Spanish Socialist Workers' Party





























































































































Spanish Socialist Workers' Party


Partido Socialista Obrero Español

Abbreviation PSOE
President Cristina Narbona
Secretary-General Pedro Sánchez
Spokesperson in Congress Adriana Lastra
Spokesperson in Senate Ander Gil
Founder Pablo Iglesias Posse
Founded 2 May 1879 (139 years ago) (1879-05-02)
Headquarters C/ Ferraz, 70
28008 Madrid, Spain
Newspaper El Socialista
Student wing Campus Joven
Youth wing Socialist Youth of Spain
Trade union General Union of Workers
Membership (2017)
Decrease187,360[1]
Ideology
Social democracy[2][3]
Pro-Europeanism[4][5]
Political position
Centre-left[2]
European affiliation Party of European Socialists
International affiliation
Progressive Alliance
Socialist International
European Parliament group Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Colors
     Red
Anthem "Himno del PSOE"[6]
"Anthem of the PSOE"

Congress of Deputies

84 / 350

Senate

62 / 265

European Parliament

14 / 54

Regional Parliaments

346 / 1,268

Regional Governments

7 / 19


Provincial deputations[7]

391 / 1,040

Local Government (2015)

20,823 / 67,611

Website
www.psoe.es

  • Politics of Spain

  • Political parties

  • Elections


The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (Spanish: Partido Socialista Obrero Español [paɾˈtiðo soθjaˈlista oβɾeɾo espaˈɲol] (About this soundlisten); PSOE [peˈsoe] (About this soundlisten)) is a social-democratic[8]political party in Spain. The PSOE has been in government for a longer time than any other political party in modern democratic Spain: from 1982 to 1996 under Felipe González; from 2004 to 2011 under José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, and currently since 2018 under Pedro Sánchez.


The PSOE was founded in 1879, which makes it the oldest party currently active in Spain. The PSOE played a key role during the Second Spanish Republic, being part of coalition government from 1931 to 1933 and from 1936 to 1939, when the Republic was defeated by Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War. Historically a Marxist party, it abandoned Marxism in 1979.[9] The PSOE has historically had strong ties with the General Union of Workers (UGT), a Spanish trade union. For decades, UGT membership was a requirement for PSOE membership. However, since the 1980s UGT has frequently criticized the economic policies of PSOE, even calling for a general strike against the PSOE government on 14 December 1988.[10] The PSOE is a member of the Party of European Socialists, Progressive Alliance and the Socialist International.[10] In the European Parliament, PSOE's 14 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) sit in the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) European parliamentary group.




Contents






  • 1 Ideology


    • 1.1 From Marxism to social democracy


    • 1.2 Federalism




  • 2 History


    • 2.1 Restoration regime


    • 2.2 Second Republic and Civil War


    • 2.3 Clandestinity and exile


    • 2.4 Modern history (1974–present)




  • 3 Electoral performance


    • 3.1 Congress of Deputies


    • 3.2 Senate


    • 3.3 European Parliament




  • 4 Terms


  • 5 Historical leaders


  • 6 Notable members


  • 7 See also


  • 8 Footnotes


  • 9 References


  • 10 Bibliography


  • 11 External links





Ideology



From Marxism to social democracy





Pablo Iglesias founded the party back in 1879


PSOE was founded with the purpose of representing and defending the interests of the working class formed during the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century.[citation needed] In its beginnings, PSOE's main objective was the defense of worker's rights and the achievement of the ideals of socialism, emerging from contemporary philosophy and Marxist politics, by securing political power for the working class and socialising the means of production in order to establish a dictatorship of the proletariat in the transition to socialist society. The ideology of the Spanish Socialist Worker's Party has evolved throughout the 20th century according to relevant historical events and the evolution of Spanish society.


In 1979, the party abandoned its definitive Marxist theses at the hands of its then secretary general Felipe González, not before overcoming great tensions and two congresses, the first of which preferred to maintain Marxism. Before this situation, notable internal leaders like Pablo Castellano or Luis Gómez Llorente founded the internal faction of Left Socialists, which included the militants who would not renounce Marxism. This allowed for the consolidation of the leftist forces in PSOE. From this moment, the diverse events both outside and within the party led to projects that resembled those of other European social democratic parties and acceptance of the defence of the market economy.


