 9.85% of the vote. Many strategic errors were identified with the campaign during the final stretch. For example, many claimed that he attempted to elevate himself above the rest of the contenders by directing all criticisms against Alejandro Toledo, the leader in the polls and eventual winner, thus detracting from his case against, and the resultant downfall of Fujimori. [4]
The two candidates that proceeded to the second round were Alejandro Toledo, with the Perú Posible Party and Alan García, of APRA. During the campaign, the successive errors of Toledo and his family and campaign led him to lose popularity in a very short time. [5] However, Toledo prevailed over his rivals with 53% of the valid votes, thanks, in part, to the support of Ferando Olivera.
After terminating the alliance with Perú Posible at the end of 2005, the Independent Moralizing Front named Fernando Olivera as presidential candidate for the general election in 2006. However, due to the little support he registered in public opinion polls, he decided withdraw his candidacy for the presidency and run for Congress for the Moralizing Independent Front topping his party's list. After ending his candidacy, he states that "I am a man who believes in Peru and who believes in democracy, and because in a democracy, the people rule, I am announcing the withdrawal of my presidential candidacy and declare that, compliant with patriotic duty, I assume the responsibility of working for the rescue of Congress together with the entire FIM team and with all the Democrats of Peru.” [6]
Before the first round, the congressmen from APRA, Jorge del Castillo, Mercedes Cabanillas and Mauricio Mulder delivered to the press a document referring to a "governing agreement" with four items that allegedly were signed by the National Unity candidate Lourdes Flores Nano and the questioned leader of FIM, Fernando Olivera. [7] Immediately, the candidate of National Unity dismissed the existence of a governing agreement between the electoral alliance which he led and the Independent Moralizing Front. [7]
The FIM's showing in the elections on April 9, 2006 were poor. None of the candidates on its list won their seats for the legislative period 2006-2011; further, due to not reaching the electoral threshold, the party lost its registration.
Date [2] [3] | % of Valid Votes | Seats | Chosen Deputies | Parliamentary Group |
---|---|---|---|---|
1990 | 15.63 % | 7 | Olivera Vega, Fernando (Lima) López Therese, Eduardo Felix J. (Lima) Falvy Valdivieso, Dennis Miguel (Lima) Picasso Salinas, Jaime Ernesto (Lima) Flores Aráoz Gratta, Fernando (Lima) Gamarra Olivares, Ernesto Ramón (Lima) Terán Iriarte, Edgar Victor (Lima) | Independent Moralizing Front |
Date [2] [3] | % of Valid Votes | Seats | Chosen Deputies | Parliamentary Group |
---|---|---|---|---|
1992 | 7.81% | 7 | Olivera Vega, Fernando Gamarra Olivares, Ernesto R. Cuaresma Sánchez, Carlos Larrabure Gálvez, César Ricardo Chu Mériz, Julio Sambucetti Pedraglio, Humberto Serrato Puse, Willy | Independent Moralizing Front |
Date [2] [3] | % Of Valid Votes | Seats | Chosen Deputies | Parliamentary Group |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | 4.89 % | 6 | Vega Olivera, Fernando Merino Lucero, Martha Beatriz Salazar Vargas, Jorge Gamarra Olivares, Ernesto Llerana Maroti, Antonio Vidarte Correa, Elferez | Independent Moralizing Front |
2000 | 7.56 % | 9 | Olivera Vega, Luis Fernando Higuchi Miyagawa, Susana Iberico Núñez, Luis Carlos Antonio Pennano Allison, Guido Carlos Ríos Salcedo, Waldo Enrique Gamarra Olivares, Ernesto Ramón Vásquez Valera, Manuel Alejandro Donayre Pasquel, Patricia Elizabeth Cuaresma Sánchez, Carlos Ricardo | Independent Moralizing Front |
2001 | 11.0% | 11 | Infantas Fernández, Carlos Armando (Junín) Alcides Chamorro Balvín|Chamorro Balvin, Alcides Glorioso]] (Junín) Ibérico Núñez, Luis Carlos Antonio (Lima) Fausto Alvarado Dodero, Fausto Humberto (Lima) Susana Higuchi Miyagawa (Lima) Benítez Rivas, Heriberto Manuel (Lima) Requena Oliva, Juan Humberto (Piura) Pacheco Villar, Gustavo Adolfo (Puno) | Independent Moralizing Front |
2006 | 1.5% | 0 |
Date [2] [3] | District Level Results | Provincial Level Results | Regional Level Results | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elected Officials | Constituencies (convened / participating) | Elected Officials | Constituencies (convened / participating) | Elected Officials | Constituencies (convened / participating) | |
1993 (M) | 60 | 1539/79 | 19 | 186/14 | ||
2002 (RYM) | 118 | 1635/200 | 20 | 194/22 | 11 | 25/2 |
2003 (MC) | 0 | 13/3 | ||||
2005 (MC) | 0 | 21/1 | ||||
2006 (NEM) | 0 | 9/1 | ||||
2006 (RYM) | 11 | 1637/63 | 0 | 195/11 | 0 | 25/1 |
On the 14th of September, 2000, almost 2 months after Alberto Fujimori was sworn in for the third consecutive term as President of the Republic of Peru, the FIM congressmen Fernando Olivera, Luis Iberico and Susana Higuchi presented before public opinion a video where Vladimiro Montesinos appears to deliver 15,000 dollars to congressman Alberto Kouri in exchange for joining the government. [8] At the time of the presentation of this video, the leader of the Independent Moralizing Front remarked that "today we are liberating Peru from the yoke of this Mafia," in reference to the government of Alberto Fujimori.
