National Restoration Party (Costa Rica)

The National Restoration Party (Spanish: Partido Restauración Nacional – PRN) is a political party in Costa Rica. It was founded in 2005 by Carlos Avendaño Calvo mostly by dissidents of Costa Rica's historical Christian party, Costa Rican Renewal, after its then only deputy, Carlos Avendaño Calvo, left.[1] Avendaño would successfully return to Congress because of the party from 2010 to 2014. Even though he had personal differences with Justo Orozco (then the PRC's only deputy), both were able to work together in defending the same agenda, mainly the conservative views of the evangelical community. The party's candidate in the presidential election of 2014 was Avendaño, who received 1.35 percent of the vote.[6]

National Restoration party

Partido Restauración Nacional
PresidentCarlos Avendaño Calvo
Secretary-GeneralMónica Catalán Marín
Founded5 February 2005[1]
Split fromCosta Rican Renewal Party
IdeologyConservatism[2]
Social conservatism
Religious conservatism
Christian right
Anti-immigration
Political positionRight-wing[3] to far-right[4][5]
ReligionEvangelical Christianity
Colours  Blue
  Yellow
Legislative Assembly
7 / 57
Alderpeople
10 / 508
Syndics
3 / 486
District councillors
23 / 1,944
Intendants
0 / 8
Party flag

In the same year's parliamentary election, Gerardo Fabricio Alvarado Muñoz, representing San José, was elected to the only seat in the Legislative Assembly that was won by the party.[7]

In the 2018 Costa Rican general elections the party when it won 14 of the parliament seats and its presidential candidate, Fabricio Alvarado, went in to the runoff.[8] According to the BBC, his campaign gained in popularity because of his opposition to same-sex marriage.[9] The party also holds anti-immigration positions and calls for closed borders and harsher controls on migrants.[10]

Controversies

In March 2018, the newspaper Semanario Universidad reported that high figures of the party had billed several million colones for professional services for participating in their own campaign such as the beneficiaries' own candidate, Fabricio Alvarado, his wife, his brothers, his two vice-presidential nominees, two sons, and the ex-wife of the party president, Carlos Avendaño.[11] It was later discovered that one of the beneficiaries, the son of Avendaño, had received professional services for working for the party while he was incapacitated by health from his official work at the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity.[12] In May 2018, it was reported that the party had hired the polling company OPol, according to financial reports submitted to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal. Although party officials originally reported that they were political consultancies unrelated to the polls, subsequent investigations by the newspaper La Nación discovered a contract for the payment of the six surveys that were conducted during the second round campaign, five of which were published and all of which Alvarado appeared as frontrunner by a large margin.[13] Previously, the pollster had already been in controversy after it was reported on social networks that a company vehicle driven by director Mauricio Muñoz, had carried party flags.

In late May, Avendaño himself filed a complaint with the Supreme Electoral Tribunal for what he called a "parallel structure" made up of the campaign team of the candidate for hiring outside the ethical controls stipulated by the party that would have been the one that negotiated those and other payments.[14][15]

Electoral performance

Presidential

Election Candidate First round Second round
Votes % Position Result Votes % Position Result
2014 Carlos Avendaño 27,691 1.35% 7/13 Lost
2018 Fabricio Alvarado 505,214 24.91% 1/13 - 822,997 39.21% 2/2 Lost

Parliamentary

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Position Government
2006 32,909 2.0%
1 / 57
New party 8/27 Opposition
2010 29,530 1.6%
1 / 57
0 8/18 Opposition
2014 Carlos Avendaño 84,265 4.11%
1 / 57
0 6/21 Opposition
2018 Fabricio Alvarado 356,082 18.11%
14 / 57
13 2/18 Opposition

See also

References

  1. Partido Político Restauración Nacional Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones. Retrieved: 2014-03-05. (in Spanish)
  2. Estatuto Partido Restauración Nacional Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones. Retrieved: 2014-05-10. (in Spanish)
  3. "Global Elections Round-Up: Last 12 Months". Fitch Solutions. 31 July 2018.
  4. Kane, Gillian (30 March 2018). "'Gender ideology': big, bogus and coming to a fear campaign near you". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  5. Pérez, Karla (January 2018). "Fabricio Alvarado: Hay que implementar una política migratoria fuerte". El Mundo.
  6. Resultados Electorales: Total General Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones. 2014-02-17. (in Spanish)
  7. Declaratoria de elección de Diputados a la Asamblea Legislativa de la República de Costa Rica 2014-2018 Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones, 2014-03-03. (in Spanish)
  8. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-42938510
  9. "Costa Rica election: Gay marriage debate dominates campaign". BBC News Online. 4 February 2018. p. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-42938510. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  10. Chinchilla, Aaron (25 July 2018). "Restauración Nacional exige al Gobierno reforzar controles migratorios en Peñas Blancas". El Periódico.
  11. Murillo, Alvaro; Miranda, Hulda; Salazar, Daniel (27 March 2018). "Restauración reporta al TSE pagos a Fabricio y sus vicepresidentes por alquilar carros a la campaña". Semanario Universidad. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  12. "Hijo de diputado trabajo para restauracion". La Nación. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  13. Cambronero, Natasha (25 May 2018). "Encuestas de Opol se hicieron por encargo de Restauración Nacional de cara a la segunda ronda". La Nación. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  14. Cambronero, Natasha; Sequeira, Aarón (29 May 2018). "Carlos Avendaño denuncia 'estructura paralela' en financiamiento de campaña de Fabricio Alvarado". La Nación. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  15. Oviedo, Esteban; Cambronero, Natasha; Sequeira, Aarón. "Empresa de cantante reclama ¢115 millones a Restauración y anuncia demanda en tribunales". La Nación. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
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