Currently, PSOE defines itself as "social democratic, centre-left and progressive". It is grouped with other self-styled socialists, social democrats and labour parties in the Party of European Socialists.



Federalism


During the Second Republic the matter of the conception of the State was open within the party: two different views connected in discourse to the interests of the working class competed against each other, a centralist view as well as a federal one.[11] The late years of the Francoist dictatorship was a period in which PSOE defended the right to "self-determination of the peoples of Spain", in what it was a reflection of both an ideologic and a pragmatist approach.[12] Ultimately, the party, while sticking to a preference for a federal system, gradually ceased to mention the notion of self-determination during the Spanish transition to democracy.[13] Postulates coming from peripheral nationalisms that have been assumed by elements of the party, bringing an understanding of Catalonia, the Basque Coutry and Galicia as nations and thus, deserving of a different treatment than the rest of regions, have been heavily criticised by other party elements, as according to the later, they would undermine the principle of territorial equality among the autonomous communities.[14]



History



Restoration regime




Pablo Iglesias addressing the workers during a 1905 demonstration in Madrid.


PSOE was founded by Pablo Iglesias on 2 May 1879 in the Casa Labra tavern in Tetuán Street near the Puerta del Sol at the centre of Madrid.[15] Iglesias was a typesetter who had become in contact in the past with the Spanish section of the International Working Men's Association and with Paul Lafargue.[16] The first program of the new political party was passed in an assembly of 40 people, on 20 July of that same year. The bulk of the growth of the PSOE and its affiliated trade union, the Unión General de Trabajadores (UGT) was chiefly restricted to the Madrid-Biscay-Asturias triangle up until the 1910s.[17] The obtaining of a seat at the Congress by Pablo Iglesias at the 1910 legislative election, in which the PSOE candidates presented within the broad Republican–Socialist Conjunction, became a development of great symbolical transcendence, and gave the party more publicity at the national level.[18]




Besteiro, Anguiano, Saborit and Largo Caballero in the prison of Cartagena (1918).


The party and the UGT took a leading role in the general strike of August 1917, in the context of the events of the 1917 Crisis during the conservative government of Eduardo Dato. The strike was crushed by the army with the result of further undermining of the constitutional order;[19] the members of the organizing committee (Julián Besteiro, Francisco Largo Caballero, Daniel Anguiano and Andrés Saborit), were accused of sedition and sentenced to life imprisonment.[20] Sent to the prison of Cartagena,[20] they were released a year later, after being elected to the Cortes in the 1918 general election.
During the 1919−1921 "Crisis of the Internationals" the party experienced tensions between the members endorsing the Socialist International and the advocates for joining the Third International. Two consecutive splits of dissidents willing to join the Komintern, namely the Spanish Communist Party in 1920,[21] and the Spanish Communist Workers' Party in 1921,[22] broke away from the PSOE and soon merged to create the Communist Party of Spain (PCE).


The party was a member of the Labour and Socialist International between 1923 and 1940.[23]


After the death of Pablo Iglesias in 1925, Julián Besteiro replaced the later at the presidency of the PSOE and the UGT.


During the 1923–1930 dictatorship of Primo de Rivera corporativist PSOE and UGT elements were willing to engage into limited collaboration with the regime, against the political stance defended by other socialists such as Indalecio Prieto and Fernando de los Ríos, who instead vouched for a closer collaboration with republican forces.[24] The last years of the dictatorship saw a divergence emerge among the "corporativists"; it was personified in Francisco Largo Caballero, who began to endorse the rapport with bourgeois republicans, and Julián Besteiro, who still showed great distrust towards the later.[25] The opposition of Besteiro to participate in the "Revolutionary Committee" led to his resignation as president both of the party and the trade union in February 1931.[26] He was replaced as president of the party by Remigio Cabello.[27]



Second Republic and Civil War




PSOE entered the provisional government of the Second Republic in 1931 with Indalecio Prieto, Fernando de los Ríos and Largo Caballero as ministers.


After the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic on 14 April 1931, three PSOE members were included in the cabinet of the provisional government: Indalecio Prieto (Finance), Fernando de los Ríos (Education) and Francisco Largo Caballero (Labour). The socialist presence remained in the rest of cabinets of the "Social-Azañist Biennium" (1931–1933).


