From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Integrity Party
Partido de Integridad Nacional
AbbreviationPIN
Founded1949
Dissolved1950s
Headquarters Quetzaltenango
IdeologyPro- Árbenz
Personalismo
Political position Center-left
National affiliation PRG

The National Integrity Party (Partido de Integridad Nacional, PIN, or in some English-speaking countries, NIP) is a former political party in Guatemala. It was a "personalistic Arbenzista party" founded in Quezaltenango in 1949 with the goal of countering the opposition Independent Anti-Communist Party of the West, which was active in the same region. [1] In 1952 the party merged with the other non-Communist parties supporting the Árbenz presidency (the National Renovation Party, the Revolutionary Action Party, the Socialist Party and the Popular Liberation Front) to form the Party of the Guatemalan Revolution. [2]

References

  1. ^ Silvert, Kalman H. A study in government: Guatemala. New Orleans: Tulane University, 1954, pp. 239.
  2. ^ Political parties of the Americas : Canada, Latin America, and the West Indies / edited by Robert J. Alexander. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 1982. Pp. 427.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Integrity Party
Partido de Integridad Nacional
AbbreviationPIN
Founded1949
Dissolved1950s
Headquarters Quetzaltenango
IdeologyPro- Árbenz
Personalismo
Political position Center-left
National affiliation PRG

The National Integrity Party (Partido de Integridad Nacional, PIN, or in some English-speaking countries, NIP) is a former political party in Guatemala. It was a "personalistic Arbenzista party" founded in Quezaltenango in 1949 with the goal of countering the opposition Independent Anti-Communist Party of the West, which was active in the same region. [1] In 1952 the party merged with the other non-Communist parties supporting the Árbenz presidency (the National Renovation Party, the Revolutionary Action Party, the Socialist Party and the Popular Liberation Front) to form the Party of the Guatemalan Revolution. [2]

References

  1. ^ Silvert, Kalman H. A study in government: Guatemala. New Orleans: Tulane University, 1954, pp. 239.
  2. ^ Political parties of the Americas : Canada, Latin America, and the West Indies / edited by Robert J. Alexander. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 1982. Pp. 427.

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