Popular Action

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from Acción Popular)
Jump to: navigation, search
Acción Popular
Popular Action
Image:Lampa-AP.gif
Leader Víctor Andrés García Belaúnde
Founded 1956
Headquarters Lima, Perú
Ideology Centrism, Conservative liberalism, Humanism
International affiliation none
Website www.accionpopular.org.pe
Acción Popular banner in Lima, Peru
Acción Popular banner in Lima, Peru
Republic of Peru

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Peru


Government
Constitution of Peru
President

Vice President
Council of Ministers (Cabinet)


Congress of the Republic

Judicial System

Supreme Court of the Republic
Superior Courts of Justice
Courts of First Instance
Courts of Peace

Elections
Electoral system
Peruvian Constituent
Assembly elections, 1978
Political Parties
APRA
List of political
parties in Peru
Region & Local government
Regional Governments
Provincial Municipalities
Districtal Municipalities

Other countries · Atlas
 Politics Portal
view  talk  edit

Popular Action (Acción Popular) is a centrist and conservative liberal party in Peru.

Fernando Belaúnde Terry founded Popular Action (Acción Popular) in 1956 as a reformist alternative to the status quo conservative forces and the controversial American Popular Revolutionary Alliance party.

Although Belaúnde's message was not all that different from APRA's, his tactics were more inclusive and less confrontational. He was able to appeal to some of the same political base as APRA, primarily the middle class, but also to a wider base of professionals and white-collar workers. The AP had significant electoral success, attaining the presidency in 1963 and 1980, but the party was more of an electoral machine for the persona of Belaúnde than an institutionalized organization. In addition, whereas in the 1960s the AP was seen as a reformist party, by the 1980s as Peru's political spectrum had shifted substantially to the left the AP was positioned on the center-right.

With the debacle of the second Belaúnde government, the AP fared disastrously in 1985, attaining only 6.4 percent of the vote. In 1990 the AP participated in the elections as a part of the FREDEMO conservative coalition behind Mario Vargas Llosa and suffered, as did all traditional political parties, an electoral rejection.

AP member Valentín Paniagua Corazao would become President of Congress in October 2000 and, after the demise of the Fujimori administration, became the interim President of the Republic, holding office from November 2000 to July 2001.

At the last legislative elections, 8 April 2001, the party won 4.2 % of the popular vote and 3 out of 120 seats in Congress.

For the 2006 national election, the party has joined forces with Somos Perú and Coordinadora Nacional de Independientes to form the Frente de Centro coalition. The presidential candidate was Paniagua, while the vice-presidential candidates belonged to AP's allies.

[edit] Presidents of Peru from Popular Action

Belaúnde election poster
Belaúnde election poster

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


Personal tools