After the November 1933 general election, which marked a win for the right-of-centre forces, in a climate of increasing polarization and growing unemployment along a desire to mend the mistake of not having sided along the republicans in the election against the united right, Largo Caballero adopted a revolutionary rhetoric.[28] Indalecio Prieto had also participated in the increasingly aggressive rhetoric, having already condemned the heavy-hand repression of the December 1933 largely anarchist uprising by the government, that has been cheered on by the CEDA parliamentary fraction leaders.[29] The Socialist Youth of Spain (JSE) also engaged into a shrilling revolutionary rhetoric, while Besteiro firmly opposed the insurrectionary drift of the militancy.[30]




Workers arrested by civil guards and assault guards during the 1934 Asturian revolutionary strike.


The formation of a new cabinet including CEDA ministers in October 1934 was perceived among the Left as a reaction,[31] with the CEDA party being indistinguishable from contemporary Fascism to most workers,[32] while CEDA leader Gil-Robles had vouched for the establishment of a corporative state already in the 1933 electoral campaign.[33] Having the UGT called for a general strike in the country for 5 October, the strike developed into a full-blown insurrection (the "Revolution of 1934") in the mining region of Asturias, which was vocally supported by socialists such as Largo Caballero and Prieto. After the end of the revolt, whose repression was entrusted to Generals Franco and Goded, most PSOE and UGT leaders were jailed.[34]




Largo Caballero visiting the siege of the Alcázar in September 1936.


A growing rift between Prieto and Largo Caballero (with disparate views of politics, albeit sharing a general pragmatist approach) formed in 1935 while Besteiro's clout on the party took several steps back.[35] Followers of Indalecio Prieto would ultimately become "estranged from the party left".[36] PSOE formed part of the broad left-wing Popular Front electoral coalition that stood for election in 1936 and achieved a victory in seats over the right.


In September 1936, a few months into the 1936–1939 Spanish Civil War, a cabinet presided by Largo Caballero was formed (he also held the functions of Minister of War). Later in November, Largo Caballero got to integrate some CNT ministers in his government. The left socialist caballeristas were revolutionary in rhetoric (although ultimately they displayed moderate reformist policies in practice while in government);[36] the May Events of 1937 in Barcelona destabilised the government, which was replaced by a new cabinet presided by the also socialist Juan Negrín.



Clandestinity and exile




Rodolfo Llopis led the PSOE in exile for nearly three decades.


With the PSOE reduced to clandestinity during the Francoist dictatorship, its members were persecuted, with many leaders, members and supporters being imprisoned or exiled and even executed.[n 1] The party was legalized again in 1977, during the Spanish Transition.


Disputes between the followers of Indalecio Prieto (who had exiled to Mexico) and Juan Negrín over the political strategy of the Republican government in Exile soon arose. Negrín, whose 1937–1939 spell at the government in wartime was seen negatively by large elements of both caballerista and prietista extraction, had become vilified.[37] The party was re-organized along new lines in 1944 in the 1st Congress in Exile that took place in Toulouse and in which Rodolfo Llopis became the party's new Secretary General.[38]


The PSOE congresses in exile during the post-war period were marked by strong anti-communist positions, as a reflection of how the exiles remembered the last events of the Civil War (which featured bitter strifes with the communists) and in line with the stance of other parties of the Socialist International during the Cold War, neglecting any kind of rapprochement with the PCE.[39] The relative void left in Spain by the PSOE, with a Toulouse-based direction lacking in dynamism and innovation, was filled by the PCE and other new clandestine organizations such as the Agrupación Socialista Universitaria (ASU), the Popular Liberation Front (FELIPE), or, later, the Tierno Galván's Socialist Party of the Interior.[40] The Toulouse executive board became increasingly detached from the party in Spain in the 1960s an unsurmountable chasm between the former and the party in the interior was already defined by 1972.[41]



Modern history (1974–present)


Its 25th Congress was held in Toulouse in August 1972. In 1974 at its 26th Congress in Suresnes, Felipe González was elected Secretary General, replacing Llopis. González was from the "reform" wing of the party, and his victory signaled a defeat for the historic and veteran wing of the Party. The direction of the party shifted from the exiles to the young people in Spain who had not fought the war.[10]




Felipe González during a speech in 1977


Llopis led a schism to form the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (historic). González showed intentions to move the party away from its Marxist and socialist background, turning PSOE into a social-democratic party, similar to those of the rest of western Europe. In 1977 PSOE became the unofficial opposition leading party with 29.2% of the vote and 118 seats in the Parliament (which until then it had been the Communists, leading more aggressively among a larger representation of underground parties since the last free popular vote during the Civil War on Republican territory) in what was still a pluralistic party election but heading towards a de facto two-party system. Their standing was further boosted in 1978 when the 6 deputies of the Popular Socialist Party agreed to merge with the party.


