Democratic Party Partido Democrático | |
---|---|
Historical leaders | Patricio Rivas, Laureano Pineda, William Walker, José Santos Zelaya, José María Moncada, Juan Bautista Sacasa |
Founded | 1838 |
Dissolved | 1928 |
Merged into | Nationalist Liberal Party |
Headquarters | León, Nicaragua |
Ideology | Liberalism (Nicaraguan) |
Political position | Centre-left[citation needed] |
Colors | Maroon |
The Democratic Party (Spanish: Partido Democrático, PD), renamed in 1893 as the Liberal Party (Spanish: Partido Liberal, PL), was a Nicaraguan political party in the 19th century. The power base of the liberal Democratic Party was in the city of León; while their conservative counterparts were centered in Granada. The Democrats were opposed to the Legitimists who expelled the Democrats from the constitutional assembly in 1853, driving them underground or into exile, and promulgated a constitution of 1854.
The Democrats rejected the constitution and the Legitimist government and fought against it with the help of filibuster William Walker.
When José Santos Zelaya came to power in July 1893, the Democratic Party was renamed the Liberal Party.
The liberal parties in Nicaragua have their roots in the historical Democratic Party.