The political parties of Chile are three clearly categorized, distinct, political groups: the left-wing, the center and the right-wing. Before the 1973 coup, these three political groups were moderately pluralistic and fragmented.
This distinction has existed since the end of the 19th century. Since then, the three groups have been made up of different parties. Each party has had some amount of power in the management of the State or has been represented in the National Congress.
Political parties are recognized legally and formally by Political Constitution of the Republic of Chile of 1980 and by the Organic Constitutional Law of Political Parties of 1987 as organizations that participate in the legal political system and contribute to guiding public opinion.
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In Chile, the first political groups were created during the Independence of Chile: the Royalists and the Patriots. The Royalists wanted to maintain the status quo with the King of Spain, while the Patriots wanted to gain a larger degree of freedom. In turn, the Patriots further split into the Moderates, who wanted a slow pace of reform, and the Radicals or Extremists, who favored a much faster pace. All of the early political groups were shy of advocating for full independence since it was unknown if the King would regain his power from Napoleon.
Once Chile gained independence, many political groupings emerged. They were based on various popular leaders during that time, instead of common political ideas. Two very strong political groupings were the Pipolos (liberals) and the Pelucónes (conservatives). Two minor parties, the O’Higginists and the Tobacconists, were often on the Pelucónes' side. After Diego Portales Palazuelos became the architect of the New Institution and the Constitution of 1833, the Pelucónes prevailed for thirty years (1831–1861).
From 1831 to 1861, the prevailing political system was one in which the President co-opted a successor. This system greatly influenced the idea that power should be transferred between members of the ruling political faction. It was only the "Question of the Sacristan" (1856), which divided The Pelucónes, allowed for the rise of the Liberals to power in 1861.
The formal emergence of political parties in Chilean institutions occurred around the 1850s. Chileans began to challenge the President as the leading role in national political life through the National Congress. In 1891, the disagreement was resolved after a Civil War, in favor of a parliamentary system.
Around that time, the rise of the middle class would eventually lead to the creation of the Radical Party. Their campaign started in the 1850s, as a group defending the interests of the silver mine owners, but it would gradually shift its focus to the employees of the growing state bureaucracy. Soon afterwards, from the same branch of radicalism, the Democratic Party appeared. It was a community that was born closer to the working class segment of society, but that over time would join the game of alliances within the rest of the party system.
After the Chilean Civil War of 1891, the political system began to embody elements of a parliamentary system. Hence, the political coalitions became very strong. Although around twenty distinct political parties and movements existed, Chilean politics was structured around two large groups: the Liberal Alliance (of Liberal and Progressive tendency) and the Coalition (Conservative, Catholics). At the same time, political parties, formerly tools of the upper-class, expanded to include the thriving middle and working classes too.
With the rise of immigration from Europe, workers with anarchist and socialist ideas came to Chile. Additionally, in the mid-19 century, the union movement began in the nitrate fields of the north of Chile through a surge of the joint labor unions. It is from these processes that in 1912, the Workers' Socialist Party was founded in Iquique by the typographer Luis Emilio Recabarren and 30 union workers and employees. The Workers' Socialist Party is defined as the political party of the Chilean working class. In 1922, the party joined the Third Communist International. Since that date, the party has been known as the Communist Party of Chile.
In the period between 1920 and 1938 (between the start of the first presidential term of Arturo Alessandri Palma and the end of his second term) a series of political incidents led to the loss of the importance of traditional nineteenth-century parties, but for the benefit of the "party masses".
The splendor of this new type of political party would come with the three presidential terms of the Radical Party between 1938 and 1952. At that time, the Radical Party (the faction of the middle class, par excellence), transformed into a large body of positions and political favors, which in the long run would lead to its discredit. Its place as an intermediate political group—between the right and the left—would be taken by the Christian Democratic Party. The Christian Democratic Party is the successor of the National Falange, which in turn had split from the declining Conservative Party after the victory of Eduardo Frei Montalva (1964–1970). Regarding political parties, their main characteristic between 1938 and 1973 was their structuring into the classic "three-thirds" system (right, center, and left).
With Salvador Allende, the Popular Unity came to power as a vast political coalition composed of elements from the center and the left. However, the Military Coup of 1973 signified not only the disappearance of the Popular Unity, but the breakdown of the party system and its end during most of the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Only in the last year of the military dictatorship was the Organic Constitutional Law of Political Parties enacted, which regulated their formation and function.