In their 27th congress in May 1979, González resigned because the party would not abandon its Marxist character. In September of that year, the extraordinary 28th congress was called in which González was re-elected when the party agreed to move away from Marxism. European social-democratic parties supported González's stand, and the Social Democratic Party of Germany granted them money. PSOE party symbol was changed from the anvil with the book to the social-democratic rose in the fist, as used by the French Socialist Party. In the referendum of 1978, PSOE supported the Spanish Constitution, which was approved. In the 1979 Spanish general election PSOE gained 30.5% of the vote and 121 seats, remaining the main opposition party.
On 28 October 1982 Spanish general election, PSOE was victorious, with 48.1% of the vote (10,127,392 total). Felipe González became Prime Minister of Spain on 2 December, a position he held until May 1996.


Though the party had opposed NATO, after reaching the government most party leaders supported keeping Spain inside the organisation. The González administration organised a referendum on the question in 1986, calling for a favourable vote, and won. The administration was criticised for avoiding the official names of North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and NATO, using the unofficial Atlantic Alliance terms. A symbol of this U-turn is Javier Solana who campaigned against NATO but ended up years later as its Secretary General.


PSOE supported the United States in the Gulf War (1991). PSOE won the 1986, 1989 and 1993 general elections. Under the Gonzalez Administration, public expenditure on education, health, and pensions rose in total by 4.1 points of the country's GDP between 1982 and 1992.[42]


Economic crisis and state terrorism (GAL) against the violent separatist group ETA eroded the popularity of Felipe González, and in 1996, PSOE lost the elections to the conservative People's Party (PP). Between 1996 and 2001 PSOE weathered a crisis, with Gonzalez resigning in 1997. PSOE suffered a heavy defeat in 2000 (34.7%). PSOE remained as the ruling party in the autonomous communities of Andalusia, Extremadura, Castilla-La Mancha and Asturias.


In 2000, a new general secretary, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero (also known as ZP), was elected, renewing the party. Later, PSOE won the municipal elections of 2003.


PSOE strongly opposed the Iraq War, which was supported by the Aznar government.





José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero during the 2010 Progressive Governance Conference


On 13 November 2003 PSOE (Socialists' Party of Catalonia, PSC) increased its vote total but scored second in the regional election in Catalonia, after Convergence and Union. After a period of negotiations, the party formed a pact with Republican Left of Catalonia, Initiative for Catalonia Greens and the United and Alternative Left, and governed in Catalonia until 2010.


On 14 March 2004, PSOE won the 2004 Spanish general election with almost 43% of the votes, following the 11-M terrorist (11 March) attacks, and maintained their lead in the elections to the European Parliament.


In 2005, PSOE called for a "Yes" vote on the European Constitution. PSOE also favoured the negotiations between the government and ETA during the 2006 cease-fire, which had a de facto end with the Barajas Airport terrorist attack.


On 9 March 2008 PSOE won the 2008 general elections again with José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero remaining Prime Minister of Spain. The Socialists increased their share of seats in the Congress of Deputies from 164 to 169 after the latest election.




PSOE leading figures during the 38th federal congress in which Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba (center) was elected Secretary General.


However, after waning popularity throughout their second term, mainly due to their handling of the worsening economic climate in Spain in the aftermath of the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, PSOE were defeated in the general elections of November 2011 by the conservative People's Party.[citation needed] Shortly after, an extraordinary congress was held, in which Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, former Deputy to Zapatero and Minister of the Interior, was elected Secretary General defeating Carme Chacón, the other candidate, who stood for the Zapatero platform. This victory caused huge internal divisions and weakened the party's external image.