Two days after the publication of the video, Fujimori announced in a message to the Nation that he would dissolve the National Intelligence Service (SIN) and convese anticipated elections for April 2001. [9] In those elections, in which the FIM participated with the presidential candidacy of Fernando Olivera and a parliamentary list, Luis Iberico publicized his candidacy with posters in which he was holding up the video as a symbol of the fight against corruption. [10]
On the 28th of July, 2001, Alejandro Toledo assumed the presidency of the Republic of Peru, after defeating the APRA candidate Alan García in the second round. During the campaign, and continuing after the first round, the Independent Moralizing Front decided to support the candidacy of Alejandro Toledo to prevent the APRA candidate from winning in the second round. However, the support of the FIM to the Perú Posible candidate was achieve after both groups agreed to a so-called "Pact For Governance and Moralization" which established that any agreement with another political group must be approved by both parts of the alliance. [11]
Already in government, Alejandro Toledo faced a Congress with a strong opposition parliament. Due to that, "he bet on an alliance with the Independent Moralizing Front (FIM), with whose votes —in addition to some independent ones—I could get a more manageable majority in Parliament." [12] Subsequently, he established a minimum coalition between the party of government Peru Possible and the Independent Moralizing Front, a coalition which was constantly rocked by ministerial tensions, evincing breaks and demonstrating that there did not exist certainty in the votes that should have favored the government. [13]
As a product of that alliance, the FIM leader and founder, Fernando Olivera was sworn in as Minister of Justice in the first Toledo cabinet and later was named Peruvian ambassador to Spain. The parliamentarian Fausto Alvarado Dodero, also representing the FIM, replaced Olivera as Minister of Justice and was sworn in "for the alliance of governance and moralization which seeks to give Peru a government that delivers to it prosperity." [14] The ministerial change was greeted by the APRA parliamentarian Jorge del Castillo, who thought it "very well that the government has been liberated from the presence of Fernando Olivera, who, on account of his personality until the last moment created problems by his compulsive and confrontational attitude." [14]
Other FIM figures with important positions during the Toledo government were Luis Iberico, who was chosen as fifth Vice President of the Republican Congress; Beatrix Merino, who was parliamentarian for the FIM in the period between 1995-2000 and then, as an independent, was chosen as the President of the Council of Ministers in the Toledo government in June 2003, and Eduardo Iriarte, who ran for the Second Vice President on the ticket with Fernando Olivera during his presidential run in 2001 and who would later serve as Minister of Production, Minister of Transportation and Communications and Director of the National Reserve Bank during the Toledo administration.
In February 2004, Fernando Olivera "announced that his political group would not participate in the discussion of the new cabinet the government was starting to overcome the existing governing crisis in the country, but that the alliance with Peru Possible remains firm." [15] The wear and tear that Peru Possible, the party of President Alejando Toledo, suffered was similar to that suffered by the FIM. Some of its representatives were questioned "among them Olivera himself, who despite being ambassador to Spain spends more time in Lima, dedicated to political work; or the regional president of Cusco, who has just enacted a regional ordinance recognizing the free cultivation of the coca leaf in some valleys of that region," [16] and as a result they began to lose popular support and soon they disappeared from public opinion polls, which hindered their electoral possibilities for 2006. [15] At the end of the Alejandro Toledo government, the alliance with the FIM came to its end.
The Peruvian Aprista Party is a Peruvian social-democratic political party and a member of the Socialist International. The party was founded as the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance by Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, who originally intended to create a network of anti-imperialist social and political movements in Latin America. Members are called "compañeros" (fellows), based on the fraternity espoused by Haya de la Torre. Originally a centre-left to left-wing party with democratic socialist and nationalist elements, the party moved closer to the political centre under the leadership of Alan García starting in the 1980s, embracing social democracy and later some Third Way policies. In 2006, the party adopted a new platform as García's second presidency implemented a series of policies labelled as centre-right, embracing free-market capitalism, dialogue with other right-wing parties and organizations in the country, and closer ties with the Catholic Church and Evangelical churches.
Possible Peru was a Peruvian political party. It was founded in 1994 by Alejandro Toledo with the original name of Possible Country.
The Popular Action is a liberal and reformist political party in Peru, founded by former Peruvian president Fernando Belaúnde.