Between 1973 and 1987, Chilean political parties were prohibited. On October 8, 1973, the members of the Popular Unity were banned and three days later, the rest of the political parties and movements were declared adjourned, [1] and definitively dissolved on March 12, 1977. [2]
On October 1, 1996, the Organic Constitutional Law was published in the Legal Gazette, which re-established the system of electoral registrations and created the Electoral Service of Chile (Servel) as a replacement for the former Directorate of the Electoral Registry. [3] On March 23, 1987, the Organic Constitutional Law of Political Parties was published—which established its objectives, requirements for legalization and the internal organization between others—with which the groups began procedures for their legal recognition. [4]
The National Party was the first political organization to be legally recognized by the Servel on December 23, 1987, inscribed officially in the registry on January 4, 1988. [5] In the following months—before the Plebiscite of October 5, 1988—the National Advance, Humanist, National Renewal, Radical Democracy, Socialist, Christian Democratic (CDP), Party for Democracy, Party of the South, Radical and Green parties were legalized. [6]
With the restoration of Democracy in 1990, the prominent political coalition was the Concertación de Partidos por la Democracia (Coalition of Parties for Democracy), a center-left group initially founded by 17 parties, of which the most important, which remained in the coalition throughout the years, were: The Christian Democratic Party, the Socialist Party, the Party for Democracy and the Radical Party. The "Concertación" governed Chile throughout the presidencies of Patricio Aylwin (1990–1994), Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle (1994–2000), Ricardo Lagos (2000–2006) and Michelle Bachelet (2006–2010). The opponent of the ruling coalition, was the Alianza (Alliance). The Alliance was a group of center-right parties, formed by the main parties that supported the "YES" option in the 1988 plebiscite. Extra-parliamentarily, there was the leftist coalition Juntos Podemos Más (Together we can do more), formed by the Communist Party, Humanist Party, PC-AP and others left-wing movements, this coalition did not achieve great electoral results due to the binomial system, which favoured the Concertacion and the alliance.
The "Alliance" came to power when Sebastián Piñera (2010–2014) assumed office. In 2013, after electoral losses, the "Concertación", with the intention of renewing its image, decided to make an agreement with the Communist Party, the Citizen Left, and the MAS Region, creating the New Majority. This coalition won comfortable victories in the 2013 elections and achieved re-election of Michelle Bachelet between 2014 and 2018. In turn, the parties that made up the Alliance, regrouped in 2015 in a new coalition denominated Chile Vamos (Let's go Chile).
In 2016, the number of political parties in Chile doubled, increasing from 14 to 32. It came as a precursor to the municipal elections of the year and the Parliamentary Elections of 2017, [7] given that they will be the first to be held under the new proportional electoral system, the replacement for the binomial system. The binomial system favoured the existence of two blocks to the detriment of isolated parties and independent candidates. In that election, the Frente Amplio (Broad Front) appeared, a coalition that brought together left-wing sectors, which surprisingly won the election of 20 deputies. [8] In the presidential election, Sebastián Piñera was able to return to the government and establish Chile Vamos (Let's go Chile) as an official coalition between 2018 and 2022.
After the social outburst of 2019, a plebiscite was held that defined the drafting of a new constitution through a Constitutional Convention. The members of that body were elected in May 2021, in a process that benefited independents over political party militants. The most successful group of independents was The List of the People.
From that election, the coalition Apruebo Dignidad (I Approve Dignity) emerged, which gathered the coalitions Frente Amplio (Broad Front) and Chile Digno (Worthy Chile). This group supported the presidential candidacy of Gabriel Boric, who after winning in the ballot decided to summon the Socialist, For Democracy, Radical and Liberal parties to the government, which were grouped in a coalition called Democratic Socialism. This implied the definitive break of the former Concertación/New Majority with the Christian Democratic Party, which was not invited to the new administration.
From the right-wing emerged the Republican Party, which in the parliamentary elections achieved the election of 14 deputies and one senator, facing the traditional center-right grouped in Chile Vamos, which from 2022 went to the opposition after the end of Piñera's government. Other blocks also emerged in those elections, such as the conservative liberal Partido de la gente (Party of the people).
This article lists political parties in Chile . Chile has a multi-party system.
