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Conservative political party in Brazil From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Liberal Party (Portuguese: Partido Liberal, PL) is a liberal-conservative political party in Brazil. From its foundation in 2006 until 2019, it was called the Party of the Republic (Portuguese: Partido da República, PR).
Liberal Party Partido Liberal | |
---|---|
President | Valdemar Costa Neto[1] |
Honorary President | Jair Bolsonaro[1] |
General Secretary | Mariucia Tozatti[1] |
First Treasurer | Jucivaldo Salazar[1] |
Founded | 26 October 2006[2] |
Registered | 19 December 2006[3] |
Merger of | Liberal Party (1985) PRONA |
Headquarters | Edifício Liberty Mall Asa Norte, Brasília, Federal District |
Think tank | Instituto Fundação Alvaro Valle[4] |
Youth wing | PL Jovem |
Women's wing | PL Mulher |
Membership (2023) | 760,995[5] |
Ideology | Conservatism[6][7][8] Conservative liberalism[9] Economic liberalism |
Political position | Centre-right[14] to right-wing[18] Faction: Far-right[19] |
Colours | Green Yellow Blue White |
Slogan | "The people have chosen and made PL the largest party of Brazil" |
TSE Identification Number | 22 |
Governorships | 2 / 27 |
Mayors | 348 / 5,568 |
Federal Senate | 12 / 81 |
Chamber of Deputies | 99 / 513 |
Mercosur Parliament | 7 / 38 |
State Assemblies | 129 / 1,024 |
City Councillors | 4,929 / 56,810 |
Party flag | |
Website | |
partidoliberal | |
The party was founded in 2006 as a merger of the 1985 Liberal Party and the Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order (PRONA),[9] as a big tent, centre-right party,[20][11] and was considered part of the Centrão, a bloc of parties without consistent ideological orientation that support different sides of the political spectrum in order to gain political privileges.[20][21][22] As such, it supported the government of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff— members of the center-left Workers' Party—and Michel Temer.[23]
In 2021, it became the base of the then-president of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, for the 2022 Brazilian general election. This led to many of his supporters joining the party, which thereby became the largest bloc in the National Congress of Brazil,[24] and the Liberal Party took a general shift to right-wing populism.[9]
The Party of the Republic was founded on 26 October 2006, by the merger of the old Liberal Party — which initially started as a classical liberal party,[9] but slowly shifted towards social conservatism after it became influenced by evangelicals[9] — and the Party of the Reconstruction of the National Order (Partido da Reedificação da Ordem Nacional, PRONA) — a far-right nationalist party.[25][26] The merger was performed in order to surpass the electoral threshold of 5%,[9][a] but also as a rebranding as the Liberal Party was heavily implicated in the Mensalão scandal.[9][28]
Historically, the party was a pragmatic party of business interests, supporting the candidacies of Lula and Dilma from the Workers' Party (PT) for the sake of moderating their presidencies. It generally supported a form of Lulism, which had less economic regulation. As such, the Party of the Republic was considered part of the Centrão.[21][22] PR's predecessor, the Liberal Party, was heavily involved in the Mensalão — a vote-buying scheme done by the Workers' Party in order to gain support in the National Congress,[28] and Lula's Vice President José Alencar was a member of the old PL.
During the 2010 elections, the Party of the Republic focused on the parliamentary elections; it won 41 of the 513 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 4 of the 81 Senate seats. One of PR's elected politicians was professional humorist and professional clown Tiririca, who became the State of São Paulo's most voted representative with more than one million votes, and due to Brazil's proportional voting system, Tiririca thus supported PR in electing a sizeable amount of representatives.[29]
Sergio Victor Tamer, founder of the Party of the Republic, was the party's president from 2006 to 2014. Alfredo Nascimento succeeded Tamer as president of the PR until April 2016, when he resigned due to party leadership not supporting the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff. However, 26 of the PR's MPs did vote for her impeachment.[30]
After that move by its MPs, the party took a more rightward turn away from its bipartisan past and supported Geraldo Alckmin's failed campaign in the 2018 Brazilian presidential election.
