People's Democratic Movement (Chile)

The People's Democratic Movement (Spanish: Movimiento Democrático Popular, MDP) was a Chilean left-wing political coalition created on September 20, 1983 and dissolved on June 26, 1987. It was formed by the Communist Party of Chile, PS-Almeyda and the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR), plus factions of the Christian Left and the Popular Unitary Action Movement (MAPU). Its first president was the socialist Manuel Almeyda.[1][2]

Leaders of the People's Democratic Movement (MDP), September 1983.
People's Democratic Movement

Movimiento Democrático Popular
Founded20 September 1983
Dissolved26 June 1987
HeadquartersSantiago, Chile
IdeologySocialism
Marxism
Communism
Political positionLeft-wing

The reason for its creation was to organize the leftist opposition to the military dictatorship. The MDP led the so-called "Jornadas de Protesta Nacional" driven by opposition to the military dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet, while actively involved in the reconstruction of the social movements of people, students and workers. Since its inception, the MDP showed himself a staunch opponent of the regime and demanded its immediate end and a general agreement with the Democratic Alliance to establish a provisional government without exclusions.[3][4]

In August 1984, politicians, lawyers, businessmen and civilians who supported the military regime, including Jaime Guzmán and Pablo Longueira, required the Constitutional Court of Chile, which declared the unconstitutionality of this movement. Despite the ruling, the MDP continued subsisting in semi-clandestine.[5]

The MDP self-dissolved in June 1987 to create a new leftist coalition: United Left.[6]

References

  1. "Germán Correa". ¿La Concertación desconcertada? (in Spanish). Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  2. "Manuel Almeyda: "No somos la fachada del PC"" (PDF). Análisis (in Spanish). November 1983. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  3. Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile. "Movimiento Democrático Popular". Historia Política Legislativa (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 June 2012.
  4. Friedmann, Reinhard (1988). La Política Chilena de la A a la Z (in Spanish). Santiago, Chile: Melquíades.
  5. "Movimiento Democrático Popular (1983-1987)". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  6. Ortega Frei, Eugenio (1992). "Historia de una alianza política : el partido Socialista de Chile y el partido Demócrata Cristiano : 1973-1988". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 October 2013.
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