Popular Democratic Party (Puerto Rico)
Political party in Puerto Rico / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Popular Democratic Party (Spanish: Partido Popular Democrático, PPD) is a political party in Puerto Rico that advocates to continue as a Commonwealth of the United States with self-governance.[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2] The party was founded in 1938 by dissidents from the Puerto Rican Liberal Party and the Unionist Party and originally promoted policies on the center-left.[6][lower-alpha 3] In recent years, however, its leaders have described the party as centrist.[lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 5]
Popular Democratic Party Partido Popular Democrático | |
---|---|
President | Jesús Manuel Ortiz |
Secretary-General | Toñito Cruz |
Vice President | Carlos Delgado Altieri Carmen Maldonado González |
President of the Senate | José Luis Dalmau |
Speaker of the House of Representatives | Tatito Hernández |
Founder | Luis Muñoz Marín |
Founded | July 22, 1938; 85 years ago (1938-07-22) |
Split from | Liberal Party |
Preceded by | Liberal Party |
Headquarters | Puerta de Tierra, San Juan, Puerto Rico |
Youth wing | Swanny Enit Vargas |
Women's wing | Julia Nazario |
Ideology | |
Political position |
|
National affiliation | Democratic (majority) Independent (minority) |
Colors | Red |
Slogan | "Pan, Tierra y Libertad" (Bread, Land and Freedom) |
Anthem | "Jalda Arriba" (Johnny Rodriguez) |
Seats in the Senate | 12 / 27 |
Seats in the House of Representatives | 25 / 51 |
Municipalities | 41 / 78 |
Website | |
ppdpr.net | |
As one of the long-standing parties on the island, the PPD has played a significant role in the history of Puerto Rico. In the early 1950s, for example, the party held a majority in the delegation convened to draft the Constitution of Puerto Rico. Once the constitution was ratified, the document was proclaimed by the party's leader and co-founder, Luis Muñoz Marín—who, in doing so, became the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the people of Puerto Rico. The party ruled all branches of the Puerto Rican government afterward for 36 of the past 72 years, while establishing many of the institutions that permeate Puerto Rican society today.
Today, the party is one of the two major parties in Puerto Rico with significant political strength. In the executive branch, the party's most recent governor was Alejandro García Padilla who governed the island from 2013 to 2017; while in the legislative branch, the party is the largest in both the House and the Senate, though it is short of an overall majority in both. On the Supreme Court, the party is in the minority, though the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court is from the PPD; a circumstance that allows the party to designate political appointees in the judicial branch since the Chief Justice is also constitutionally the chief judicial administrator. Finally, in the municipal landscape, the party holds more than half of the seats of mayors.
Ideologically, the PPD differs from the other parties active in the island. Historically, for example, the party's opponent has been the New Progressive Party (PNP in Spanish). Both parties have ruled the island unopposed for years after the Puerto Rican constitution was ratified in 1952.
Members of the party are referred to in different terms depending on their faction. In general, those affiliated to the party are commonly called populares (English: "populars") and mostly affiliate with the Democratic Party of the United States.[12] Internally, members aligned with the delegation that drafted the constitution compose the largest faction and are referred to as 'conservatives'. A smaller 'liberal' faction is referred to as the soberanistas, and advocates for Puerto Rico to enter a compact of free association with the United States rather than remain an unincorporated territory under the United States.