PSC

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PC or pc may refer to:

PCP may refer to:

PSD may refer to: pica

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lucio Gutiérrez</span> 43rd President of Ecuador (2003–2005)

Lucio Edwin Gutiérrez Borbúa served as 43rd President of Ecuador from 15 January 2003 to 20 April 2005. In 2023, he was elected to the National Assembly.

APC most often refers to:

PMC may refer to:

PSA, PsA, Psa, or psa may refer to:

PIC or pic may refer to:

PCC may refer to:

PSL may refer to:

Democratic Party and similar terms may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sixto Durán Ballén</span> Ecuadorian political figure and architect

Sixto Alfonso Durán-Ballén Cordovez was an Ecuadorian political figure and architect. He served as Mayor of Quito between 1970 and 1978. In 1951, he co-founded a political party, the Social Christian Party. In 1991, he left the Social Christian Party and formed a new conservative group, the Republican Union Party (PUR), before running for president for the third time in 1992.

PCD may refer to:

Mira is a star in the constellation Cetus

PPC may refer to:

The politics of Catalonia takes place within the framework of its Statute of Autonomy, which grants a degree of self-government to Catalonia and establish it as an autonomous community of Spain with the status of a nationality, operating as a parliamentary democracy. The Generalitat de Catalunya is the Catalan institution of self-government, which includes the Parliament of Catalonia, the President and the Executive Council. The Parliament of Catalonia is one of the oldest in the world.

Partido Social Cristiano may refer to:

Par or PAR may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Political influence of Evangelicalism in Latin America</span>

Marginal at first, news reports and political analysts have pointed the important weight that the Evangelical Christian community has and its impact in electoral politics in Latin America, even helping in the electoral victories of conservative candidates.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Reform State</span> Period in Costa Rican history

The Reform State or Reformist State is the period in 20th-century Costa Rican history when the country switched from the uncontrolled capitalism and laissez-faire approach of the Liberal State into a more economically progressive Welfare State. It began about 1940 during the presidency of social reformer Rafael Angel Calderón Guardia, and ended in the 1980s with the neoliberal reforms inherent in the Washington Consensus that began after the government of Luis Alberto Monge.