Democratic Pact for Catalonia Pacte Democràtic per Catalunya | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | PDC, PDpC |
Leader | Jordi Pujol |
Founded | 3 January 1977(Democratic Front) 11 March 1977 (Left Front) 3 May 1977 (Democratic Pact) |
Dissolved | 1978 |
Succeeded by | Convergence and Union |
Ideology | Catalan nationalism Autonomism Liberalism Social liberalism |
Political position | Centre to centre-left |
Members | See list of members |
The Democratic Pact for Catalonia (Catalan: Pacte Democràtic per Catalunya, PDC or PDpC) was a Catalan electoral alliance established in May 1977 ahead of the Spanish Congress of Deputies 15 June election.[1] It ran on a political platform emphasizing the need of approving a statute of autonomy for Catalonia.[2] The coalition comprised members from two separate, previously established alliances: Democratic Convergence of Catalonia (CDC) and Democratic Left of Catalonia (EDC) from the Democratic Front for Catalonia (Catalan: Front Democràtic per Catalunya, FDC),[3] and the Socialist Party of Catalonia–Regrouping (PSC–R) and the National Front of Catalonia (FNC) from the Left Front (Catalan: Front d'Esquerres, FdE).[1][4][5]
It obtained 514,647 votes (16.88% of the vote in Catalonia, 2.81% of the votes in Spain) and 11 deputies, of which 5 were for CDC, 4 for PSC–R and 2 for EDC. Its leader was Jordi Pujol. Shortly after the election, the coalition dissolved, as the PSC–R joined the Catalan Federation of the PSOE and the Socialist Party of Catalonia–Congress to form the Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC), while CDC (into which EDC was merged in 1978) joined with Democratic Union of Catalonia (UDC) to form Convergence and Union (CiU).