Radical Democracy
Democracia Radical |
|
---|---|
Leaders |
Julio Durán, Julio Mercado Illanes, Alfonso Quintana |
Founded | November 22, 1969 |
Dissolved | July 17, 1990 |
Split from | Radical Party |
Merged into | National Democracy of Centre |
Headquarters | Santiago de Chile |
Ideology |
Radicalism Social liberalism Classical liberalism Anti-communism |
Political position | Centre-right |
National affiliation |
Confederation of Democracy (1972–73) National Democratic Agreement (1984–85) |
International affiliation | None |
Colors | Blue, red, white |
Slogan | Un partido de centro, con raíces en la historia |
The Radical Democracy (Spanish: Democracia Radical, DR), was a Chilean centre-right political party. The party, created in 1969, was dissolved in 1973, and reappeared in 1983 before disbanding permanently in 1990.
The party was composed of Radicals, opposed to the presidential candidacy of the Marxist Salvador Allende. It represented the anti-communist sector of the Radicals that separated themselves permanently from the Radical Party. The group was initially known as the Movement for Democratic Unity. It supported the presidential candidacy of independent right-winger Jorge Alessandri in 1970.
A firm opponent to Salvador Allende, Radical Democracy took part in the parliamentary elections of 1973 as part of the anti-Allende CODE coalition. The party supported the military coup of 1973, voluntarily complying with its own dissolution that same year. Among its most notable members were Julio Durán Neumann (presidential candidate for Radical Party in 1964), Domingo Durán, Ángel Faivovich, Julio Mercado, and Rafael Señoret.
Unlike its pre-1973 period, the party was reduced due to the departure of some iconic militants. Ángel Faivovich and Germán Picó Cañas entered the National Labour Front, a movement that later became the National Renewal. Other members, such as former deputy Julio Mercado Illanes, returned to the central trunk of the Radical Party.
In 1984 it joined with other movements that supported the military dictatorship a coalition known as the Group of Eight (Grupo de los Ocho), which later evolved to the National Democratic Agreement.