In 2013, PSOE held a political conference which introduced a completely new platform, widely seen as a move to the left in a desperate attempt to steal votes from parties such as United Left, whose popularity rose steadily due to the general discontent with the two-party system and spending cuts. That platform was the basis for the European Parliament election manifesto, promoted as a solid alternative to the conservative plan for Europe. The expectations inside the party, which chose Elena Valenciano as their election candidate, were really optimistic; however, the social democrats suffered another huge defeat due to the appearance of new parties such as Podemos which managed to gain the support of left-wing voters; PSOE won 14 seats. Shortly thereafter, Rubalcaba resigned as Secretary General and an Extraordinary Congress was convoked. This congress was the first to use a primary election system with three candidates: Pedro Sánchez, Eduardo Madina and José Antonio Pérez-Tapias. Pedro Sánchez was elected with 49 percent of the vote of the affiliates and therefore became Secretary General on 27 July.


In 2015 municipal elections were held, where the PSOE won 25% of the vote, one of its worst results in the history of democracy, together with the fall of the Popular Party, which won 27% of votes, it meant the end of the two-party system in Spain in favor of new parties. The PSOE lost 943 councilors but passes govern 2-7 communities through pacts left.


On 20 December, the 2015 general election was held, which produced a parliament broken into four major parties. PSOE, due to the large increase for parties like Podemos (left) and Citizens (centre-right), got about 20% of the vote, its worst result since democracy was restored. Parliament was so fragmented, no government could be formed, and six months later new elections were held. The 2016 elections resulted in the PSOE losing five seats despite gaining 0.6% of the vote (still the party's second-worst popular vote total since the restoration of democracy, after 2015), leaving the party with 85 seats in Parliament, their lowest total since the restoration of democracy and the fewest since the elections of 1933 in Republican Spain left the party with 59 seats in the 473-member parliament.




Pedro Sánchez (who led the party through its crisis in 2016), after winning the 2017 primary election for Secretary-General, singing The Internationale.


With the exception of the 2015 Andalusian elections, most elections held during the leadership of Sánchez were negative for the PSOE. In addition, the policy of pacts conducted by Sánchez after the general elections of 2016, based on Sánchez's outright refusal to facilitate a PP government, caused a faction within the party critical of Sánchez to rise in prominence. This faction was led by President of Andalusia Susana Díaz.


On September 28, 2016, the Secretary of Federal Policy, Antonio Pradas, went to the party's headquarters and presented the en bloc resignation of 17 members of the Federal Executive and the demands of those who resigned for the party to be run by an interim manager and to pressure Pedro Sánchez to resign as secretary general. The Executive later lost two more members in the en bloc resignation, bringing the total number of resignations to 19. Resigning executives included the president of the party, Micaela Navarro, the former Minister Carme Chacón, the President of Valencia Ximo Puig and the President of Castilla–La Mancha Emiliano García-Page. This launched the 2016 PSOE crisis.


On the afternoon of 1 October 2016, after holding a tense Federal Committee meeting, Pedro Sánchez resigned as party General Secretary, forcing an extraordinary party congress to choose a new General Secretary. That night it was reported that an interim manager would be chosen, confirmed to be the President of Asturias Javier Fernández Fernández. Sánchez announced his intention to run for General Secretary of the party, as Susana Díaz (one of the leaders of the anti-Sánchez faction of the party) and Patxi López also did.


At the 39th federal congress in June 2017, Díaz received 48.3% of endorsements, outpacing both Sánchez (43.0% of endorsements) and López (8.7% of endorsements), but Sánchez won an absolute majority of the party's popular vote, at 50.3% (Díaz received 39.9% and López 9.8%). Both Díaz and López withdrew before the delegate vote, returning Sánchez as the General Secretary of the PSOE and ending the crisis.


In June 2018, General Secretary Sánchez presented a motion of no confidence to parliament against the PP government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy after the National Court found that the PP profited from the illegal kickbacks-for-contracts scheme of the Gürtel case, confirming the existence of an illegal accounting and financing structure that ran in parallel with the party's official one since 1989 and ruling that the PP helped establish "a genuine and effective system of institutional corruption through the manipulation of central, autonomous and local public procurement." The PSOE's motion passed with the support of Unidos Podemos, Republican Left of Catalonia, Catalan European Democratic Party, Basque Nationalist Party, Coalició Compromís, EH Bildu and New Canaries, bringing down the Rajoy government. The PP voted against the proposal, joined by Citizens, Navarrese People's Union and Asturias Forum. Canarian Coalition abstained.


