Liberal Party of Honduras

Last updated

Liberal Party of Honduras
Partido Liberal de Honduras
President Yani Rosenthal
Founder Policarpo Bonilla [1]
Founded5 February 1891 (1891-02-05)
Headquarters Tegucigalpa, MDC
Ideology Liberalism
Political position Centre
Regional affiliation Center-Democratic Integration Group
Continental affiliation RELIAL
COPPPAL
International affiliation Liberal International
Colours  Red
Anthem
"Himno del Partido Liberal de Honduras"
"Hymn of the Liberal Party of Honduras"
National Congress
22 / 128
Party flag
Liberal Party of Honduras logo.svg
Website
www.partidoliberal.hn

The Liberal Party of Honduras (Spanish: Partido Liberal de Honduras) is a centrist [2] liberal political party in Honduras that was founded in 1891. It is the oldest extant political party in the country; further, it is one of the two main parties that have, until recently, dominated Honduran politics. The party is a member of the Liberal International. The PLH is identified with the colours red and white, as the flag Francisco Morazán used in most of his military campaigns during time of the Central American Federal Republic.

Contents

The party is against the legalisation of abortion, which is punishable by imprisonment in Honduras. [3]

2001 elections

At the legislative elections, held on 25 November 2001, the party won 40.8% of the popular vote and 55 out of 128 seats in Congress. Its candidate at the presidential elections, Rafael Pineda Ponce won 44.3%, but was defeated by Ricardo Maduro of the National Party of Honduras.

2005 elections

The PLH won the closely contested 2005 presidential race, but at the moment the PNH has a majority in the National Congress due to an alliance with the Christian Democrats (Democracia Cristiana).

In the general election of 27 November 2005, the party won 62 out of 128 seats in the National Congress; and its presidential candidate, Manuel Zelaya, polled 49.9% to defeat the PNH's Porfirio Pepe Lobo, restoring the PLH as the presidential party. He was inaugurated on 27 January 2006.

Elected as a liberal, Zelaya shifted dramatically to the political left and socialism during his presidency, forging an alliance with the Hugo Chávez-linked ALBA, [4] angering conservatives and his own Liberal Party. He was deposed by a coup d'état in 2009 and replaced by Roberto Micheletti, also of the Liberal Party.

2009 elections

At the 2009 elections, which took place after the 2009 Honduran coup d'état that removed Manuel Zelaya from power, the Liberal Party suffered a heavy defeat by the National Party, with the Nationals' candidate for president, Porfirio Lobo Sosa, winning the presidency with (according to the Electoral Tribunal) over 1,212,846 votes and 56.56% of the national total of valid votes (in all participation as acknowledged by the tribunal was of 41%) compared with 816,874 votes and 38.1% of the national total for Liberal candidate Elvin Santos. In the elections for the National Congress of Honduras the Liberal Party won a total of 45 seats, dropping from its previous 61. The elections were held under a tense political atmosphere without the accustomed OAS observers and under a decree restricting civil rights with the elected president Zelaya under military siege in the Brazilian embassy at Tegucigalpa. Sectors opposed to the 2009 coup claim the participation was much less than reported by the authorities, but this claim has not been verified. [5] [6]

In 2011, Zelaya's supporters left the Liberal Party and founded Liberty and Refoundation.

Recent activities

Following Zelaya's split, the Liberal Party has seen a decline in its support. At the 2013 election, liberal candidate Mauricio Villeda got 20.3% of votes, arriving third.

