Galician Socialist Party-Galician Left

Galician Socialist Party-Galician Left
Partido Socialista Galego-Esquerda Galega
Leader Camilo Nogueira
Founded 1984 (1984)
Dissolved 1993 (1993)
Merger of Galician Left
Galician Socialist Party
Youth wing Youth Collectives of the PSG-EG
Membership 1,130 (1993)[1]
Ideology Democratic socialism
Galician nationalism
Left-wing nationalism
Pacifism
Ecologism
Parliament of Galicia (1985)
3 / 71
Local seats (1987)
60 / 4,033
Politics of Galicia
Political parties

The Galician Socialist Party-Galician Left (PSG-EG, Partido Socialista Galego-Esquerda Galega in Galician language) was a Galician nationalist and left-wing party of Galiza.

History

It was founded in 1984 with the union of the PSG and Galician Left, led by Camilo Nogueira Román. In 1993 the PSG-EG formed with nationalist centre-left sectors a new Galician Unity coalition. In the general and autonomic elections of 1993 the party concurred with the United Left coalition, forming the Galician Unity-United Left (UG-EU) coalition. After the defeat in the elections, some members of the party converged with EU forming the Galician Left-United Left and the others joined the Galician Nationalist Bloc as Galician Unity.

In 1993 it had 1,130 members in 67 local chapters, Vigo being the largest, with 160 members.

Electoral results

Elections to the Parliament of Galicia

Year Votes Percentage Deputies
1985 71,599 5.71% 3
1989 50,047 3.79% 2
1993[2] 44,902 3.09% 0

General elections

Year Votes Percentage Deputies
1986 45,574 3.57%[3] 0
1989 34,131 2.59%[4] 0
1993[5] 74,605 4.75%[6] 0

Local elections

Year Votes Percentage Town councillors
1987 57,062 4.25% 60
1991 39,116 2.82% 46

Gallery

References

Notes
  1. Beramendi, X.G. and Núñez Seixas, X.M. (1996): O nacionalismo galego. A Nosa Terra, Vigo.
  2. In the Galician Unity-United Left coalition.
  3. In Galiza.
  4. In Galiza.
  5. In the Galician Unity-United Left coalition.
  6. In Galiza.
Sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.