After Rajoy's government fell, Pedro Sánchez became Prime Minister of Spain on 1 June 2018, in a minority government. Sánchez said he planned to form a government that would eventually dissolve the Cortes Generales and call for a general election, but he did not specify when he would do it,[43] while also saying that, before calling for an election, he intended take a series of measures like increasing unemployment benefits and proposing a law of equal pay between the sexes.[44] However, he also said he would uphold the 2018 budget approved by the Rajoy government, a condition the right-leaning Basque Nationalist Party imposed to vote for the motion of no-confidence.[45] He also said he would "reinstate dialogue" with the Catalan independence movement.[45]


Sánchez took office on 2 June 2018 in the presence of former Prime Minister Rajoy, President of the Congress Ana Pastor, as well as King Felipe VI.[46] Spanish media noted that Sánchez swore office on the Spanish Constitution instead of swearing on a Bible, nor did he wear a crucifix, for the first time in modern Spanish history.[47] After being sworn in, Sánchez announced that he would only propose measures that had considerable parliamentary support, and reaffirmed the government's compliance with the EU deficit requirements.[48]



Electoral performance



Congress of Deputies


















































































































































































































Congress of Deputies
Election
Seats
Vote
%
Status
Leader

1907


0 / 404




N/A

Pablo Iglesias Posse

1910


1 / 404


with CRS

Opposition

Pablo Iglesias Posse

1914


1 / 408


with CRS

Opposition

Pablo Iglesias Posse

1916


1 / 409


with CRS

Opposition

Pablo Iglesias Posse

1918


6 / 409


with AI

Opposition

Pablo Iglesias Posse

1919


6 / 409


with CRS

Opposition

Pablo Iglesias Posse

1920


4 / 409




Opposition

Pablo Iglesias Posse

1923


7 / 409




Opposition

Pablo Iglesias Posse


1931


116 / 470



21.4
Government

Francisco Largo Caballero
Opposition (from Sep 1933)

1933


59 / 473



19.4
Opposition

Francisco Largo Caballero

1936


99 / 473


with FP
16.4
Opposition

Indalecio Prieto
Government (from Sep 1936)


1977


118 / 350


5,371,866 (#2)
29.32
Opposition

Felipe González

1979


121 / 350


5,469,813 (#2)
30.40
Opposition

Felipe González

1982


202 / 350


10,127,392 (#1)
48.11
Government

Felipe González

1986


184 / 350


8,901,718 (#1)
44.06
Government

Felipe González

1989


175 / 350


8,115,568 (#1)
39.60
Government

Felipe González

1993


159 / 350


9,150,083 (#1)
38.78
Government

Felipe González

1996


141 / 350


9,425,678 (#2)
37.63
Opposition

Felipe González

2000


125 / 350


7,918,752 (#2)
34.16
Opposition

Joaquín Almunia

2004


164 / 350


11,026,163 (#1)
42.59
Government

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero

2008


169 / 350


11,289,335 (#1)
43.87
Government

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero

2011


110 / 350


7,003,511 (#2)
28.76
Opposition

Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba

2015


90 / 350


5,545,315 (#2)
22.00
Opposition

Pedro Sánchez

2016


85 / 350


5,443,846 (#2)
22.63
Opposition

Pedro Sánchez
Government (from Jun 2018)


