The Agrarian Labor Party ( Spanish : Partido Agrario Laborista , PAL) was a Chilean political party supporting the candidacy of Carlos Ibáñez del Campo for the 1952 presidential election . Formed in 1945, it was dissolved in 1958.
6-578: Alejandro Hales Jamarne (April 23, 1923 – April 7, 2001) was a Chilean lawyer, diplomat and politician. He was a member of the Agrarian Labor Party . He served as the Minister of Agriculture from April 1953 to June 1954. He served as the Chilean Ambassador to Bolivia from 1954 to 1958. He also served as the Minister of Mining from September 1992 to March 1994. This Chilean biographical article
12-731: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Agrarian Labor Party It was formed in 1945 from the merger of the Agrarian Party , the Popular Freedom Alliance (an offshoot of the National Socialist Movement of Chile ), the Movimiento Nacionalista de Chile and the Unión Nacionalista . Its foundational program, emphasising law and order , asserted the need to "secure public order in
18-657: The National Party to create the PANAPO ( Partido Nacional Popular , National People's Party). The PANAPO itself was dissolved in 1961, a faction joining the Christian Democrats, while another merged with the PADENA ( Partido Democrático Nacional , National Democratic Party) which joined the left-wing FRAP coalition. Finally, a third tendency attempted to maintain the original party, without any success. A group tried to revive
24-526: The Socialist Party . Starting in 1954, the PAL's influence on Ibáñez's cabinet declined, leading to an internal crisis and to the subsequent use of the PAL label by two different organizations. Legally, the ownership of the PAL label was among the faction opposing Ibáñez, led by the senator Julio von Mühlenbrock . New divisions split the PAL for the 1958 presidential election , with the official faction supporting
30-735: The candidate of the Christian Democrat Party , Eduardo Frei Montalva , while activists from Cautín and Biobío and dissidents who formed the Partido Agrario Laborista Recuperacionista (Recover Agrarian Labor Party) supported the right-wing candidate Jorge Alessandri , along with the United Conservative Party and the Liberal Party . The PAL subsequently dissolved itself in October 1958, merging with
36-481: The country, on the functional basis that labour has not only obligations but also indisputable civil rights ." In 1951 the PAL proclaimed as its presidential candidate the former dictator Carlos Ibáñez del Campo , who had, since his first term, somehow changed political orientation. After his election in 1952, it took part in his first cabinet, along with the Popular Socialist Party formed of dissidents of
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