National Renewal (Chile)

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National Renewal
Renovación Nacional
PresidentRodrigo Galilea
Secretary-GeneralAndrea Balladares
Founded29 April 1987
Registered28 January 1988
Merger ofNational Union Movement
Independent Democratic Union splinters
National Labour Front[1][2]
HeadquartersAvenida Antonio Varas 454, Providencia, Santiago, Chile
Youth wingYouth of National Renewal (JRN)
Women's wingMujeresRN
Indigenous wingPueblos Originarios RN
Membership (2017)31,214 (4th in Chile)[3]
IdeologyConservatism[4][5][6]
Liberal conservatism[7]
[8]
Economic liberalism[9]
Factions
Pinochetism[10][11]
Political positionCentre-right[12][13][14] to right-wing[2][15]
National affiliationChile Vamos[16]
Regional affiliationUnion of Latin American Parties[17]
International affiliationInternational Democrat Union[18]
Centrist Democrat International[19]
Colours    Blue, White and Red
Chamber of Deputies
23 / 155
Senate
11 / 50
Party flag
Website
www.rn.cl

National Renewal (Spanish: Renovación Nacional, RN) is a liberal conservative[7][20] political party in Chile. It is a member of Chile Vamos, a center-right to right-wing coalition. Sebastián Piñera, the former President of Chile, was a member of the party.

History[edit]

National Renewal was formed on 29 April 1987 when three rightist organizations – the National Union Movement (Movimiento de Unión Nacional, MUN), the National Labour Front (Frente Nacional del Trabajo, FNT), and the Independent Democratic Union Movement (Movimiento Unión Demócrata Independiente, UDI) – joined in preparation for the 1988 Plebiscite that would determine the continuity or not of rule of Augusto Pinochet who had been in power since the coup of 1973. The UDI soon broke away to run as a separate party due to its strong support for the plebiscite and a Pinochet candidacy, while the remaining National Renewal party indicated its preference for an open election or a candidate other than Pinochet. However, once Pinochet was proclaimed candidate, the overwhelming majority of National Renewal supported him.

The party was founded on 29 April with 351 founding members. In this way, National Renewal was the first political party to form in Chile after the lifting on the ban of political parties that had been established after the coup; by December of that year, 61,167 members, led by Andrés Allamand, had joined. The principal idea that the party proclaimed was to generate an environment of calm during the return of democracy.

The party supported UDI candidate Joaquín Lavín as the sole Alliance candidate in the 1999/2000 presidential elections, who went on to obtain 47.5% of the votes in the first round, but was subsequently defeated in the second round by Ricardo Lagos.

During early 2005, the party initially supported Lavín to again run as the sole candidate of the Alliance in the presidential election of that year. However, in face of Lavín's declining opinion poll numbers, Sebastián Piñera announced his candidacy as the National Renewal candidate thus ensuring that the Alliance have two candidates for the election. In the first round on 11 December, Piñera obtained 25.4% of the vote, which was enough to send him to the run-off on 15 January 2006 with Michelle Bachelet. With 46.5% of the vote, Piñera was defeated by Bachelet.

In the legislative elections, also on 11 December 2005, the party won, as part of the Alliance for Chile, 20 out of 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and currently holds 7 out of 38 seats in the Senate.

In the parliamentary elections, also on 13 December 2009, the party gains, as part of the Coalition for Change, 18 out of 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies of Chile and currently has 8 out of 38 seats in the Senate of Chile.

In the 2010 presidential election, Sebastián Piñera was elected president of Chile.[21]

In 2013, Andrés Allamand was presidential precandidate for primary elections, the National Renewal party supported the presidential candidacy of Evelyn Matthei for the presidential election, that lost in second round with the 37% of the votes.

In January 2014, three deputies (Karla Rubilar, Pedro Browne and Joaquín Godoy)[22] and one senator (Lily Pérez)[23] resigned to membership in the party and launched a political movement called "Amplitude" (Amplitud), that aimed to be a new political party inside the Alliance. In the internal elections of 2014 the party, the deputy Cristián Monckeberg was elected president of the party. On 2 August 2014, National Renewal debuts its new logo with a blue and red star gradient colours. In August 2014 the deputy Gaspar Rivas left the party.[24]

On 22 November 2014, on a Doctrinal Council held in Pucón, National Renewal drafted a new statement of principles[25] where they were eliminated references to the coup d'état of 11 September 1973.[26]

On 4 October 2015, National Renewal formed with the Independent Democratic Union (UDI), Political Evolution (Evópoli) and the Independent Regionalist Party (PRI) the new centre-right coalition called Chile Vamos.[27]

In July 2016, the Senator of National Renewal Manuel José Ossandón left the party to form his presidential candidacy in 2017. The National Renewal party, in 2017, accorded support the presidential candidacy of Sebastián Piñera within UDI and PRI to primary elections of the centre-right coalition Chile Vamos.

In the parliamentary elections of 2017, National Renewal obtained 36 seats in the Chamber of Deputies with 17.80% of the votes and 8 seats in the Senate with 20.98% of the votes, thus becoming the most voted party in these elections and displacing its coalition partner, the Independent Democratic Union.

On 11 March 2018, for the second government of Sebastián Piñera, National Renewal has 5 Ministers, 8 Undersecretaries, 5 regional Intendants and 24 provincial Governors.

Presidents of National Renewal[edit]

National Renewal has nine party presidents in its history:

Electoral history[edit]

Presidential elections[edit]

The following is a list of the presidential candidates supported by the National Renewal. (Information gathered from the Archive of Chilean Elections).

