Libertarian Movement (Costa Rica)

Last updated
Libertarian Movement Party
Partido Movimiento Libertario
FoundedMay 1994
Ideology Libertarian conservatism
Social conservatism [1] [2]
Catholic social teaching
Economic liberalism
Political position Right-wing
Colours Red
Legislative Assembly
0 / 57

The Libertarian Movement Party (Spanish : Partido Movimiento Libertario; PML) is a political party based on libertarian conservatism in Costa Rica. It was founded in May 1994. After an important protagonism during early 2000s with its perennial nominee Otto Guevara among the main candidates and reaching third place in 2006 and 2010, it was affected by several corruption scandals and lack of funds, the party gradually suffered a debacle in 2014 ending in fourth on the presidential ticket, and fifth in Parliament. Later losing all its mayors in the mid-term local election of 2016, to finally having bad results in 2018 with Guevara's candidacy reaching only 1% of support and losing all seats in Congress.

Contents

History

Founded by non-partisan liberals from the Academy and liberal defectors of Social Christian Unity Party, contested the 1998 election with Federico Malavassi as candidate receiving only 0.4% of the vote but succeeding in getting attorney Otto Guevara elected as member of the Legislative Assembly. [3] In this time the party was strongly libertarian and was in favor of minimal government (something quite polemic in a welfare state like Costa Rica when even the right-wing parties as the Social Christians tend to accept social programs and government intervention [3] ), legalization of recreational drugs, same-sex marriage, abortion and the like. [3]

In 2002, Guevara ran for president (unsuccessfully, 1.7% of the vote), and the party at the legislative elections won 9.3% of the popular vote and 6 out of 57 seats. A few weeks after taking office, one Congressman left the party and became independent, leaving PML with five seats. In 2006, Guevara again ran for president (unsuccessfully, 8.4% of the vote), and the party at the legislative elections won 9.1% of the popular vote and 6 out of 57 seats. [3] Evangelical pastor Fernando Alexis Castillo Villanueva endorsed the party in this period. [4] In the 2010 general election Guevara was again the PML's presidential candidate and received 20% of the popular vote, it also increased its number of deputies to nine (even so three of these deputies defects from the party before the end of the legislative period). At the municipal level the party obtain one mayor in 2006 and two in 2010. [3]

In its 2014 electoral campaign, the party took a more socially conservative position, totally opposing the legalisation of abortion [2] and rejecting homosexual couples' right to a marriage license. [5]

The party suffered a debacle in the 2014 election, as was relegated to fourth place after PAC, PLN and FA parties, [6] and reducing its congressional representation to less than half (four seats), [7] also was unable to elect any mayor in the 2016 mid-term municipal election. This electoral debacle was also costly, as the party was unable to pay some of its campaign debts to both workers, Social Security, loaners and Banks. As previously, in 2015 another deputy defects; Carmen Quesada, who declares herself independent.

Also in 2015 several party members went to trial after being accused of fraud by the State, apparently trying to trick the Electoral Tribunal in paying for trainings that were already cover by the Friedrich Naumann Foundation. [8] Judges sentenced party's vice president, treasurer and accountant to eight years in prison.

For the 2018 general election the party held the first primary election in their history, due to there being more than one members aspiring for the party's nomination for the presidency. The two pre-candidates were Otto Guevara, running for the fifth time, this time under a right-wing populist tone, inspired by the campaigns of Donald Trump. [9] The other candidate was Natalia Díaz, a young, first-time deputy, who promised, if elected, she'll bring a new face to the party and renew its structure and administration. Guevara won with 59.49% of the votes.

Due to previous fraud allegations against the party, Otto Guevara's campaign had difficulty finding a bank willing to give the party a loan for campaigning. This changed on January 20, when Promérica Bank loaned the party 500 million colones for the purpose of financing their electoral campaign. [10] On November, 2019 Guevara announced the foundation of a new political party named Liberal Union [11] [12] as the Libertarian Movement is unable to pay its debts. [13] [14] [15]

In 2019 Guevara announced that the party would not take part in elections anymore and that a new formation would be founded named Liberal Union. [13] [16] [15]

The party's candidacy was taken originally by credit tycoon Carlos Valenciano Kamer, however he resign soon after arguing health issues. The candidacy was then taken by former president of the Arias Foundation Luis Alberto Cordero Arias receiving only a little more than 3000 votes and being the least voted candidate of all 25 in that election.

