Costa Rican Renewal Party

The Costa Rican Renewal Party (Spanish: Partido Renovación Costarricense) is a Christian political party in Costa Rica.

Costa Rican Renewal Party
Partido Renovación Costarricense
PresidentJusto Orozco Álvarez
Secretary-GeneralJimmy Soto Solano
Founded1995
IdeologySocial conservatism
Integralism
Formerly:
Christian socialism
Political positionSocial:
Right-wing
Economic:
Centre-left to left-wing (until 2018)
Right-wing (from 2018)
ReligionEvangelical Christianity
ColoursBlue and White
Legislative Assembly
0 / 57
Mayors
0 / 82
Alderpeople
2 / 508
Syndics
0 / 486
District councillors
2 / 1,944
Intendants
0 / 8
Party flag
Website
http://www.renovacionprc.com/

History

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Established in 1995, as a splinter of the National Christian Alliance, the party first participated in national elections in 1998, when its presidential candidate, Sherman Thomas Jackson, received 1.4% of the vote,[1] whilst they won a single seat in the parliamentary elections, taken by pastor and lawyer Justo Orozco. During the 1999–2000 popular protests against the electric liberalization bill known as Combo ICE, Orozco supported the protests and voted against the bill.

Orozco was the party's presidential candidate in 2002, finishing fifth with 1.1% of the vote. The party also retained its sole parliamentary seat in the elections, taken by Carlos Avendaño. However, Avendaño left the party and founded his own (National Restoration Party).

In the 2006 elections, the party's candidate Bolívar Serrano Hidalgo won 3.4% of the vote in the presidential election, but the party lost its parliamentary seat (to Avendaño's party). Journalist David Romero Mora, well known for his book El caso Chemise, endorsed the party in this period.[2]

During the 2007 Costa Rican Dominican Republic – Central America Free Trade Agreement referendum, it stood with the opposition to the agreement.

In 2010 elections, former Tibás mayor Mayra Gonzalez finished sixth in the presidential contest with 0.7%, but the party regained parliamentary representation, winning a solitary seat, taken by Orozco. Orozco was very polemic during his tenure especially because some of his public comments were accused of homophobia and because he was elected president of the Human Rights Commission of Parliament thanks to his alliance with then ruling PLN.[3] Orozco was candidate again in 2014 gaining similar results (1% of the votes) yet obtaining 2 seats in Congress, took by Gonzalo Ramírez Zamora and Abelino Esquivel. One of them, Gonzalo Ramírez Zamora, was elected president of the Legislative Assembly for the 2017–2018 period, supported by the National Liberation Party branch.

During the mandatory party structures renovation process for the 2017–2018 election campaign, the party divided between Orozco supporters and critics. Orozco critics, led by both party congressmen at that moment, Gonzalo Ramírez and Abelino Esquivel, won the process, so Orozco and his supporters left the party, and did not join any other for that election. At the end, Ramírez tendency, considered pro-PLN, took control of the party, also excluding Esquivel's tendency from the party conduction and candidate lists. With both Orozco and Esquivel center-leftist tendencies out of the race, journalist Stephanie Campos was elected as presidential candidate and former liberacionista right-wing Congressman Daniel Gallardo Monge as its head of list. Finally, the party got very weak results and couldn't maintain any seat in Congress.

The party holds very conservative beliefs and is directed toward the evangelical Christian minority, opposing such subjects as abortion, same-sex marriage, marijuana legalization and violent video games.[4][5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p182 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. ^ "La Gaceta" (PDF). Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  3. ^ "Justo Orozco Orozco to Represent Costa Rica at Human Rights Summit in Brazil". Costa Rican Times. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  4. ^ "Government promises to approve gay civil unions". Costa Rican News. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  5. ^ "Meet Costa Rica's 13 presidential candidates". Tico Times. Retrieved 27 March 2016.