The party further declined in the 2017 election; its candidate Luis Zelaya only obtained 14.74% of the vote, and again finished third. However, the party maintained its 26 seats in the parliament. The Liberal Party denounced the result as fraudulent. [7]

Electoral history

Presidential elections

ElectionParty candidateVotes%Result
1891 Policarpo Bonilla 15,30030.81%LostRed x.svg
1894 Policarpo Bonilla 42,66798.84%ElectedGreen check.svg
1898 Terencio Sierra 36,75682.53%
1902 Juan Ángel Arias Boquín 25,11842.9%LostRed x.svg
1919 Rafael López Gutiérrez 79,06881.0%ElectedGreen check.svg
1923 Juan Ángel Arias 20,42419.4%LostRed x.svg
1924 Did not run
1928 Vicente Mejía Colindres 62,31956.62%ElectedGreen check.svg
1932 Angel Zúñiga Huete61,64356.85%LostRed x.svg
1948 21000.08%
1954 Ramón Villeda Morales 121,21348.10%ElectedGreen check.svg
1957 205,13561.85%
1971 Jorge Bueso Arias269,98947.38%LostRed x.svg
1981 Roberto Suazo Cordova 636,43753.9%ElectedGreen check.svg
1985 José Simón Azcona del Hoyo 786,62451.02%
1989 Carlos Roberto Flores Facussé 776,69844.33%LostRed x.svg
1993 Carlos Roberto Reina 906,79353.01%ElectedGreen check.svg
1997 Carlos Roberto Flores Facussé 1,040,40352.65%
2001 Rafael Pineda Ponce 962,44644.2%LostRed x.svg
2005 Manuel Zelaya 999,00645.6%ElectedGreen check.svg
2009 Elvin Santos 816,87438.10%LostRed x.svg
2013 Mauricio Villeda 632,32020.30%
2017 Luis Orlando Zelaya 484,18714.74%
2021 Yani Rosenthal 335,76210.00%

Note

In the 1957, election Ramón Villeda Morales was elected by the Constituent Assembly.

National Congress elections

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–Position
1923
9 / 48
Increase2.svg 9Increase2.svg 3rd
1924
0 / 46
Decrease2.svg 9Increase2.svg 2nd
1926
6 / 46
Increase2.svg 6
1928
21 / 48
Increase2.svg 15
1930
23 / 48
Increase2.svg 2
1932
13 / 56
Decrease2.svg 10
1934
4 / 59
Decrease2.svg 9
1936 4600.01%
0 / 59
Decrease2.svg 4
1942
0 / 45
Steady2.svg
1948 21000.08%
0 / 49
Steady2.svg
1954 121,21348.10%
24 / 59
Increase2.svg 24Increase2.svg 1st
1956 41,72410.08%
0 / 58
Decrease2.svg 24Decrease2.svg 2nd
1957 205,13561.85%
36 / 58
Increase2.svg 36Increase2.svg 1st
1965 272,19844.85%
29 / 64
Decrease2.svg 7Decrease2.svg 2nd
1971 269,98947.38%
32 / 64
Increase2.svg 3
1980 495,77951.68%
35 / 71
Increase2.svg 2Increase2.svg 1st
1981 636,43753.9%
44 / 82
Increase2.svg 9
1985 786,62451.02%
67 / 134
Increase2.svg 23
1989 776,69844.33%
51 / 128
Decrease2.svg 16Decrease2.svg 2nd
1993 906,79353.01%
71 / 128
Increase2.svg 20Increase2.svg 1st
1997 1,040,40352.65%
67 / 128
Decrease2.svg 4
2001 850,29040.8%
55 / 128
Decrease2.svg 12Decrease2.svg 2nd
2005 7,746,80644.84%
62 / 128
Increase2.svg 7Increase2.svg 1st
2009 4,937,99530.78%
45 / 128
Decrease2.svg 17Decrease2.svg 2nd
2013 4,670,15716.97%
27 / 128
Decrease2.svg 18Decrease2.svg 3rd
2017 484,18720.31%
26 / 128
Decrease2.svg 1
2021 3,531,88711.14%
22 / 128
Decrease2.svg 4Decrease2.svg 4th

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Honduras</span> Historical development of Honduras

Honduras was inhabited by many indigenous peoples when the Spanish arrived in the 16th century. The western-central part of Honduras was inhabited by the Lencas, the central north coast by the Tol, the area east and west of Trujillo by the Pech, the Maya and Sumo. These autonomous groups maintained commercial relationships with each other and with other populations as distant as Panama and Mexico. Honduras has ruins of several cities dating from the Mesoamerican pre-classic period that show the pre-Columbian past of the country.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Politics of Honduras</span> Political system of Honduras

Politics of Honduras takes place in a framework of a multi-party system presidential representative democratic republic. The President of Honduras is both head of state and head of government. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in the National Congress of Honduras. The party system is dominated by the conservative National Party of Honduras, the Liberal Party of Honduras, and Liberty and Refoundation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ricardo Maduro</span> President of Honduras from 2002 to 2006

Ricardo Rodolfo Maduro Joest is a Honduran politician who served as President of Honduras from 2002 to 2006. A member of the National Party, Maduro was previously chairman of the Central Bank of Honduras. He graduated from The Lawrenceville School and later Stanford University. Maduro is a member of the Levy-Maduro family whose roots go through Portugal, the Netherlands and the Netherlands Antilles.

Liberalism in Honduras is a form of Latin American liberalism. It was influenced by French revolutionaries from 1789 to 1799, when the door was open for ideas of positivism. During this time the populace were exposed to liberal ideas such as: liberty, equality, and popular sovereignty, causing enthusiasm for them to be increased.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Porfirio Lobo Sosa</span> President of Honduras from 2010 to 2014

Porfirio Lobo Sosa also known by his nickname, Pepe Lobo, is a former Honduran politician and agricultural landowner who served as President of Honduras from 2010 to 2014. A member of the conservative National Party and a former deputy in the National Congress of Honduras from 1990, he was president of the National Congress of Honduras from 2002 to 2006. He came second to Manuel Zelaya with 46% of the vote in the 2005 general election. After the military ousted Zelaya in a coup d'état, Lobo was elected president in the 2009 presidential election and took office on 27 January 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elections in Honduras</span>

Honduras National Congress has 128 members (diputados); they serve four-year terms.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Congress of Honduras</span> National legislature of Honduras

The National Congress is the legislative branch of the government of Honduras.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Miguel Paz Barahona</span> President of Honduras from 1925 to 1929

Miguel Paz Barahona was President of Honduras from 1 February 1925 to 1 February 1929. Barahona was a member of the National Party of Honduras (PNH).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Party of Honduras</span> Political party in Honduras

The National Party of Honduras is a conservative political party in Honduras founded on 27 February 1902, by Manuel Bonilla Chirinos. Historically it has been one of the two most influential parties in the country. The party's platform is based on Christian humanist doctrine, and its five main principles are common wealth, dignity of the human person, equality, solidarity and subsidiarity.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manuel Zelaya</span> President of Honduras from 2006 to 2009

José Manuel Zelaya Rosales is a Honduran politician who was President of Honduras from 27 January 2006 until his forcible removal in the 2009 coup d'état, and who since January 2022 serves as the first First Gentleman of Honduras. He is the eldest son of a wealthy businessman, and inherited his father's nickname "Mel". Before entering politics he was involved in his family's logging and timber businesses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elvin Santos</span> Honduran politician

Elvin Ernesto Santos Ordóñez is a Honduran politician who served as the vice president of Honduras from January 2006 to November 2008, when he resigned to stand as a Liberal Party candidate for the presidency in the 2009 elections. For the 2005 election the constitution was amended to create a single vice president. Although Santos served as vice president under the presidency of Manuel Zelaya, he distanced himself from Zelaya since there were conflicts between the two politicians. He was also against the fourth ballot box referendum that Zelaya promoted.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2005 Honduran general election</span>

