- Green Party (Colombia)
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Colombian Green Party
Partido Verde ColombianoLeader Luis Eduardo Garzón (Spokesman and Co-president)
Enrique Peñalosa (Co-president)
Jorge Eduardo Londoño (Co-president)
Sergio Fajardo (Co-president)Founded 2005 Headquarters Bogotá, Colombia Ideology Green politics
"centre-environmentalism"
Participatory politics
Democratic security
"Post-Uribism"[1]Political position Centrism International affiliation Federation of the Green Parties of the Americas Official colours Green Seats in the Chamber of Representatives 3 / 166Seats in the Senate 5 / 102Website www.partidoverde.org.co Politics of Colombia
Political parties
ElectionsCore topicsSchoolsOrganizationsin Africa
in the Americas
Asia-Pacific Green Network
European Green Party
Young European Greens
Global Greens
Global Young Greens
Green Zionist Alliance
Green parties
Institute for Social EcologyRelated topicsColombian Green Party (Spanish: Partido Verde Colombiano) is a Colombian political party associated with the philosophies of the Green party as well as the "political middle". The party advocates for having an ecological conscience, social justice, participative democracy, non violence resolutions, human sustainability and respect for diversity in order to improve the Colombian social, economic and political struggle and bring to an end the Colombian armed conflict. The Party is mostly influenced by the French party "The Greens" and the Global Greens.
Contents
History
The party was founded on November 25, 2005 in Bogotá by a group of people headed by Carlos Ramón González Merchan and Elías Pineda.
2007 regional elections
Main article: Colombian regional election, 2007For the October 28, 2007 Colombian regional elections to elect department governors, department assembly deputies, mayors and councils and Local Administrative Juntas the party oddly won the governorships of Cesar with candidate Cristian Moreno Panezo and Boyacá with candidate José Roso Millán. The party also obtained 23 Municipal mayors.[2]
2010 congressional elections
Three independent former mayors of Bogota: Luis Eduardo Garzón, Antanas Mockus and Enrique Peñalosa, formed an alliance to choose an independent candidate for presidency. However, they required a political structure. They merged with the Centre Option Green Party, changing its name to Green Party. They also were joined by many regional politicians.
Antanas Mockus was elected candidate for presidency in the green primary elections, hold on March 14, 2010. The same day, the party gained 5 seats in senate.
Then, independent presidential candidate and former mayor of Medellín, Sergio Fajardo, joined Mockus campaign and was chosen as vice-presidential candidate from the Green Party.
2010 Presidential Elections
On May 30, the Colombian Green Party became the second political force as a result of the First Round of the Presidential Election with 21% of the electorate. On June 21, they received 28% of the vote thereby losing the Presidential election to Juan Manuel Santos who achieved 69% [3].
Slogans
- "Your Life is Sacred"
- "Public Resources are Sacred"
- "Not Everything is Justifiable"
- "Conscience Vote"
- "Natural Resources Are Sacred"
See also
References
- ^ http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/verde-presidente
- ^ Partido Verde Opción Centro, casi desconocido en el país, ganó dos gobernaciones y 23 alcaldías - Archivo - Archivo digital eltiempo.com
- ^ Murphy, Helen and Bristow, Matthew. "Colombia’s Santos Hails Uribe in Landslide Presidential Victory", Bloomberg Businessweek, New York City, June 21, 2010
External links
- (Spanish) Colombian Green Party
Green parties by country Africa Algeria · Angola · Benin · Burkina Faso · Cameroon · Côte d'Ivoire · Democratic Republic of the Congo · Egypt · Guinea · Guinea-Bissau · Kenya · Mali · Mauritius · Morocco (The Greens) · Morocco (Izigzawen) · Mozambique · Niger · Nigeria · Rwanda · Senegal · Somalia · South Africa · Uganda · ZambiaAmericas Argentina · Brazil · Canada · Chile · Colombia · Dominican Republic · Haiti · Mexico · Nicaragua · Peru · Puerto Rico · St. Vincent & the Grenadines · United States · Uruguay · VenezuelaAsia-Pacific Australia · Fiji · Iran · Iraq · Israel (The Green Movement) · Israel (The Greens) · Japan · Lebanon · Mongolia · Nepal · New Caledonia · New Zealand · Pakistan · Papua New Guinea · Philippines · Polynesia · Saudi Arabia · South Korea · Sri Lanka · Taiwan · Uzbekistan · VanuatuEurope
(EGP · FYEG)Albania · Andorra · Austria · Belarus · Belgium (Flanders and Brussels) · Belgium (Wallonia and Brussels) · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Bulgaria (The Greens) · Bulgaria (Green Party) · Croatia · Cyprus · Czech Republic · Denmark (the Greens) · Denmark (Socialist People's Party) · England and Wales (Wales) · Estonia · Finland · France · Georgia · Germany · Greece · Hungary (LMP) · Hungary (ZD) · Iceland · Ireland · Italy · Kosovo · Latvia · Luxembourg · Malta · Moldova · Montenegro · Netherlands (The Greens) · Netherlands (GreenLeft) · Northern Ireland · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania (Ecologist Party) · Romania (Green Party) · Russia (Green Russia) · Russia (Alternative) · Russia (Ecological) · Scotland · Serbia · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Spain (Catalonia) · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey · UkraineItalic links indicate observers or non-members of the Global Greens.Categories:- Political parties in Colombia
- Green political parties
- Green Party (Colombia)
- Political parties established in 2005
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