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Canarian Coalition

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political party in Spain
Canarian Coalition
Coalición Canaria
AbbreviationCC
CCa
General SecretaryFernando Clavijo Batlle
FoundedFebruary 1993 (as a coalition)
May 2005 (as a party)
HeadquartersC/ Galcerán, 7-9 Edif. El Drago,Santa Cruz de Tenerife
C/ Buenos Aires 24,Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Ideology
Political positionCentre[1] tocentre-right[4]
National affiliationCEUS (since 2019)
CEU (2014–2019)
CEU (2009–2014)
CE (1999–2004)
CN (1994–1999)
Regional affiliationAgreement of Nationalist Unity (2006–2023)
European affiliationEuropean Democratic Party
ColoursWhite, blue, yellow (colours of theCanarian flag)
Congress of Deputies (Canarian seats)
1 / 15
Spanish Senate (Canarian seats)
1 / 14
European Parliament
0 / 61
Canarian Parliament
20 / 70
Island councils
41 / 155
Mayors (2023-2027)[5]
21 / 88
Municipal councils (2023-2027)
303 / 1,402
Website
www.coalicioncanaria.org

TheCanarian Coalition (Spanish:Coalición Canaria,CC orCCa) is aregionalist[6][7] andCanarian nationalist[8] political party in Spain operating in theCanary Islands. The party's aim is for greaterautonomy for the islands but not independence.[9] Its position has been labeled ascentrist[10] andcentre-right.[1] The party governed the Canary Islands from 1993 to 2019; and currently since 2023 underFernando Clavijo Batlle's leadership.

It usually negotiates with the plurality party at the Cortes to form a majority in exchange for resources for the islands. It also governs the local administrations ofTenerife,La Palma, andFuerteventura, as well as having majority control in some of the town councils on the Canary Islands.

History

[edit]

The coalition was formed in February 1993 from a grouping of five parties (the largest being theCanarian Independent Groups) under one banner[9] and has governed the Canary Islands since 1993,[11] when it replaced the formerSpanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) administration after amotion of no confidence. After entering government, CC obtained power for the regional government to levy its own taxes and a law compensating the islands for their distance from the mainland.[9] The coalition became a single party in 2005.[11]

Composition

[edit]
PartyScopeNotes
Independent Canarian Centre (CCI)CanariesLeft in 2005
Nationalist Canarian Initiative (ICAN)Dissolved in 1993
Canarian Nationalist Party (PNC)Left in 2023
Canarian Independent Groups (AIC)Dissolved in 1993
Tenerife Group of Independents (ATI)TenerifeDissolved in 2005
La Palma Group of Independents (API)La PalmaDissolved in 2005
Lanzarote Independents Party (PIL)LanzaroteLeft in 1994.[12]
Independents of Fuerteventura (IF)FuerteventuraLeft in 1994.
Majorera Assembly (AM)FuerteventuraDissolved in 1995
Independent Herrenian Group (AHI)El HierroLeft in 2023

Electoral performance

[edit]

Parliament of the Canary Islands

[edit]
ElectionLeading candidateIsland constituenciesRegional constituencySeats+/–Government
Votes%Votes%
1995Manuel Hermoso261,42432.80 (#1)
21 / 60
4[a]Minority(1995–1996)
Coalition(1996–1999)
1999Román Rodríguez306,65836.93 (#1)
24 / 60
3Coalition(1999–2002)
Minority(2002–2003)
2003Adán Martín304,41332.90 (#1)
23 / 60
1Coalition(2003–2005)
Minority(2005–2007)
2007Paulino RiveroWithinCC–PNC
17 / 60
4Coalition(2007–2010)
Minority(2010–2011)
2011WithinCC–PNC–CCN
18 / 60
2Coalition
2015Fernando ClavijoWithinCC–PNC
16 / 60
3Coalition(2015–2016)
Minority(2016–2019)
2019WithinCC–PNC
19 / 70
2Opposition
2023201,40122.08(#2)175,19819.20 (#3)
19 / 70
0Coalition

