From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Authentic Integral Development
Desarrollo Integral Auténtico
AbbreviationDIA
Founded13 June 1993
Dissolved21 August 2008
Ideology Left-wing nationalism
Progressivism [1]
Political position Left-wing [2] [3]

Authentic Integral Development ( Spanish: Desarrollo Integral Auténtico) was a left-wing nationalist political party in Guatemala. At the 2003 Guatemalan general election, held on 9 November 2003, the party won 3.0% of the popular vote and 1 out of 158 seats in Congress. Its presidential candidate Eduardo Suger Cofiño won 2.2% in the presidential elections of the same day.

In the 2007 Guatemalan general election, held on 9 September 2007, the party secured 1.43% of the votes in the race for national-list deputies and, save for defections, will have no representation in the 2008-12 Congress. In the presidential election of the same day, its candidate Héctor Rosales won 0.57% of the popular vote. The party has been deregistered since it achieved neither 5% of the votes nor a single deputy.

References

  1. ^ Sarah Zukerman Daly (2022). Violent Victors: Why Bloodstained Parties Win Postwar Elections. Princeton University Press. p. 313. ISBN  9780691231334.
  2. ^ "Guatemala - Political Parties". Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  3. ^ "El ADN político de la familia Torres". 29 September 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Authentic Integral Development
Desarrollo Integral Auténtico
AbbreviationDIA
Founded13 June 1993
Dissolved21 August 2008
Ideology Left-wing nationalism
Progressivism [1]
Political position Left-wing [2] [3]

Authentic Integral Development ( Spanish: Desarrollo Integral Auténtico) was a left-wing nationalist political party in Guatemala. At the 2003 Guatemalan general election, held on 9 November 2003, the party won 3.0% of the popular vote and 1 out of 158 seats in Congress. Its presidential candidate Eduardo Suger Cofiño won 2.2% in the presidential elections of the same day.

In the 2007 Guatemalan general election, held on 9 September 2007, the party secured 1.43% of the votes in the race for national-list deputies and, save for defections, will have no representation in the 2008-12 Congress. In the presidential election of the same day, its candidate Héctor Rosales won 0.57% of the popular vote. The party has been deregistered since it achieved neither 5% of the votes nor a single deputy.

References

  1. ^ Sarah Zukerman Daly (2022). Violent Victors: Why Bloodstained Parties Win Postwar Elections. Princeton University Press. p. 313. ISBN  9780691231334.
  2. ^ "Guatemala - Political Parties". Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  3. ^ "El ADN político de la familia Torres". 29 September 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2023.

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