Communist Party of Galicia (Revolutionary Marxist)
Communist Party of Galicia (Revolutionary Marxist) Partido Comunista de Galicia (Marxista-Revolucionario) | |
---|---|
Secretary-General | Julio Pérez de la Fuente |
Founded | 1985[1] |
Dissolved | 1991 |
Split from | Communist Party of Galicia |
Merged into | PSdeG[2][3] |
Headquarters | Avenida de Lugo, 231, Santiago de Compostela[4] |
Ideology | Until 1989: Eurocommunism Revolutionary Marxism 1989-1991: Democratic socialism Postcommunism |
Political position | Left-wing |
National affiliation | Workers' Party of Spain – Communist Unity |
Town councillors (1987-1991) | 8 / 4,033 |
Communist Party of Galicia (Revolutionary Marxist) (in Galician: Partido Comunista de Galicia (Marxista-Revolucionario), PCG-MR) was a communist political party in Galiza, founded by the followers of Santiago Carrillo after their expulsion from the Communist Party of Galicia (PCG) in October 1985.
History
[edit]PCG-MR participated in the 1985 Galician elections, gaining 8,318 votes (0.66%) and failing to win any seat. In the municipal elections of 1987, PCG-MR had 8 town councillors elected. In the general elections of 1986, the party gained 12,072 votes and, again, no seats.
Following the bad result of the 1989 general elections, PCG-MR merged into the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party in 1991, and organized itself as an internal tendency called Left Unity (Unidade da Esquerda).
Election results
[edit]Election | Votes | % | MPs or town councillors |
---|---|---|---|
Galician parliamentary election, 1985 | 8.318 | 0.66 | - |
Spanish general election, 1986 | 12,072 | 0.94 | - |
European Parliament election, 1987 | 13,091 | 1.06 | - |
Spanish municipal elections, 1987 | 10,113 | 0.75 | 8 |
Spanish general election, 1989 | 5,280 | 0.4 | - |
References
[edit]- ^ Carrillo comienza a construir su nuevo partido.
- ^ El partido de Carrillo celebra su último congreso antes de integrarse hoy en el PSOE
- ^ "Carrillo no entrará en el PSOE cuando su partido ingrese como corriente organizada." El País. 13 March 1991. Retrieved 2010.
- ^ Raúl Heras (1 January 1997). Enciclopedia política y atlas electoral de la democracia española. Temas de Hoy. p. 394. ISBN 978-84-7880-881-6.