Venezuela First Primero Venezuela | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | PV |
Leader | Luis Parra |
President | Génesis Sabrina Ramírez |
General Secretary | Miguel Ponente Parra |
Founder | Luis Parra |
Founded | 4 September 2020 |
Split from | Justice First Democratic Unity Roundtable |
Preceded by | Acción Ciudadana en Positivo |
Ideology | Humanism Liberal democracy |
Political position | Centre |
National affiliation | Democratic Alliance (2020–2023) |
Colours | Gold Black |
National Assembly | 2 / 277 |
Governors | 0 / 23 |
Mayors | 1 / 335 |
Website | |
Twitter page | |
Venezuela First (Spanish : Primero Venezuela; PV) is a Venezuelan political party led by former members of the opposition coalition Democratic Unity Roundtable.
It is made up of a split of militants expelled from the Primero Justicia (PJ) party and other political groups, who took control of it as a result of an intervention order from the Supreme Court of Justice months before the 2020 parliamentary election. [1]
The majority of deputies of the IV legislature of Parliament who deserted the ranks of the Democratic Unity Roundtable, after being accused of the corruption and vote-buying scandal, known by various media as Operación Alacrán, focused on this training. [2]
Together with the ad hoc directorate of Popular Will and the United Venezuela party, they founded the Alianza Venezuela Unida coalition.
For the 2020 parliamentary elections, Primero Venezuela obtains two deputies.[ citation needed ]
On the other hand, in these elections Luis Parra did not receive enough votes to be assigned a seat on the Yaracuy regional list, where he was registered. In response, the CNE replaced the seat it had previously announced on the national list for José Gregorio Noriega with that of Luis Parra. [3] [4] This situation was denounced by David García, then leader of Primero Venezuela, who in a public letter stated that "Luis Parra silently obtained a seat that did not correspond to him" and announced his resignation from this party. [5] Similarly, Primero Venezuela expels David García for "not having provided the logistics resources and support that the alliance team would have to take care of the organization's votes" and they assured that García "is breathing through the wound, for not having been elected deputy and setting himself up as Rector of the CNE, points out who is elected and who is not, committing crimes of simulation of punishable acts, irresponsibly pointing to high public officials». [5]
SIts deputies later joined the Democratic Alliance faction.
Year | Votes | % | Deputies | +/- |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | 187,264 | 2 / 277 | 2 |
Year | Votes | % | Governors | +/- | Mayors | +/- | Councillors | +/- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | 86.449 | 1,08% | 0 / 23 | 0 | 1 / 335 | 1 |
Democratic Action is a Venezuelan social democratic and centre-left political party established in 1941. The party played an important role in the early years of Venezuelan democracy, leading the government during Venezuela's first democratic period (1945–1948). A decade of dictatorship under Marcos Pérez Jiménez followed, which saw AD excluded from power. With the advent of democracy in 1958, four Presidents of Venezuela came from Acción Democrática from the 1950s to the 1990s during the two-party period with COPEI.
The Justice First is a centre-right political party in Venezuela. Founded in 1992 as a civil association, it became a political party in 2000. Henrique Capriles was the candidate of the party in 2013 Venezuelan presidential election.
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.
Parliamentary elections were held in Venezuela on 6 December 2015 to elect the 164 deputies and three indigenous representatives of the National Assembly. They were the fourth parliamentary elections to take place after the 1999 constitution, which abolished the bicameral system in favour of a unicameral parliament, and the first to take place after the death of President Hugo Chávez. Despite predictions from the opposition of a possible last-minute cancellation, the elections took place as scheduled, with the majority of polls showing the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) holding a wide lead over the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) and its wider alliance, the Great Patriotic Pole (GPP).
Presidential elections were held in Venezuela on 20 May 2018, with incumbent Nicolás Maduro being declared re-elected for a second six-year term. The original electoral date was scheduled for December 2018 but was subsequently pulled ahead to 22 April before being pushed back to 20 May. Some analysts described the poll as a sham election, as many prominent opposition parties had been barred from participating in it. The elections had the lowest voter turnout in Venezuela's democratic era.
Regional elections were held in Venezuela on 15 October 2017 to elect the executive position of all 23 federal entities. This marked the first state executive election not held on the same date as elections for state legislatures, and the second separate from municipal elections. They were the 9th regional elections held in Venezuela since 1989.
Parliamentary elections were held in Venezuela on 6 December 2020. Aside from the 167 deputies of the National Assembly who are eligible to be re-elected, the new National Electoral Council president announced that the assembly would increase by 110 seats, for a total of 277 deputies to be elected.
The 2020 Venezuelan National Assembly Delegated Committee election was to be held in the ordinary session of the National Assembly on 5 January, in which 160 deputies were to elect the legislature's board of directors for the year 2020–21: the president, the first and second vice presidents, the secretary and the deputy secretary. It was the last such election of the IV National Assembly.
Luis Eduardo Parra Rivero is a Venezuelan politician who was in a dispute with Juan Guaidó for a year over who was the President of the National Assembly of Venezuela based on a vote on 5 January 2020.
Operación Alacrán, also known as CLAP affair or PSUV-CLAP faction, is the name given to a corruption plot which was denounced in 2019 by the members of the National Assembly of Venezuela. It would have sought to avoid the re-election of Juan Guaidó on 5 January 2020 as President of the Assembly, by obtaining the support of opposing legislators in exchange for millions of dollars. Legislators would have been asked to vote against Guaidó, or to not attend the election and thereby break the necessary quorum.
Addy Coromoto Valero Velandria was a Venezuelan politician who served as a deputy in the National Assembly.
The IV National Assembly of Venezuela was a meeting of the legislative branch of Venezuelan federal government, comprising the National Assembly of Venezuela. It is meeting in Caracas after 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary election.
José Dionisio Brito Rodríguez is a Venezuelan administrator and politician who serves as a deputy to the National Assembly and former member of Justice First party.
Franklyn Leonardo Duarte is a Venezuelan politician who currently serves as deputy to the National Assembly representing Táchira. Duarte assumed the post in October 2017 after the main deputy, Laidy Gómez, was elected governor of Táchira.
Juan Pablo Isidoro Guanipa Villalobos is a Venezuelan lawyer and politician who served as deputy and First Vice President of the National Assembly, leader of the Justice First political party and former governor of Zulia. He was a presidential candidate in the 2018 elections until boycott. Guanipa is the regional coordinator of the Justice First party in Zulia and chairs the Maracaibo Posible foundation.
The Democratic Alliance was a political coalition created to face the government of Nicolás Maduro in the 2020 Venezuelan parliamentary election and grouped in the National Assembly. It is made up of Hope for Change, Cambiemos and Progressive Advance parties of the predecessor coalition Agreement for Change, in addition to the intervened parties Democratic Action and Copei, and the later incorporated Primero Venezuela, United Venezuela, Ecological Movement, Unidad Vision Venezuela, Country Commitment and the also intervened Popular Will.
The Democratic Unitary Platform, or just the Unitary Platform, is a Venezuelan opposition political alliance made up of civil society, trade unions, retired military personnel, political parties, and deputies of the 2016–2021 National Assembly.
Regional and municipal elections were held in Venezuela on 21 November 2021. In the elections, all executive and legislative positions of the 23 federal entities, as well as that of the 335 municipalities of the country, were renewed.
Dignora Hernández is a Venezuelan politician, alternate deputy of the National Assembly for the Monagas state and the Cuentas Claras party.
Several interventions of political parties in Venezuela have occurred during Nicolás Maduro's government. The interventions are mandated by the pro-government Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of Justice. During these interventions, the leadership or most of the political party members end up suspended, expelled or replaced by members appointed by the TSJ.