Policy positions

The political party generally has a moderately libertarian perspective on policy issues, although sometimes policy proposals on social issues are more conservative, than libertarian, i.e. a legislator introduced legislation that would have banned same-sex couples from adopting or having custody of children.

During the 2014 campaign, the party expressed opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage, although Congressman and Presidential candidate Otto Guevara has since said that his major concern about legalizing gay marriage is that the debate over such libertarian legislation would distract the nation from more important matters. [17]

On most policy issues, the party favors moderate libertarian reforms such as: [18]

Electoral performance

Presidential

ElectionCandidateFirst roundSecond round
Votes%PositionResultVotes%PositionResult
1998 Federico Malavassi5,8740.42%7thLost
2002 Otto Guevara 25,8151.69%Increase2.svg 4thLost
2006 137,7108.48%Increase2.svg 3rdLost
2010 384,54020.83%3rdLost
2014 233,06411.34%Decrease2.svg 4thLost
2018 21,8901.02%Decrease2.svg 7thLost
2022 Luis Alberto Cordero Arias1,4060.07%Decrease2.svg 26thLost

Parliamentary

ElectionLeaderVotes %Seats+/–PositionGovernment
1998 Federico Malavassi42,6403.1%
1 / 57
New4thOpposition
2002 Otto Guevara 142,1529.3%
6 / 57
Increase2.svg 54thOpposition
2006 147,9349.2%
6 / 57
Steady2.svg 0Increase2.svg 3rdOpposition
2010 275,51814.5%
9 / 57
Increase2.svg 33rdOpposition
2014 162,5597.9%
4 / 57
Decrease2.svg 5Decrease2.svg 5thOpposition
2018 49,6592.3%
0 / 57
Decrease2.svg 4Decrease2.svg 9thExtra-parliamentary
2022 Luis Alberto Cordero Arias13,4730.7%
0 / 57
Steady2.svg 0Decrease2.svg 19thExtra-parliamentary

Related Research Articles

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

Otto Guevara Guth is a politician in Costa Rica and founder of the Partido Movimiento Libertario. He served in the Costa Rican legislature from 1998-2002 and 2014-2018. Guevara is currently the president of the Libertarian Movement Party and has been its candidate for president of Costa Rica in 2002, 2006, 2010 and 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Liberation Party (Costa Rica)</span> Political party of Costa Rica

The National Liberation Party, nicknamed the verdiblancos, is a political party in Costa Rica. The party is a member of the Socialist International. Social-democratic by statute, the party has a few internal factions, including liberals, Third Way supporters, centrists, and social conservatives.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Citizens' Action Party (Costa Rica)</span> Political party in Costa Rica

The Citizens' Action Party is a political party in Costa Rica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Social Christian Unity Party</span> Political party in Costa Rica

The Social Christian Unity Party is a centre-right political party in Costa Rica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Integration Party (Costa Rica)</span> Political party in Costa Rica

The National Integration Party is a political party in Costa Rica. The party mainly endorses perennial candidate Dr. Walter Muñoz Céspedes, a San Jose medical doctor and five-time presidential candidate, normally with about 1% or less of the vote. In the 2018 election, it endorsed the candidacy of former minister and defense lawyer Juan Diego Castro reaching 9% of the vote, although Castro and the party angrily split pathways soon after the election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2006 Costa Rican general election</span> General election held in Costa Rica

General elections were held in Costa Rica on 5 February 2006. In the presidential election, Óscar Arias of the National Liberation Party, a former president and Nobel Peace Laureate, was victorious over Ottón Solís of the Citizens' Action Party and twelve other minor-party candidates. Although Arias was expected to win by a wide margin, the actual polling reports were unexpectedly close. However, early results showed the contest to be closer than it actually was. The preliminary official report, after 88.45% of the vote counted, showed the result for President of the Republic almost tied between Arias with 40.51% of the vote and Ottón Solís with 40.29%. Given the small difference of only 3250 votes, the Superior Electoral Tribunal announced that a manual count of all the votes would start immediately and no official winner would be announced until that process was completed, approximately two weeks after the election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Union Party (Costa Rica)</span> Right wing party in Costa Rica

The National Union Party is the name of several parties in Costa Rica, generally located on the centre-right of the political spectrum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2010 Costa Rican general election</span> General election held in Costa Rica

General elections were held in Costa Rica on 7 February 2010. The ruling party before the election, the center-left National Liberation Party, put forward former Vice-President Laura Chinchilla as its presidential candidate, while the libertarian, Movimiento Libertario nominated former legislator Otto Guevara. Opinion polls before voting started consistently put Chinchilla as the front-runner, a trend confirmed in the election-night count, which showed her garnering 46.76% of the vote.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 Costa Rican general election</span> General election held in Costa Rica

General elections were held in Costa Rica on Sunday, 2 February 2014 to elect a new president, two vice presidents, and 57 Legislative Assembly lawmakers. In accordance with Article 132 of the constitution, incumbent President Laura Chinchilla Miranda was ineligible to run for a second consecutive term.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Restoration Party (Costa Rica)</span> Political party in Costa Rica

The National Restoration Party is a political party in Costa Rica. It was founded in 2005 by Carlos Avendaño Calvo mostly by dissidents of Costa Rica's historical Christian party, Costa Rican Renewal, after its then only deputy, Carlos Avendaño Calvo, left. Avendaño would successfully return to Congress because of the party from 2010 to 2014. Even though he had personal differences with Justo Orozco, both were able to work together in defending the same agenda, mainly the conservative views of the evangelical community. The party's candidate in the presidential election of 2014 was Avendaño, who received 1.35 percent of the vote.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Constitution of Costa Rica</span>

The Constitution of Costa Rica is the supreme law of Costa Rica. At the end of the 1948 Costa Rican Civil War, José Figueres Ferrer oversaw the Costa Rican Constitutional Assembly, which drafted the document. It was approved on 1949 November 7. Several older constitutions had been in effect starting from 1812, with the most recent former constitution ratified in 1871. The Costa Rican Constitution is remarkable in that in its Article 12 abolished the Costa Rican military, making it the second nation after Japan to do so by law. Another unusual clause is an amendment asserting the right to live in a healthy natural environment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Generation Party (Costa Rica)</span> Political party in Costa Rica

The New Generation Party is a conservative political party in Costa Rica. The party was founded in 2012 in order to partake in the 2014 general election.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 Social Christian Unity Party presidential primary</span>

The Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC) presidential primary of 2017 or Social Christian National Convention as is known in Spanish was an electoral process for the selection of the party's presidential candidate for the 2018 Costa Rican general election and was scheduled for June 4, 2017.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 Costa Rican general election</span> General election held in Costa Rica

General elections were held in Costa Rica in 2018 to elect both the President and Legislative Assembly. The first round of the presidential election was held on 4 February 2018, with the two highest-ranked candidates being Christian singer and Congressman Fabricio Alvarado Muñoz from the conservative National Restoration Party and writer and former Minister Carlos Alvarado Quesada from the progressive Citizens’ Action Party, gaining 24% and 21% of the votes respectively. As no candidate received more than 40% of the first round vote, a second round run-off election was held on 1 April 2018 and was won by Carlos Alvarado Quesada, with a landslide victory of 60.6% of the vote.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liberalism in Costa Rica</span> Overview of liberalism in Costa Rica

Liberalism in Costa Rica is a political philosophy with a long and complex history. Liberals were the hegemonic political group for most of Costa Rica's history especially during the periods of the Free State and the First Republic, however, as the liberal model exhausted itself and new more left-wing reformist movements clashed during the Costa Rican Civil War liberalism was relegated to a secondary role after the Second Costa Rican Republic with the development of Costa Rica's Welfare State and its two-party system controlled by social-democratic and Christian democratic parties.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Republic Party (Costa Rica)</span> Political party in Costa Rica