As of October 2023 [update] there are 25 legally constituted political parties in Chile. [9]
Party/Alliance | Abbr. | Est. | Position | International affiliation | Governors [10] | Senators [11] | Deputies [12] | Regional advisors [13] | Mayors [14] | Councilors | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Let's go Chile Chile Vamos | ChV | 2015 | Centre-right to right-wing | IDU | 0 / 16 | 18 / 50 | 41 / 155 | 107 / 302 | 64 / 345 | 733 / 2,240 | |||
Independent Democratic Union Unión Demócrata Independiente | UDI | 1983 | Right-wing | IDU [15] | 0 / 16 | 9 / 50 | 19 / 155 | 43 / 302 | 32 / 345 | 298 / 2,240 | |||
National Renewal Renovación Nacional | RN | 1987 | Centre-right to right-wing | IDU, [15] CDI [16] | 0 / 16 | 6 / 50 | 20 / 155 | 53 / 302 | 31 / 345 | 374 / 2,240 | |||
Political Evolution Evolución Política | Evópoli | 2012 | Centre-right | LI, [17] RELIAL | 0 / 16 | 3 / 50 | 2 / 155 | 11 / 302 | 1 / 345 | 61 / 2,240 | |||
Democratic Socialism Socialismo Democrático | SD | 2021 | Centre-left | None | 4 / 16 | 10 / 50 | 21 / 155 | 53 / 302 | 52 / 345 | 653 / 2,240 | |||
Socialist Party Partido Socialista de Chile | PS | 1933 | Centre-left | PA, SI, FSP, COPPPAL | 4 / 16 | 7 / 50 | 12 / 155 | 23 / 302 | 23 / 345 | 272 / 2,240 | |||
Party for Democracy Partido por la Democracia | PPD | 1987 | Centre-left | PA, SI, COPPPAL | 0 / 16 | 3 / 50 | 3 / 155 | 19 / 302 | 17 / 345 | 202 / 2,240 | |||
Radical Party [lower-alpha 1] Partido Radical de Chile | PR | 1863 | Centre-left | PA, SI, COPPPAL | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 3 / 155 | 11 / 302 | 11 / 345 | 174 / 2,240 | |||
Liberal Party [lower-alpha 2] Partido Liberal de Chile | PL | 2013 | Centre-left | LI | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 3 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 1 / 345 | 5 / 2,240 | |||
Approve Dignity Apruebo Dignidad | AD | 2021 | Left-wing to far-left | None | 0 / 16 | 4 / 50 | 31 / 155 | 52 / 302 | 17 / 345 | 304 / 2,240 | |||
Communist Party Partido Comunista de Chile | PCCh | 1922 | Left-wing to far-left | FSP, CBP, IMCWP | 0 / 16 | 2 / 50 | 12 / 155 | 21 / 302 | 6 / 345 | 155 / 2,240 | |||
Democratic Revolution [lower-alpha 3] Revolución Democrática | RD | 2012 | Centre-left to left-wing | None | 0 / 16 | 1 / 50 | 6 / 155 | 12 / 302 | 6 / 345 | 43 / 2,240 | |||
Social Green Regionalist Federation [lower-alpha 4] Federación Regionalista Verde Social | FREVS | 2017 | Centre-left to left-wing | None | 0 / 16 | 1 / 50 | 1 / 155 | 7 / 302 | 1 / 345 | 47 / 2,240 | |||
Social Convergence [lower-alpha 5] Convergencia Social | CS | 2019 | Left-wing | PI | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 6 / 155 | 10 / 302 | 4 / 345 | 52 / 2,240 | |||
Commons [lower-alpha 6] Comunes | Comunes | 2019 | Left-wing | FSP | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 3 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 2 / 2,240 | |||
Humanist Action [lower-alpha 7] Acción Humanista | AH | 2020 | Left-wing | None | 0 / 16 | 0 / 43 | 2 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 5 / 2,240 | |||
Christian Democratic Party Partido Demócrata Cristiano | PDC | 1957 | Centre to centre-left | CDI [16] | 2 / 16 | 3 / 50 | 7 / 155 | 36 / 302 | 46 / 345 | 315 / 2,240 | |||
Democrats [lower-alpha 8] Demócratas | Demócratas | 2022 | Centre-left to Centre-right | None | 0 / 16 | 2 / 50 | 4 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 2 / 2,240 | |||
Republican Party Partido Republicano de Chile | PLR | 2019 | Far-right | None | 0 / 16 | 1 / 50 | 11 / 155 | 15 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 11 / 2,240 | |||
Party of the People Partido de la Gente | PDG | 2019 | Centre-right to right-wing | None | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 3 / 155 | 22 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 1 / 2,244 | |||
Christian Social Party [lower-alpha 9] Partido Social Cristiano | PSC | 2022 | Right-wing to Far-right | None | 0 / 16 | 2 / 50 | 7 / 155 | 5 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 4 / 2,244 | |||
Yellows for Chile [lower-alpha 10] Amarillos por Chile | AxCh | 2022 | Centre-left to Centre-right | None | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 1 / 155 | 1 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 2 / 2,244 | |||
Humanist Party [lower-alpha 11] Partido Humanista | PH | 1984 | Left-wing | HI, FSP | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 1 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 1 / 345 | 27 / 2,244 | |||
