Labour Party (Argentina)
Political party in Argentina / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Labour Party (Spanish: Partido Laborista) is a left-wing and populist political party in Argentina. It was created in 1945 by prominent leaders of the trade union movement in Argentina shortly before the 1946 Argentine general election and mobilized working-class support for emerging populist leader Juan Perón.[6] The party run Perón’s presidential ticket for the election.[7] It was inspired and based on the British Labour Party and is considered to have been the first instance of direct electoral mobilization of the working class in Argentina. Its goal was to bring Perón to power and institutionalize the political power of Argentinian trade union movement. After winning the 1946 presidential election, Perón merged the party into his Peronist Party.[8]
Labour Party Partido Laborista | |
---|---|
Founder | Juan Perón |
Founded | October 24, 1945 (1945-10-24) (first) 1957 (second) |
Dissolved | July 1947 (1947-07) (first) 1965 (second) |
Merged into | Peronist Party |
Headquarters | Buenos Aires |
Newspaper | El Laborista |
Ideology | Peronism[1] Socialism[2] Syndicalism[2] Left-wing populism[3] Left-wing nationalism[4] |
Political position | Left-wing[5] |
Colours | Blue and white |
The party was part of a larger front of pro-Peronist coalition in the 1946 election, and fielded Perón on its electoral lists together with the conservative Independent Party and the Radical Civic Union Renewal Board, a left-wing splinter of the liberal Radical Civic Union. The Labour Party was the strongest pro-Peronist party in the coalition, and was considered the backbone of Perón’s electoral success in the 1946 election.[9] It had a staunchly left-wing and socialist platform which called for far-ranging redistributive measures, introduction of a social security system and pension funds for rural and industrial workers; the platform was fully embraced by Perón who managed to implement a large majority of the proposed measures under his rule.[6] The party was composed of trade unionists of socialist, anarcho-syndicalist, and communist backgrounds, and became the left wing of the Peronist movement once it was merged into Perón's personal party.[10]