Senate











































































Senate
Election
Seats
Leader

1977


54 / 207



Felipe González

1979


69 / 208



Felipe González

1982


134 / 208



Felipe González

1986


124 / 208



Felipe González

1989


107 / 208



Felipe González

1993


96 / 208



Felipe González

1996


81 / 208



Felipe González

2000


60 / 208



Joaquín Almunia

2004


89 / 208



José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero

2008


96 / 208



José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero

2011


54 / 208



Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba

2015


47 / 208



Pedro Sánchez

2016


43 / 208



Pedro Sánchez


European Parliament





















































European Parliament
Election
Seats
Vote
%

1987


28 / 60


7,522,706 (#1)
39.06

1989


27 / 60


6,275,552 (#1)
39.57

1994


22 / 64


5,719,707 (#2)
30.79

1999


24 / 64


7,477,823 (#2)
35.33

2004


25 / 54


6,741,112 (#1)
43.46

2009


23 / 54


6,141,784 (#2)
38.78

2014


14 / 54


3,614,232 (#2)
23.01


Terms




  • Baron: unofficial term for the party's regional leaders. They can be very powerful, especially if they run an autonomous community. There have been conflicts between barons and the central directorate in the past. Some barons were Pasqual Maragall (Catalonia), who didn't run for re-election in 2006; Juan Carlos Rodríguez Ibarra (Extremadura), who didn't run for re-election in 2007; Manuel Chaves (Andalucia), who renounced Andalucia's presidency in 2009 to assume Third Vice Presidency of the Spanish Government; José Montilla (Catalonia), now opposition leader. The term barón is more colloquial than official, representing the great power regional leaders have in the party, but it has been falling out of use since 2008.[citation needed]


  • Compañero ("companion", "comrade"): a term of address among Socialists, analogous to the English comrade and the Russian tovarisch.

  • Currents: there have been several internal groups within PSOE, based on personal or ideological affinities. Some of them have ended with separation from PSOE. The failed trial of primary elections for PSOE candidates was an attempt to conciliate currents. Examples of currents are "Guerristas" (followers of Alfonso Guerra), "Renovadores" (renewers, right wing of the Party) or Izquierda Socialista (Socialist Left).



Historical leaders








































































President
Term

Pablo Iglesias
1879–1925

Julián Besteiro
1925–1931

Remigio Cabello
1931–1932

Francisco Largo Caballero
1932–1935

Indalecio Prieto
1935–1948

Trifón Gómez
1948–1955
Vacant
1955–1964

Pascual Tomás
1964–1967

Ramón Rubial
1967–1970
In exile
1970–1976

Ramón Rubial
1976–1999

Manuel Chaves
1999–2012

José Antonio Griñán
2012–2014

Micaela Navarro
2014–2016

Cristina Narbona
2017–







































Secretary-General
Term

Ramón Lamoneda
1936–1944

Rodolfo Llopis
1944–1972

In exile
1972–1974

Felipe González
1974–1997

Joaquín Almunia
1997–2000

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero
2000–2012

Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba
2012–2014

Pedro Sánchez
2014–2016; 2017–



























Prime Ministers of Spain
Term

Francisco Largo Caballero
1936–1937

Juan Negrín López
1937–1939

Felipe González
1982–1996

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero
2004–2011

Pedro Sánchez
2018–



Notable members




See also



  • Politics of Spain

  • List of political parties in Spain



Footnotes





  1. ^ Among others, the aging and ill Julián Besteiro, who preferred to stay in Spain over exile, died in a Francoist prison in 1940. Julián Zugazagoitia, government minister in 1937–1938, was captured in exile by the Gestapo, handed over to Spain and executed in 1940.




References





  1. ^ Anabel Díez: El PSOE fija el censo provisional en 187.360 militantes. El País, 18/04/2017.


  2. ^ ab PSOE. Ideology: Social democracy. Political Position: Centre-left - European Social Survey


  3. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2016). "Spain". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 30 August 2018..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  4. ^ Gibbons 1999, p. 48: «This was in line with the PSOE's strongly pro-European policies»


  5. ^ Campoy-Cubillo 2012, p. 163: «The Saharawi cause was embraced not only by the Europeanist PSOE»


  6. ^ https://www.abc.es/espana/20150521/abci-himno-psoe-201505191330.html


  7. ^ Diputaciones provinciales 1979 - 2015.


  8. ^ The PSOE is described as a social-democratic party by numerous sources:


    • Hans-Jürgen Puhle (2001). "Mobilizers and Late Modernizers: Socialist Parties in the New Southern Europe". In Nikiforos P. Diamandouros; Richard Gunther. Parties, Politics, and Democracy in the New Southern Europe. JHU Press. p. 315. ISBN 978-0-8018-6518-3. Retrieved 14 July 2013.


    • Dimitri Almeida (2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. CRC Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0. Retrieved 14 July 2013.


    • Richard Collin; Pamela L. Martin (2012). An Introduction to World Politics: Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 218. ISBN 978-1-4422-1803-1. Retrieved 18 July 2013.


    • Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko; Matti Mälkiä, eds. (2006). Encyclopedia of Digital Government. Idea Group Inc (IGI). p. 397. ISBN 978-1-59140-790-4.