General elections were held in Honduras to elect the President of Honduras, vice-president, and deputies to the National Congress of Honduras on 27 November 2005. For the 2005 election the constitution was amended to create a single vice-president. For the 2005 election the system of proportional representation was also changed from a closed list to an open list - the parties also used open-list primaries to select candidate slates. The list system reduced the re-election rate of incumbents, with just 31% of deputies in the new Congress having seats in the 2002–2006 Congress.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roberto Micheletti</span> Interim president of Honduras following the 2009 coup until 2010

Roberto Micheletti Baín is a Honduran politician who served as the interim president of Honduras from 28 June 2009 to 27 January 2010 as a result of the 2009 Honduran coup d'état. The Honduran military ousted the President, and the National Congress read a letter of resignation, which was refuted two minutes later by Manuel Zelaya in conversation with CNN en Español; days later, the coup-plotters claimed that the Supreme Court had ordered to forcefully detain President Manuel Zelaya because "he was violating the Honduran constitution"; Zelaya was exiled rather than arrested. Micheletti, constitutionally next in line for the presidency, was sworn in as president by the National Congress a few hours after Zelaya was sent into exile by the Honduran military. He was not acknowledged as de jure president by any government or international organization. The 2009 general election took place as planned in November and elected Porfirio Lobo Sosa to succeed Micheletti.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 Honduran general election</span>

General elections were held in Honduras on 29 November 2009, including presidential, parliamentary and local elections. Voters went to the polls to elect:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Honduras (1932–1982)</span>

Authoritarian General Tiburcio Carías Andino controlled Honduras during the Great Depression, until 1948. In 1955—after two authoritarian administrations and a general strike initiated by banana workers—young military reformists staged a coup that installed a provisional junta and paved the way for constituent assembly elections in 1957. This assembly appointed Ramón Villeda Morales as president and transformed itself into a national legislature with a 6-year term.

The modern history of Honduras is replete with large-scale disappearances of left-leaning union members, students and others. The legislature approved a new constitution in 1982, and the Liberal Party government of President Roberto Suazo Córdova took office. Suazo relied on United States support — including controversial social and economic development projects sponsored by the United States Agency for International Development — during a severe economic recession. According to the US State Department, "Honduras became host to the largest Peace Corps mission in the world, and non-governmental and international voluntary agencies proliferated."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 Honduran constitutional crisis</span> Political crisis in Honduras

The 2009 Honduran constitutional crisis was a political dispute over plans to either rewrite the Constitution of Honduras or write a new one.

The 1963 Honduran coup d'état was a military takeover of the Honduran government on 3 October 1963, ten days before a scheduled election. Oswaldo López Arellano replaced Ramón Villeda Morales as president and initiated two decades of military rule.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 Honduran general election</span> Election

General elections were held in Honduras on 24 November 2013. Voters went to the polls to elect a new President, the 128 members of the National Congress, 298 Mayors and vice-mayors and their respective councilors and 20 representatives to the Central American Parliament.

Modesto Rodas Alvarado was a prominent Honduran lawyer and politician who served as President of the National Congress of Honduras between 1957 and 1963.

References

  1. Elections and Events 1875-1899 The Library, UC San Diego
  2. Pearson, Frederic S.; Walker, Scott; Stern, Stephanie (2007), "Military Intervention and the Question of Democratization and Inter-Ethnic Peace", Governance, Conflict Analysis and Conflict Resolution, Ian Randle Publishers, p. 252, ISBN   9789766372590
  3. "Aborto en Honduras seguirá siendo un crimen". La Prensa. 4 May 2017.
  4. "President Zelaya voted in as Liberal turned into ally of Chavez' ALBA". MercoPress.
  5. Vickers, George (25 November 2009). "The Sham Elections in Honduras". Foreign Policy .
  6. Carroll, Rory (27 November 2009). "Honduras coup: troops deployed to oversee election". The Guardian. London.
  7. ""Nasralla ganó las elecciones en el 82% de nuestras actas": Luis Zelaya". tiempo.hn (in Spanish). 6 December 2017. Retrieved 24 September 2019.