The New Republic Party is a Costa Rican Christian-conservative political party founded on 20 October 2018. The party was founded after the resignation of the evangelical singer and journalist Fabricio Alvarado Muñoz from the Christian party National Restoration for disagreements with the Executive Committee chaired by Congressman Carlos Avendaño. Alvarado was the latter's presidential candidate in the 2018 elections of major significance, since he was the most voted in the first round with 25% of the votes, qualifying for the run-off, but was defeated by the Citizen's Action Party nominee Carlos Alvarado Quesada.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liberal Progressive Party (Costa Rica)</span> Political party in Costa Rica

The Liberal Progressive Party is a classical-liberal political party in Costa Rica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2020 Costa Rican municipal elections</span>

The 2020 municipal elections in Costa Rica were local elections in Costa Rica held on Sunday, February 2, 2020, to elect all municipal offices in the country; mayors, aldermen, syndics, district councilors and the intendants of eight special autonomous districts, together with their respective alternates in all cases. These will be the fifth direct municipal elections since the amendment to the 1998 Municipal Code and the second to be held mid-term since the 2009 reform.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">United We Can</span> Political party in Costa Rica

United We Can is a Costa Rican classical liberal political party founded by the former deputy and former Libertarian Movement member Natalia Díaz Quintana. The party culminated its process of cantonal and provincial assemblies in November 2018 allowing it to participate in the 2020 Costa Rican municipal elections.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2022 Costa Rican general election</span> General election held in Costa Rica

General elections were held in Costa Rica on 6 February 2022, to elect the president, two vice-presidents, and all 57 deputies of the Legislative Assembly. As none of the presidential nominees obtained at least 40% of the votes, a runoff was held on 3 April 2022, between the top two candidates, José María Figueres and Rodrigo Chaves Robles.

References

  1. Sanchez, María Isabel (2 February 2014), "No clear frontrunner as Costa Ricans vote for new president", Digital Journal
  2. 1 2 "Liberal and conservative ideologies clashed in first official presidential debate", Inside Costa Rica, 6 January 2014, archived from the original on 15 March 2014, retrieved 15 March 2014
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Costa Rica". San José University. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  4. "La Gaceta" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2020-08-22.[ permanent dead link ]
  5. "¿Ha sido consistente Guevara frente al matrimonio gay?". El Financiero. Retrieved 2014-05-30.[ dead link ]
  6. Buckman, Robert T. (20 August 2014). Latin America 2014. ISBN   9781475812282 . Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  7. Turner, Blair (20 August 2015). Latin America 2015-2016. ISBN   9781475818710 . Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  8. Molina, Tabatha. "Libertarian Party VP in Costa Rica Faces 16 Years for Fraud". Panama Post. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  9. Mata, Esteban. "Otto Guevara: Trump's campaign gives me new inspiration". La Nación. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  10. Madrigal, Rebeca. "Libertarian Movement will get 500 million colones from Promérica Bank in order to fund their last campaign in the days before the election". La Nación. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  11. Arrieta, Esteban (11 November 2019). "Otto Guevara funda nuevo partido para regresar a la Asamblea". La República. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  12. Herrera, Juan José (11 November 2019). "Unión Liberal: el nuevo partido con el que Otto Guevara regresa a la política". Teletica. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  13. 1 2 González, Rodolfo (2019). "Otto Guevara quiere regresar a la Asamblea con nuevo partido". Teletica. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  14. Arrieta, Esteban (18 September 2019). "Otto Guevara anhela regresar a la Asamblea Legislativa en 2022". La República. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  15. 1 2 Arrieta, Esteban (22 March 2018). "Otto Guevara piensa en nuevo partido y desaparecer deudas de un plumazo". La República. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  16. Arrieta, Esteban (18 September 2019). "Otto Guevara anhela regresar a la Asamblea Legislativa en 2022". La República. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  17. "Costa Rica's Libertarian Lawmakers Show Latin America How It's Done" Archived 2019-03-20 at the Wayback Machine .
  18. "Estatuto".