  9. ^ http://e-spacio.uned.es/fez/eserv/bibliuned:DerechoPolitico-1980-06-10077/PDF


  10. ^ abc "History of PSOE" (in Spanish). PSOE own site. Retrieved 11 July 2007.


  11. ^ Molina Jiménez 2013, p. 259.


  12. ^ Quiroga Fernández de Soto 2008, p. 100.


  13. ^ Quiroga Fernández de Soto 2008, p. 101.


  14. ^ Quiroga Fernández de Soto 2008, p. 108.


  15. ^ Vadillo 2007, p. 32; Álvarez Junco 2018, pp. 414–415


  16. ^ Álvarez Junco 2018, pp. 414–415.


  17. ^ Tuñón de Lara 1990, p. 239.


  18. ^ Robles Egea 2015.


  19. ^ Romero Salvadó 2010, pp. 79-80.


  20. ^ ab Casanova & Gil Andrés 2014, p. 63.


  21. ^ Heywood 2002, p. 56.


  22. ^ Heywood 2002, p. 25.


  23. ^ Kowalski, Werner. Geschichte der sozialistischen arbeiter-internationale: 1923 – 19. Berlin: Dt. Verl. d. Wissenschaften, 1985. p. 325


  24. ^ Egido León 2011, pp. 29–30.


  25. ^ Juliá 1983, p. 44.


  26. ^ Heywood 2002, p. 117.


  27. ^ Heywood 2002, p. 119.


  28. ^ Preston 1978, pp. 94–95.


  29. ^ Preston 1978, p. 101.


  30. ^ Preston 1978, pp. 102–105.


  31. ^ Gil Pecharromán 2015, p. 14.


  32. ^ Preston 1978, p. 100.


  33. ^ Preston 1978, pp. 92–93.


  34. ^ Preston 1978, pp. 129; 132–132.


  35. ^ Preston 1978, p. 133.


  36. ^ ab Graham 1988, p. 177.


  37. ^ Hoyos Puente 2016, pp. 316–317.


  38. ^ Hoyos Puente 2016, p. 318.


  39. ^ Bueno Aguado 2016, pp. 334–335.


  40. ^ Bueno Aguado 2016, pp. 335–336.


  41. ^ Heywood 1987, pp. 198-199.


  42. ^ Regimes, Politics, and Markets: Democratization and Economic Change in ... – José María Maravall – Google Books. Books.google.co.uk. Retrieved 9 February 2014.


  43. ^ http://www.abc.es/espana/abci-sanchez-llega-poder-sin-concretar-cuando-convocara-elecciones-201806010320_noticia.html


  44. ^ http://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/9179627/06/18/Sanchez-prioriza-la-agenda-social-y-renuncia-a-realizar-reformas-en-profundidad.html


  45. ^ ab http://www.lavanguardia.com/politica/20180531/443963185308/pedro-sanchez-rajoy-dimita-mocion-de-censura.html


  46. ^ https://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2018/06/02/pdfs/BOE-A-2018-7400.pdf


  47. ^ https://www.eldiario.es/politica/Pedro-Sanchez-presidente-presencia-Rajoy_0_777972264.html


  48. ^ https://politica.elpais.com/politica/2018/06/01/actualidad/1527859489_043487.html




Bibliography


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  • Amoretti, Ugo M.; Bermeo, Nancy Gina (2004), Federalism and Territorial Cleavages, JHU Press, p. 498, ISBN 9780801874086


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  • Gil Pecharromán, Julio (2016). "Prólogo". El quiebro del PSOE (1933-1934). Tomo 1: Del gobierno a la revolución. by Víctor Manuel Arbeloa (main author). Madrid: ACCI. ISBN 978-84-15705-64-2.


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  • Romero Salvadó, Francisco J. (2010). "Spain's Revolutionary Crisis of 1917: A Reckless Gamble". In Francisco J. Romero Salvadó & Angel Smith (Eds.). The Agony of Spanish Liberalism. From Revolution to Dictatorship 1913–23. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 62–91. doi:10.1057/9780230274648. ISBN 978-1-349-36383-4.CS1 maint: Extra text: editors list (link)


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  • Vadillo, Julián (2007). "Desarrollo y debates en los grupos anarquistas de la FAI en el Madrid republicano". Germinal: revista de estudios libertarios (4): 27–65. ISSN 1886-3019.




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