On 7 May 2019, the Superior Electoral Court (TSE) voted to approve a motion of the party to change its name back to Liberal Party (PL).[31][32] According to party leadership, the change was done in order to return to the party's roots as body defending economic liberalism, Free market and low intervention of the state in the economy. The social positions of the party remained socially conservative, however.[33] Other specialists point it out as part of a national tendency of parties in Brazil rebranding in order to get better perception from the electorate due a process of loss of trust caused by the Brazilian political crisis,[34] and also riding a wave of pro-liberalism sentiment in Brazil.[33]
The Liberal Party provokes controversy in 2020 by nominating an openly neo-Nazi activist as a municipal candidate in the town of Pomerode.[35]
On 30 November 2021, President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro and his son Senator Flávio Bolsonaro — who were previously affiliated with the Social Liberal Party (PSL) and left it, attempting to create the Alliance for Brazil party with no avail[36] — joined the PL in preparation for the 2022 Brazilian general election (as presidential candidates must be affiliated with a political party). He had previously considered returning to the Progressists (PP),[37] the Social Christian Party (PSC), Brazilian Labour Party (PTB), as well negotiation with number of other smaller and/or right-wing parties.[38] Bolsonaro's affiliation to the PL has been pointed out by analysts as a consolidation of an alliance with the Centrão.[39]
In the 2022 general election, the party had formed a presidential ticket and many gubernatorial tickets with a hard right coalition of the Republicans and the Progressitas (PP). The election was a great success to the party, resulting in PL becoming the largest bloc in the National Congress of Brazil with 99 seats and the Federal Senate with 13 seats.[40] According to some analysts, the party had been divided between two wide factions: one with traditional Centrão politicians loyal to party president Valdemar Costa Neto, and a Bolsonarist one, composing about two-thirds of the PL's elected bench, with Bolsonaro’s followers from the PSL.[41][42] In an interview, Neto revealed he feared that in case Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is elected president, there would be a split in the party as the traditional faction might want to align themselves with a possible PT government, while the Bolsonarist branch would form an opposition.[42]
The Liberal Party is a big tent conservative party. The Liberal Party are described as centre-right or right-wing.[20][b]
Though previously a party of national liberalism, before its merger with PRONA, the party has increasingly been affiliated with the anti-democratic right in Brazil. This has come as a result of the party's joining around the political philosophy of Jair Bolsonaro, who was initially affiliated with the PSL and other socially conservative parties. With the questioning of democracy, foreign policy, and the anti-democratic statements of Bolsonaro, the party seems to have re-embraced some of the tendencies of the head of PRONA Eneas Carneiro, a noted supporter of LaRoucheism, the previous military dictatorship, and a right-wing opposition to neoliberalism.[37]
Generally the party is right-wing populist, economically liberal, but socially anti-liberal and pro-Evangelical, aligning with the ideology of Bolsonaro. The party is agrarian, pro-military, and pro-life. The party promotes a generally more economically open form of Brazilian nationalism than Carneiro.[44] The party has frequently supported Bolsonaro's attacks on the media and the electoral system in Brazil.[45][46][47]
Year | President | Vice-president | Coalition | Results | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | Dilma Rousseff[c] | Michel Temer[d] | For Brazil to Keep on Changing[e] | 55,752,529 (56.05%) | Won |
2014 | Dilma Rousseff[f] | Michel Temer[g] | With the Strength of the People[h] | 54,495,459 (51.64%) | Won |
2018 | Geraldo Alckmin[i] | Ana Amélia Lemos[j] | To unite Brazil[k] | 5,096,350 (4.76%) | Lost |
2022 | Jair Bolsonaro[l] | Walter Braga Netto[l] | For the good of Brazil[m] | 58,197,923 (49.1%) | Lost |
Election | Chamber of Deputies | Federal Senate | Status | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | +/– | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | ||
2010 | 7,311,655 | 7.57 | 42 / 513 |
New | 4,649,024 | 2.73 | 4 / 81 |
New | Coalition |
2014 | 5,635,519 | 5.79 | 34 / 513 |
8 | 696,462 | 0.78 | 4 / 81 |
0 | Coalition |
2018 | 5,224,591 | 5.31 | 33 / 513 |
1 | 3,130,082 | 1.83 | 2 / 81 |
2 | Coalition |
2022 | 18,228,958 | 16.54 | 99 / 513 |
66 | 25,278,764 | 24.86 | 13 / 81 |
11 | Opposition |
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