Election year Candidate 1st Round 2nd Round Results
# Votes % Votes # Votes % Votes
1989 Hernán Büchi 2,052,116 29.4% Lost
1993 Arturo Alessandri Besa 1,703,408 24.2% Lost
1999–2000 Joaquín Lavín 3,352,192 47.5% 3,495,569 48.7% Lost
2005–2006 Sebastián Piñera 1,763,694 25.4% 3,236,394 46.5% Lost
2009–2010 Sebastián Piñera 3,074,164 44.1% 3,591,182 51.6% Won
2013 Evelyn Matthei 1,648,481 25.1% 2,111,891 37.8% Lost
2017 Sebastián Piñera 2,418,540 36.6% 3,796,918 54.5% Won
2021 Sebastián Sichel 898,510 12.7% Lost

Congress election[edit]

Election year Chamber of Deputies Senate Status
# Votes % Votes Seats # Votes % Votes Seats
1989 1,242,432 18.3%
29 / 120
731,678 10.8%
5 / 38
Minority
1993 1,098,852 16.3%
29 / 120
279,580 14.9%
11 / 38
Minority
1997 971,903 16.8%
23 / 120
629,394 14.9%
7 / 38
Minority
2001 845,865 13.8%
18 / 120
342,045 19.7%
4 / 18
Minority
2005 932,422 14.1%
19 / 120
515,185 10.8%
8 / 38
Minority
2009 1,178,392 17.8%
18 / 120
382,728 20.2%
8 / 38
Minority
2009 1,178,392 17.8%
18 / 120
382,728 20.2%
8 / 38
Governing coalition with minority overall status
2013 928,037 14.9%
19 / 120
733,726 16.2%
8 / 38
Minority
2017 1,067,270 17.8%
36 / 155
349,622 20.9%
9 / 43
Governing coalition with minority overall status
2021 693,474 10.96%
25 / 155
549,553 11.8%
12 / 50
Minority

Party logos[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "El desembarco de la derecha" (PDF). Análisis (in Spanish). 10 March 1987. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 April 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  2. ^ a b Flores-Macías, Gustavo A. (2012), After Neoliberalism?: The Left and Economic Reforms in Latin America, Oxford University Press, p. 153
  3. ^ "Affiliates table" (PDF). servel.cl. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  4. ^ Arceneaux, Craig; Pion-Berlin, David (2005), Transforming Latin America: The International And Domestic Origins of Change, University of Pittsburgh Press, p. 148
  5. ^ "El conservador Sebastián Piñera gana la presidencia en Chile". 17 December 2017.
  6. ^ "El conservador Sebastián Piñera juró como presidente de Chile". 11 March 2018.
  7. ^ a b Kirby, Peadar (2003), Introduction to Latin America: Twenty-First Century Challenges, Sage, p. 157, ...the Renovacion Nacional (RN) with its internal divisions between liberals and conservatives...
  8. ^ Délano, Manuel (10 February 2010). "Liberales y conservadores se reparten el Gobierno de Chile". El País.
  9. ^ "La crisis del milagro neoliberal".
  10. ^ Verónica Marín (27 December 2018). "Evangélicos, liberales, históricos, kastistas y pinochetistas: Quién es quién en la bancada de RN". EMOL.
  11. ^ "RN entrega respaldo a diputada Flores tras dichos sobre ser pinochetista: "Aquí nadie sobra" - La Tercera". www.latercera.com. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  12. ^ "Chile's ex-leader Bachelet favoured in presidential vote". France 24. 16 November 2013.
  13. ^ "Chilean ambassador resigns after praising Pinochet". BBC. 9 June 2010.
  14. ^ "Sebastián Piñera, el millonario que votó contra el general Pinochet". 17 December 2017.
  15. ^ Posner, Paul W. (2008), State, Market, and Democracy in Chile: The Constraint of Popular Participation, Palgrave Macmillan, p. 114
  16. ^ "UDI, RN, PRI y Evópoli firman acuerdo para la creación de una nueva coalición política". La Tercera. 29 January 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  17. ^ "Partidos Miembros".
  18. ^ "Members | International Democrat Union". 1 February 2018.
  19. ^ "parties".
  20. ^ "Partido Renovación Nacional – Partidos, movimientos y coaliciones – Historia Política – Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile". bcn.cl. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  21. ^ emol.com (17 January 2010). "Minuto a Minuto: Piñera pide a la Concertación "que sea oposición fuerte, pero leal" (finalizado)". Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  22. ^ Francisco Torrealba and Alberto Labra (7 January 2014). "Karla Rubilar, Joaquín Godoy y Pedro Browne confirman renuncia a Renovación Nacional". La Tercera. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  23. ^ "Lily Pérez y renuncia a RN: "Dejó de ser el partido al que entré"". La Tercera. 16 January 2014. Archived from the original on 16 January 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  24. ^ "Diputado Gaspar Rivas: "Renuncio a Renovación Nacional. Chao con RN"". Publimetro. 7 August 2014. Archived from the original on 11 August 2014. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
  25. ^ "Consejo de RN elimina alusión al Golpe Militar de su declaración de principios". EMOL. 22 November 2014. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  26. ^ "Renovación Nacional aprobó la eliminación de referencia al golpe en sus principios". EMOL. 20 December 2014. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  27. ^ ""Chile Vamos" es el nombre de consenso en la Coalición de centro-derecha". BioBioChile – La Red de Prensa Más Grande de Chile. 4 October 2015.

External links[edit]