Green Alliance (Colombia)
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Green Alliance Alianza Verde | |
---|---|
Co-Presidents | Luis Carlos Avellaneda Antonio Sanguino |
Founded | 2005 |
Headquarters | Bogotá, Colombia |
Youth wing | Jóvenes Verdes |
LGBT wing | Verdes a Colores |
Ideology | Green politics Progressivism |
Political position | Centre-left |
Regional affiliation | Federation of the Green Parties of the Americas |
International affiliation | Global Greens |
Colours | Green |
Chamber of Representatives | 15 / 188
|
Senate | 9 / 108
|
Governors | 3 / 32
|
Mayors | 50 / 1,102
|
Website | |
www | |
The Green Alliance (Spanish: Alianza Verde) is a green political party in Colombia.[1] The party advocates social justice, electoral reform and economic sustainability.[2]
The party supports the Colombian peace process and formed the electoral alliance Coalition Colombia with centrist and centre-left parties such as Civic Compromise to present a single presidential candidate, Sergio Fajardo in the 2018 presidential election.[3]
History
[edit]The party was founded on November 25, 2005, in Bogotá by a group of people headed by Carlos Ramón González Merchan and Elías Pineda.[citation needed]
2007 regional elections
[edit]For the October 28, 2007 Colombian regional elections to elect department governors, department assembly deputies, mayors and councils and Local Administrative Juntas the party surprisingly won the governorships of Cesar with candidate Cristian Moreno Panezo and Boyacá with candidate José Roso Millán. The party also obtained 23 municipal mayors.[4]
2010 congressional elections
[edit]Three independent former mayors of Bogota, Luis Eduardo Garzón, Antanas Mockus, and Enrique Peñalosa, formed an alliance to choose an independent candidate for the presidency. However, they required a political structure. The ad-hoc coalition merged with the Centre Option Green Party, which changed its name to Green Party. Following this, the new party joined by many regional politicians.[citation needed]
Mockus was elected candidate for the presidency in the Green Party's primary elections, held on March 14, 2010. On the same day, the party gained five seats in the Senate. Independent presidential candidate and former mayor of Medellín, Sergio Fajardo, joined the Mockus campaign soon after and was chosen as the Green Party's vice presidential candidate.[citation needed]
2010 presidential elections
[edit]On May 30, 2010, the party's candidate Antanas Mockus came second in the first round of the 2010 presidential election with 21% of the vote. In the second round, he was defeated by Juan Manuel Santos, who won 68% of the vote to Mockus' 29%.[5]
Slogans
[edit]- "Your Life is Sacred"
- "Public Resources are Sacred"
- "Not Everything is Justifiable"
- "Conscience Vote"
- "Natural Resources Are Sacred"[citation needed]
Electoral history
[edit]Presidential elections
[edit]Election Year | Candidate | Running mate | First Round | Second Round | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | Percentage | Votes | Percentage | ||||
2010 | Antanas Mockus | Sergio Fajardo | 3,134,222 | 21.51 (#2) | 3,587,975 | 27.47 (#2) | Lost |
2014 | Enrique Peñalosa | Isabel Segovia | 1,064,758 | 8.27 (#5) | Lost | ||
2018 | Sergio Fajardo | Claudia López | 4,602,916 | 23.78 (#3) | Lost | ||
2022 | With Hope Center Coalition | Lost |
Legislative elections
[edit]Election Year | House of Representatives | Senate | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | Percentage | Seats | Votes | Percentage | Seats | |
2010 | 296,137 | 3,13 (#7) | 3 / 166
|
521,503 | 4,9 (#7) | 5 / 102
|
2014 | 483,407 | 4.07 (#6) | 6 / 166
|
567,102 | 4.78 (#6) | 5 / 102
|
2018 | 880,354 | 5,95 (#6) | 9 / 166
|
1,308,208 | 8,57 (#6) | 9 / 102
|
2022 | With Hope Center Coalition | With Hope Center Coalition |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Castro Morales, Juan Pablo (2011). Partido Verde: Ni izquierda ni derecha (in Spanish) – via ResearchGate.
- ^ "Principios y prioridades". alianzaverde.org.co (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 22 March 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
- ^ "'Coalición está cerca': De la Calle sobre alianza con López y Fajardo". El Tiempo (in Spanish). 13 September 2017. Archived from the original on 11 February 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
- ^ "Partido Verde Opción Centro, casi desconocido en el país, ganó dos gobernaciones y 23 alcaldías". eltiempo.com (in Spanish). 2007.
- ^ Murphy, Helen; Bristow, Matthew (21 June 2010). "Colombia's Santos Hails Uribe in Presidential Victory". Bloomberg.com. Archived from the original on 5 June 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2023.
External links
[edit]- Official website (in Spanish)
Representatives
- Colombian Liberal Party (35)
- Democratic Center (32)
- Radical Change (30)
- Social Party of National Unity (25)
- Colombian Conservative Party (21)
- Green Alliance (9)
- Commons (5)
- Independent Movement of Absolute Renovation (3)
- List of Decency (3)
- Alternative Democratic Pole (2)
- Citizen Option (2)
- Indigenous Authorities of Colombia (2)
- FUNECO (2)
- Independent Social Alliance Movement (1)
- Fair and Free Colombia (1)
- Soy Porque Somos (1)
- Alianza Democratica Amplia (1)
- Democratic Center (19)
- Radical Change (16)
- Colombian Conservative Party (15)
- Colombian Liberal Party (14)
- Social Party of National Unity (14)
- Green Alliance (10)
- Alternative Democratic Pole (5)
- Commons (5)
- Citizen Option (5)
- Alianza Democratica Amplia (2)
- Indigenous and Alternative Social Movement (1)
- Independent Social Alliance Movement (1)
- Alternative of Social Progress
- Alternative Way
- Christian National Party
- Christians for Community
- Citizens' Convergence
- Citizens' Footprint Movement
- Citizens' Movement
- Citizens' Political Movement for Bocaya
- Civic People's Convergence
- Civic Purpose Colombia
- Coalition
- Colombia Always
- Colombia Unite
- Colombian Community and Communal Political Movement
- Colombian People's Party
- Colombian Social Democratic Party
- Community Participation
- Democratic Colombia Party
- Democratic Progressivity
- Democratic Unity Party
- For the Country of Our Dreams
- Front of Hope
- Hope, Peace, and Liberty
- Independent Civic Movement
- Independent Conservatism
- Independent Democratic Pole
- Let the Moreno Play Movement
- Living Colombia Movement
- Liberal Alternative
- Liberal Opening Movement
- Moral and Social Vanguard Party Let's Go Colombia
- National Democratic Reconstruction
- National Movement for Reconciliation
- National Popular Alliance
- National Salvation Movement
- New Democratic Force
- New Huila and Liberalism
- New Liberalism
- Oxygen Green Party
- Patriotic Union (UP)
- People's Integration Movement
- People's Participation Movement
- People's Will Movement
- Political Movement for Social Security
- Progressive Force
- Progressive National Movement
- Regional Integration Movement
- Renovation Movement Labour Action
- Republican Movement
- Revolutionary Independent Labour Movement
- Revolutionary Socialist Party
- Social Action Party
- Social and Political Front
- Team Colombia
- Unionist Movement
- United People's Movement
- We are Colombia
- Yes Colombia