Misplaced Pages

Progressive Party (Portugal)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Progressive Party" Portugal – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Political party in Portugal
Progressive Party Portuguese: Partido Progressista
AbbreviationPP
LeaderAnselmo José Braamcamp
Founded1876 (1876)
Dissolved1910 (1910)
Merger ofHistoric Party
Reformist Party
HeadquartersLisbon
IdeologyConstitutional monarchism
Liberalism
Progressivism
Republicanism (minority)
Political positionCentre-left
Colors  Red

The Progressive Party (Portuguese: Partido Progressista), along with their opponent the Partido Regenerador, was a political party in Portugal during the constitutional monarchy at the end of the 19th century.

Ideology

It developed from the Pact of Granja (7 September 1876), which fused the Historic Party and the Reformist Party, which both espoused liberal ideals, and had political opinions counter the Regenerator Party's leader (which included both left-leaning and conservative members), Fontes Pereira de Melo.

At the time, the Progressista and Regenerator parties were sociological and psychological different entities, causing factionalist divisions in society. A good example of this breach occurred in Seixal, where two philharmonic bands were established that supported the Partido Regenerador, the Timbre Seixalense, and the Sociedade Filarmónica União Seixalense (created in 1871), which supported the Partido Progressista.

The Progressistas (as they were referred) began their activities on 17 November 1876.

History

The first Progressive Party government assumed their functions on 1 June 1879, under the Party leader Anselmo José Braamcamp, and would last until 25 March 1881. During its 664 days in office, the group promoted a program of morality and liberal idealism, supported by various important figures (such as José Luciano, Cardoso Machado, Henrique de Barros Gomes, Saraiva de Carvalho, João Crisóstomo and José Joaquim de Castro (the Marquis of Sabugosa and Viscount of São Januário). In their 19 October 1879 electoral victory, new faces were added, including António Cândido (who would be responsible for defending their program Vida Nova), Emídio Navarro and Veiga Beirão would be elected. In February 1885, the former socialist and nascent republican, Oliveira Martins, joins the party, declaring himself the inheritor of Passos. Carlos Lobo d’Ávila, would later join the party after Antero Quental declares that the Fontist regime would not evolve beyond a bureaucratic and financial oligarchy. In September 1885 Luciano de Castro was elected president of the Party (on 10 December 1885), supported by Barros Gomes and Oliveira Martins, while being opposed by Emídio Navarro and Mariano de Carvalho's faction.

In the elections of 30 March 1879, under the government of António Serpa there were 33 Progressista deputies, a number that would remain constant in the 23 October 1892 government of Dias Ferreira.

During the 6 March 1887 would form a majority with 113 of 169 seats, a feat that they would repeat, albeit with a reduced plurality in the 20 October 1889 election (retaining 104 deputies). From 20 February 1886 and 14 February 1890, a Progressive Party would govern under the party leadership of José Luciano, which included in his cabinet Veiga Beirão, Barros Gomes, Henrique de Macedo, Ressano Garcia, Emídio Navarro, Mariano de Carvalho, Augusto José da Cunha, Visconde de S. Januário, Eduardo José Coelho and Marino João Franzini.

During the government of Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro (April 1894), the number of Progressive deputies would fall to 11 representatives and for a time the Progressive party would form a liberal alliance with the Republican Party (1894–1895).

Election results

Election Leader Seats +/- Government
1878 Anselmo José Braamcamp 22 / 137 Opposition
1879 106 / 137 Increase84 Government
1881 6 / 137 Decrease100 Opposition
1884 31 / 151 Increase25 Opposition
1887 José Luciano de Castro 113 / 152 Increase82 Government
1889 104 / 152 Decrease9 Government
1890 33 / 152 Decrease71 Opposition
1890 45 / 152 Increase12 Opposition
1894 33 / 152 Decrease12 Opposition
1895 Boycotted
1897 88 / 114 Increase88 Government
1899 91 / 138 Increase3 Government
1900 28 / 138 Decrease63 Opposition
1901 41 / 148 Increase13 Opposition
1904 43 / 148 Increase2 Opposition
1905 109 / 148 Increase66 Government
Apr. 1906 19 / 148 Decrease90 Opposition
Aug. 1906 45 / 148 Increase26 Opposition
1908 58 / 148 Increase13 Opposition
1910 31 / 155 Decrease27 Opposition

References

  1. Os Actos Adicionais à Carta Constitucional de 1826, Paulo Jorge Fernandes, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Historia Constitucional, n. 13, 2012, págs. 570
Defunct political parties in Portugal
Constitutional Monarchy (1834–1910)
First Republic (1910–1926)
Ditadura Nacional (1926–1933)
Estado Novo (1933–1974)
Third Republic (1974–)
Categories: