People's Party Partido Popular | |
---|---|
Founded | 20 January 1989 |
Ideology | |
Political position | Centre-right[8][9] to right-wing[10] |
The People's Party[11] (Spanish: Partido Popular [paɾˈtiðo popuˈlaɾ] (listen); known mostly by its acronym, PP [peˈpe]) is a conservative[1][2] and Christian-democratic[2][6] political party in Spain.
The People's Party was founded in 1989 from the People's Alliance (AP). This party was created as a more centre-right party instead of a far-right party.[2]
From its original emphasis on a 'united and Catholic Spain', in the 1980s and 1990s it gradually evolved under the leadership of José Maria Aznar into a pragmatically-oriented conservative formation, with Christian democratic and, even more strongly, economically liberal elements.
The right-wing Conservative AP was now transformed into a party of the centre-right: it was renamed People's Party (Partido Popular, PP) in the spring of 1989.
Since the 're-launch' of 1989, the party has established itself clearly as a party of the centre-right...
In 1989 the AP transformed into the Partido Popular (PP) – a coalition of center-right forces...
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