Equality Party [lower-alpha 12] Partido Igualdad | IGUAL | 2009 | Left-wing to Far-left | FSP | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 0 / 155 | 3 / 302 | 1 / 345 | 25 / 2,244 | |||
People's Party [lower-alpha 13] Partido Popular | Popular | 2022 | Left-wing | None | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 0 / 155 | 1 / 302 | 1 / 345 | 4 / 2,244 | |||
Popular Green Alliance Party [lower-alpha 14] Partido Alianza Verde Popular | PAVP | 2022 | Centre-left | None | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 1 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 1 / 345 | 0 / 2,244 | |||
Progressive Homeland [lower-alpha 15] Patria Progresista | PP | 2022 | Centre-left to left-wing | None | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 0 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 0 / 2,244 | |||
Common Sense [lower-alpha 16] Sentido Común | SC | 2022 | Centre to Centre-right | None | 0 / 16 | 0 / 50 | 0 / 155 | 0 / 302 | 0 / 345 | 0 / 2,244 |
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has generic name (help)Chile's government is a representative democratic republic, whereby the President of Chile is both head of state and head of government, and of a formal multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the president and by their cabinet. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of the National Congress. The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature of Chile.
The Party for Democracy, also known as For Democracy is a centre-left political party in Chile. It states to stand in the traditions of liberal progressivism. It was founded in December 1987 by Ricardo Lagos, who aimed at forming a legal social-democratic party, as the Socialist Party of Chile (PS) remained illegal at the time. The PPD continued to function after the defeat of Pinochet. Until 1997, double membership of PPD and the PS was allowed.
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.
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.
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.
The Communist Party of Chile is a communist party in Chile. It was founded in 1912 as the Socialist Workers' Party and adopted its current name in 1922. The party established a youth wing, the Communist Youth of Chile, in 1932.
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.
The MAS Region, known until 2014 as Broad Social Movement was a Chilean left-wing political party founded by Alejandro Navarro in 2008.
The Confederation of Democracy was an electoral alliance of center-right Chilean political parties formed in July 1972. Its main purpose was to unite all the opposition parties of the Popular Unity government to face the parliamentary elections in March 1973. Its main objective was to optimize the collection of votes and seats, and accomplish the majority of Congress and thus obtain at least two thirds of the deputies.
The National Democratic Party, known by its acronym PADENA, was a Chilean political party. This party was one of the last political movements linked to the figure of President Carlos Ibáñez del Campo.
The Democratic Socialist Radical Party was a political party of Chile that emerged from a leftist faction of the Radical Party led by Luis Fernando Luengo that came into conflict with Enrique Silva Cimma, Raúl Rettig and some radical politicians.
The Broad Party of Socialist Left was a left-wing political party of Chile that operated from December 1988 to March 1990. Its existed to sign up candidates of the Communist Party Christian Left, MAPU and PS-Almeyda, all former members of the United Left.
The Democratic Alliance was a Chilean political coalition existing between 1983 and 1988 that was composed of political parties and organisations that opposed the military regime led by Augusto Pinochet.
The Broad Front was a Chilean political coalition founded in early 2017, composed of left-wing parties and movements. Its first electoral contest was the 2017 Chilean general election, where their presidential candidate Beatriz Sánchez came third with 20% of the vote in the first round of election. The Broad Front also expanded their electoral representation to 20 deputies, 1 senator and 21 out of 278 Regional Councillors, thus consolidating the movement as the 'third force' in Chilean politics.
The Broad Left Movement was a Chilean leftwing political movement. It was commenced in 2011 by several social actors belonging to the "extra-parliamentary left" as well as other former members of the Concertacion coalition that ruled Chile from 1990 to 2010. In 2014 it merged with other movements left in Convergence of the Left.