Institutional Democratic Party
Partido Institucional Democrática |
|
---|---|
President | Efraín Ríos Montt (last) |
Founder | Enrique Peralta Azurdia |
Founded | 1963 |
Dissolved | January 10, 1990 |
Merged into | Guatemalan Republican Front |
Headquarters | Guatemala City |
Ideology |
Civic nationalism Conservatism Neoliberalism |
Political position | Right-wing |
International affiliation | None |
The Institutional Democratic Party (Spanish: Partido Institucional Democrática, PID) was a Guatemalan pro-government political party active during the 1970s.
The PID was formed in 1963 by Enrique Peralta Azurdia after he had seized power in a coup. A centre-right party, it was modelled on the Mexican Institutional Revolutionary Party. From the onset the party was dominated by the country's military elite. Despite this the party maintained close links with individual civilian parties during its existence, with their civilian allies often outnumbering them in the Assembly.
The PID was first tested in the 1966 general election when the leader of the Revolutionary Party of Guatemala, Mario Mendez Montenegro agreed to support the PID. However he died not long before the vote and his brother Julio César Méndez Montenegro took over in his place. A supporter of reform, he split from the PID and won the election overwhelmingly. However his Presidency was blighted by violence from the far-right National Liberation Movement (MLN) and the PID formed an alliance with this group for the 1970 election, resulting in the success of their candidate Carlos Manuel Arana Osorio.
In the 1974 general election they were again supported by the MLN and their joint candidate Kjell Eugenio Laugerud García secured the Presidency. However this election saw cracks appear in the PID as all three candidates were leading military officers who would thus have been expected to support the party. These became more acute following the 1976 Guatemala earthquake at a time when Laugerud was involved in a feud with Arana Osorio over control of the National Reconstruction Committee. Ultimately Laugerud put a block on Arana Osorio's activity by bringing one of his closest aides to trial for organising death squads, despite the fact that Laugerud had been involved in the same practice.