National Solidarity Alliance
National Solidarity Alliance Alianza Solidaridad Nacional | |
---|---|
Right-wing | |
Colors | Yellow |
The National Solidarity Alliance (
Constituent Parties
- National Solidarity (Partido Solidaridad Nacional, PSN), liberal conservative, Castañeda's personalist vehicle
- Union for Peru (Unión por el Perú, UPP), the centrist, social liberal core of the party, after Ollanta Humala's Nationalists left the alliance
- Change 90 (Cambio 90, C90), the splinter of the former main force of Fujimorism that has not followed Keiko Fujimori to the new Force 2011
- Always Together (Siempre Unidos)
- All for Peru (Todos por el Perú),[1] liberalism and centrism
In the
In the congressional election on April 10, the alliance won 10.2% of the popular vote and 9 of 130 seats, making them the fifth-largest group in parliament. In the elections for the five Peruvian members of the Andean Parliament, they won 9.41% of the popular vote but no representative to the Andean Parliament.
Presidential candidate
For the second round Castañeda suggested to vote for Force 2011 candidate Keiko Fujimori.[2]
Dissolution
Eight of the nine representatives elected on the alliance's lists formed the National Solidarity parliamentary group. Renzo Reggiardo of Cambio 90 instead joined the small APRA-led Parliamentary Coordination bloc.[3] The alliance formally dissolved on July 20, 2011, following Reggiardo's exit from the caucus and the installation of the session of Congress.
2016 elections
For the 2016 general elections, National Solidarity decided to form an alliance only with Union for Peru led by José Vega.[4]
While All for Peru nominated Julio Guzmán for the presidency but, he was disqualified due to the irregularities in his nomination process .[5]
For these elections, the alliance announced the candidacy of Hernando Guerra-García for the Presidency of the Republic together with José Luna Gálvez and Gustavo Rondón for the 1st and 2nd Vice Presidents of the Republic. However, on March 29 of the same year, the alliance decided to withdraw the presidential candidacy and its congressional list to prevent the political party from losing its registration with the JNE.
Finally, the alliance with UPP was dissolved in 2016.
Electoral history
Presidential elections
Year | Candidate | Coalition | Votes | Percentage | Outcome | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Luis Castañeda
|
National Solidarity Alliance | 1 440 143 | 9.83 |
5th | |
2016 | Hernando Guerra García | National Solidarity-UPP Electoral Alliance | Ticket withdrawn | N/A | N/A |
Congressional elections
Year | Votes | % | Number of seats | / | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | 1 311 766 | 10.2% | 9 / 130
|
9 | Minority |
2016 | List withdrawn | N/A | N/A | N/A |
References
- ^ "Solidaridad Nacional va en alianza con UPP, Cambio 90, Todos por el Perú y Siempre Unidos". El Comercio.pe. 2010-12-11. Retrieved 2011-06-05.
- ^ "Luis Castañeda confirma que votará por Keiko Fujimori". tuteve.tv. 2011-05-27. Retrieved 2011-06-01.
- ^ LR, Redacción (2011-06-29). "Renzo Reggiardo se aleja de Solidaridad Nacional". larepublica.pe (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-30.
- ^ PERÚ, Empresa Peruana de Servicios Editoriales S. A. EDITORA. "Solidaridad Nacional firmó alianza con Unión por el Perú (UPP)". andina.pe (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-31.
- ^ "Peru presidential candidates Guzman and Acuna banned from election". BBC News. 2016-03-09. Retrieved 2021-05-31.