United Left/The Greens–Assembly for Andalusia

United Left/The Greens–Assembly for Andalusia (Spanish: Izquierda Unida Los Verdes–Convocatoria por Andalucía. IULV–CA) is the Andalusian federation of the Spanish left wing political and social movement United Left. Toni Valero is the current General Coordinator.[3] It is a current part of the electoral coalition Forward Andalusia, whose parliamentary spokesperson, Inmaculada Nieto, is also an affiliate member. The major member of this movement is the Communist Party of Andalusia (PCA, Andalusian federation of the Communist Party of Spain).

United Left/The Greens–Assembly for Andalusia

Izquierda Unida Los Verdes–Convocatoria por Andalucía
General CoordinatorToni Valero
Founded1986 (1986)
Merger ofCommunist Party of Andalusia
Izquierda Abierta
Communist Youth of Andalusia
Republican Left
Left and Progress
Socialist Alternative
Initiative for Andalusia
Independents
Unitarian Candidacy of Workers (1986-2015)[1]
Socialist Action Party (1986-2001)
Progressive Federation (1986-1988)
Carlist Party (1986-1987)
Humanist Party (1986)
HeadquartersC/Donantes de Sangre, s/n. Edificio Arrayán. 41020 Sevilla
Membership (2013)10,000[2]
IdeologySocialism
Anticapitalism
Communism
Republicanism
Feminism
Federalism
Andalusian regionalism
Political positionLeft-wing
National affiliationUnited Left
Union affiliationCCOO
Congreso de los Diputados (Andalusian seats)
2 / 61
Inside Unidos Podemos.
Parliament of Andalusia
6 / 109
Inside Adelante Andalucía.
Provincial deputations
15 / 228
Local government
1,064 / 9,031
Website
iuandalucia.org

History

Assembly for Andalusia appeared in 1984 as a proposal of the PCA to form a permanent coalition with other left-wing forces.[4] The federation was created in 1986.

In February 2015 the Unitarian Candidacy of Workers (CUT), the second most important political party of IULV-CA at the time, left IULV-CA because of their disagreement with the "policy of pacts" with the PSOE.

Electoral performance

Parliament of Andalusia

Date Votes Seats Status Size Notes
# % ±pp # ±
1986 598,889 17.8% +9.3 11 Opposition 3rd
1990 349,659 12.7% −5.1 8 Opposition 3rd
1994 689,815 19.1% +6.4 9 Opposition 3rd
1996 603,495 14.0% −5.1 7 Opposition 3rd
2000 327,435 8.1% −5.9 7 Opposition 3rd
2004 337,030 7.5% −0.6 0 Opposition 3rd
2008 317,562 7.1% −0.4 0 Opposition 3rd
2012 438,372 11.3% +4.2 6 Government 3rd government 2012−15
2015 274,426 6.9% −4.4 7 Opposition 5th
2018 585,949 16.2% N/A 1 Opposition *

Cortes Generales

Congress of Deputies
Date Votes Seats Size
# % ±pp # ±
1986 273,008 8.1% +1.9 2 3rd
1989 408,733 12.0% +3.9 3 3rd
1993 484,753 12.1% +0.1 1 3rd
1996 582,970 13.5% +1.4 2 3rd
2000 315,891 7.8% –5.7 3 3rd
2004 287,374 6.4% –1.4 3 3rd
2008 230,335 5.1% –1.3 0 3rd
2011 360,212 8.3% +3.2 2 3rd
2015 257,019 5.8% –2.5 2 5th
2016 792,008 18.6% N/A 2 *
2019 651,160 14.3% N/A 0 *
 
Senate
Date Seats Size
# ±
1986 0 3rd
1989 1 3rd
1993 1 3rd
1996 0 3rd
2000 0 3rd
2004 0 3rd
2008 0 3rd
2011 0 3rd
2015 0 5th
2016 0 *
2019 0 *

European Parliament

Date Votes Size
# % ±pp
1987 333,924 10.8% 3rd
1989 232,023 9.0% –1.8 4th
1994 613,999 17.0% +8.0 3rd
1999 397,991 10.7% –6.3 3rd
2004 125,303 5.0% –5.7 3rd
2009 136.916 5.2% +0.2 3rd
2014 311,201 11.6% +6.4 3rd
2019 *

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.