Republican Left (Spain)

Republican Left
Izquierda Republicana
LeaderManuel Azaña
Founded1934 (1934)
Dissolved1959 (1959)
Merger ofAR
PRRSI
ORGA
HeadquartersMadrid (1934–1939)
Mexico City (1939–1946)
Paris (1946–1959)
NewspaperPolítica
IdeologyRepublicanism
Anti-clericalism
Anti-fascism
Social liberalism
Political positionCentre-left[1]
National affiliationPopular Front (1936–39)
Colors    Red, yellow and murrey

The Republican Left (Spanish: Izquierda Republicana) was a Spanish republican party founded in 1934.

History[edit]

The party was founded in 1934 following the left's defeat in the 1933 election, by the merger of Manuel Azaña's Republican Action, part of Marcelino Domingo's Independent Radical Socialist Republican Party and Santiago Casares Quiroga's Autonomous Galician Republican Organization (ORGA).[2] Its members included José Giral, Victoria Kent and Manuel Azaña who became the party's leader.

Integrated in the Popular Front ahead of the 1936 election, the party won 87 seats becoming the third largest party while Manuel Azaña obtained the office of President of the Council of Minister. Following the impeachment of Niceto Alcalá Zamora from the presidency in May 1936, Azaña was elected president, an office he held until his resignation in February 1939. He was succeeded as President of the Council first by Santiago Casares Quiroga and then by José Giral. Later, alongside the Republican Union, the party was the main component of the Largo Caballero government in September 1936, at the start of the Spanish Civil War. The IR participated in all republican governments till the end of the civil war.

In exile in Mexico, the IR was the main support of the Republican government-in-exile until it was dissolved in 1959 to found the Spanish Democratic Republican Action. A party taking the name Republican Left was founded in 1977 and has achieved no major electoral success yet.

Notable members[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Graham, Helen (1991). Socialism and War: The Spanish Socialist Party in Power and Crisis, 1936-1939. Cambridge University Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780521392570.
  2. ^ De la Granja, José Luis; De Pablo, Santiago (2009). «La II República y la Guerra Civil». Historia del País Vasco y Navarra en el siglo XX (2d edition). Madrid: Biblioteca Nueva. p. 61. ISBN 978-84-9742-942-9.