Democratic Social Party
Partido Democrático Social |
|
---|---|
President | Paulo Maluf (last) |
Founded | 31 January 1980 |
Dissolved | 4 April 1993 |
Preceded by | National Renewal Alliance |
Merged into | Reform Progressive Party |
Headquarters | Brasília, DF, Brazil |
Ideology | Conservatism Liberal conservatism |
Political position | Right-wing |
International affiliation | None |
Colours | Blue |
The Democratic Social Party (Portuguese: Partido Democrático Social, PDS) was a conservative Brazilian political party.
It was established in 1979 as a continuation of the National Renewal Alliance (ARENA), the political wing of the military during the 1965–79 military dictatorship, at a time in which the country was moving away from authoritarianism. However, the official foundation date is 31 January 1980. In 1985, when Paulo Maluf won the party's nomination for the presidential bid, a huge group, led by José Sarney (former leader of PDS, 1983–84), Jorge Bornhausen and Marco Maciel, founded the Liberal Front Party (PFL). Sarney was elected Vice-President in that year's election, but he served from the beginning as President, due to the death of President-elect Tancredo Neves.
The Democratic Social Party suffered bad defeats both 1986 (7.9%) and 1990 (8.9%) elections for the Chamber of Deputies, when at the same time PFL took 17.7% and 12.4%. In 1986, in particular, the party was seriously defeated also in state elections, so that all of the 12 governorships won in 1982 were lost.
In 1993 the party merged with the Christian Democratic Party (3.0% in 1990 elections for the lower house) to form the Reform Progressive Party, which was intended to be a moderate-conservative party.