Valentín Toribio Demetrio Agustin Paniagua Corazao was a Peruvian lawyer and politician who briefly served as 55th President of Peru from 2000 to 2001. Elected President of Congress on 16 November 2000, he ascended to the presidency as incumbent Alberto Fujimori and both his Vice Presidents resigned by 22 November 2000.
The Christian People's Party is a centre-right and conservative political party based on the principles of Christian democracy. It was founded in 1966 by Christian Democratic Party dissidents, led by Luis Bedoya Reyes, at the time mayor of Lima.
Lourdes Celmira Rosario Flores Nano is a Peruvian lawyer and politician who served as a councilwoman of Lima, Deputy from Lima from 1990 to 1992, Democratic Constituent Congresswoman from 1992 to 1995, Congresswoman from 1995 to 2000, and the Christian People's Party candidate for President of Peru in the 2001 and 2006 elections in which she ran under the National Unity.
General elections were held in Peru in on 9 April 2006 to elect the President, two Vice-Presidents, 120 members of Congress and five members of the Andean Parliament for the 2006–2011 period. As the no presidential candidate received a majority of the vote, a second round was held on 4 June between the top two candidates, Ollanta Humala and Alan García. Garcia won the run-off with 52.63% to Humala's 47.37%. He was subsequently inaugurated on 28 July 2006, Peruvian Independence Day.
Luis Fernando Olivera Vega is a Peruvian politician and leader of Independent Moralizing Front (FIM), a Peruvian political party.
Alliance for the Future was a Peruvian electoral alliance formed by pro-Fujimori parties Cambio 90, New Majority Siempre Unidos and Sí Cumple for the 2006 general election. Its presidential candidate was former President of the Congress and Congresswoman Martha Chávez Cossio.
Ricardo Pablo Belmont Cassinelli is a Peruvian TV network owner and politician. He was the Mayor of Lima serving from 1990 to 1995 and as a Congressman for the Center Front, representing Lima between 2009 and 2011, replacing Alberto Andrade, who died in office. He was popularly known as "El Hermanón" for his friendliness and also as "El Colora'o" (Ginger) because of his reddish hair.
National Solidarity Party, was a conservative Peruvian political party. Founded in 1998 for the 2000 general election to support the candidacy of Luis Castañeda Lossio, a former Lima City Council member from Popular Action. Following the end of Alberto Fujimori's regime, the party formed the National Unity coalition with the Christian People's Party and other minor parties. Led by Lourdes Flores, the coalition placed third at the 2001 and 2006 general elections, while at municipal level, it won the capital city of Lima with Castañeda as the mayoral nominee.
Carlos Ricardo Bruce Montes de Oca is a Peruvian politician and a former Congressman, representing Lima from 2006 until 2019, when his term ended with the dissolution of the Congress by Martín Vizcarra in 2019.
According to the Organic Law of Regional Governments, the regions are, with the departments, the first-level administrative subdivisions of Peru. Since its 1821 independence, Peru had been divided into departments but faced the problem of increasing centralization of political and economic power in its capital, Lima.
General elections were held in Peru on 10 April 2011 to elect the president, the vice presidents, 130 members of Congress and five members of the Andean Parliament. As no presidential candidate received a majority in the first round, a second round was held on 5 June to determine the successor of outgoing president Alan García. Former army officer Ollanta Humala narrowly defeated Keiko Fujimori, daughter of imprisoned former President Alberto Fujimori. Humala was sworn in as the 94th President of Peru on 28 July.
The Possible Peru Electoral Alliance was an electoral alliance in Peru formed for the 2011 general election, dominated by the eponymous party Possible Peru and led by presidential candidate and ex-president Alejandro Toledo.
The National Solidarity Alliance was an electoral alliance in Peru formed for the 2011 general election, dominated by the eponymous National Solidarity Party and led by presidential candidate Luis Castañeda.
General elections were held in Peru on 10 April 2016 to determine the president, vice-presidents, composition of the Congress of the Republic of Peru and the Peruvian representatives of the Andean Parliament.
This is a list of the composition of the Congress of the Republic of Peru since the adoption of the current Constitution of Peru in 1993 starting with the 1995 elections.
Luis Carlos Antonio Iberico Núnez is an Argentine-born Peruvian journalist and politician. Throughout his journalistic career, he served in various news stations during the 1980s and 1990s. He gained prominence for his fight against the Alberto Fujimori administration, denouncing several allegations of corruption involving the press. Alongside Fernando Olivera, he presented the first "Vladi-videos" that would prove the major corruption operations headed by Intelligence Chief Vladimiro Montesinos. His role in Fujimori's downfall would gain him support in a career in politics.
Front of Hope 2021 is a reformist Peruvian political party. Founded in 2020 by former congressman and government minister Fernando Olivera, the party is organized as the direct successor of the defunct Hope Front party, which lost its registration at the National Elections Jury as it failed to pass the electoral threshold in the 2016 general election.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help){{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help){{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help){{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help){{cite book}}
: Missing or empty |title=
(help){{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help)