Cortes Generales

[edit]
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found onPhabricator and onMediaWiki.org.
Cortes Generales
ElectionCongressSenateLeaderStatus in legislature
Vote%ScoreSeats+/–Seats+/–
1993207,0770.88%7th
4 / 350
3[b]
5 / 208
1[c]Lorenzo OlarteOpposition
1996220,4180.88%6th
4 / 350
0
1 / 208
4José Carlos MauricioConfidence and supply
2000248,2611.07%7th
4 / 350
0
5 / 208
4Opposition
2004235,2210.91%7th
3 / 350
1
3 / 208
2Paulino Rivero
2008WithinCC–PNC
2 / 350
1
0 / 208
3Ana Oramas
2011WithinCC–NC–PNC
2 / 350
0
0 / 208
0
2015WithinCC–PNC
1 / 350
1
0 / 208
0
2016WithinCC–PNC
1 / 350
0
0 / 208
0
2019 (Apr)WithinCC–PNC
2 / 350
1
0 / 208
0
2019 (Nov)WithinCC–NC–PNC
2 / 350
0
0 / 208
0
2023116,3630.47%11th
1 / 350
1
0 / 208
0Cristina Valido GarcíaConfidence and supply
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found onPhabricator and onMediaWiki.org.
ElectionCanary Islands
CongressSenate
Vote%ScoreSeats+/–Seats+/–
1993207,07725.58%3rd
4 / 14
3[b]
5 / 11
1[c]
1996220,41825.09%3rd
4 / 14
0
1 / 11
4
2000248,26129.56%2nd
4 / 14
0
5 / 11
4
2004235,22124.33%3rd
3 / 15
1
3 / 11
2
2008WithinCC–PNC
2 / 15
1
0 / 11
3
2011WithinCC–NC–PNC
2 / 15
0
0 / 11
0
2015WithinCC–PNC
1 / 15
1
0 / 11
0
2016WithinCC–PNC
1 / 15
0
0 / 11
0
2019 (Apr)WithinCC–PNC
2 / 15
1
0 / 11
0
2019 (Nov)WithinCC–NC–PNC
2 / 15
0
0 / 11
0
2023114,71811.28%3rd
1 / 15
1
0 / 11
0

European Parliament

[edit]
European Parliament
ElectionSpainCanary IslandsEP Group
VoteSeatsVote%
1994withCN
1 / 64
113,677 (#3)18.85ERA
1999withCE
1 / 64
276,186 (#1)33.78ELDR
2004withCE
0 / 54
90,619 (#3)16.92
2009withCEU
0 / 54
96,297 (#3)15.84
2014withCEU
0 / 54
69,601 (#3)12.18
2019withCEUS
0 / 59
184,936 (#2)20.75
2024withCEUS
0 / 61
70,008 (#4)10.29

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Compared to the combined totals ofCanarian Independent Groups in La Palma and Tenerife,Canarian Initiative andMajorera Assembly in the1991 regional election.
  2. ^abCompared toCanarian Independent Groups totals in the1989 general election.
  3. ^abCompared to the combined totals ofCanarian Independent Groups,Majorera Assembly andIndependent Herrenian Group in the1989 general election.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Appendix A3: Political Parties"(PDF).European Social Survey (8th ed.). 2016.Archived(PDF) from the original on 29 January 2018.
  2. ^Rodríguez Borges, Rodrigo F. (2010)."Xenophobic discourse and agenda-setting. A case study in the press of the Canary Islands (Spain)"(PDF).Revista Latina de Comunicación Social (17–20):222–230.doi:10.4185/RLCS-65-2010-895-222-230-EN (inactive 1 November 2024). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2012-04-26. Retrieved2011-11-28.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
  3. ^Fernando León Solís (1 January 2003).Negotiating Spain and Catalonia: Competing Narratives of National Identity. Intellect Books. p. 127.ISBN 978-1-84150-077-5.
  4. ^[1][2][3]
  5. ^Lista de nuevos alcaldes 2023 en municipios españoles.Europa Press/EPDATA. 19 June 2023
  6. ^John Coakley (13 September 2013).PATHWAYS FROM ETHNIC CONFLICT: Institutional Redesign in Divided Societies. Routledge. p. 73.ISBN 978-1-317-98847-2.
  7. ^Stéphane Paquin; Guy LaChappelle (5 October 2005).Mastering Globalization: New Sub-States' Governance and Strategies. Routledge. p. 148.ISBN 978-1-134-27661-5.
  8. ^Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko; Matti Mälkiä (2007).Encyclopedia of Digital Government. Idea Group Inc (IGI). p. 394.ISBN 978-1-59140-790-4.
  9. ^abcRodgers, Eamonn J. (1999).Encyclopedia of contemporary Spanish culture. New York: CRC. p. 442.ISBN 978-0-415-13187-2.
  10. ^"Los centristas de CC reconocen que la dirección en Tenerife no ha tenido buena voluntad para cumplir acuerdos". 6 April 2010.
  11. ^abAngel Smith (2 January 2009).Historical Dictionary of Spain. Scarecrow Press. p. 174.ISBN 978-0-8108-6267-8.
  12. ^D. Peñate, Cristóbal (19 April 2015)."Sumamos, luego existimos (¿AIC bis?)".Canarias Ahora (in Spanish). Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Retrieved5 August 2023.

External links

[edit]
Congress of Deputies (350)
Senate (266)
Other parties inregional parliaments
European Parliament (61 of 720)
International
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