Democratic Alliance (Chile, 1983)


The Democratic Alliance was a Chilean political coalition existing between 1983 and 1988 that was composed of political parties and organisations that opposed the military regime led by Augusto Pinochet.

History

Origins and foundation

The origins of the Democratic Alliance date back to March 14, 1983, when a "Democratic Manifesto" was signed by Hugo Zepeda Barrios, Julio Subercaseaux ; Luis Bossay, Duberildo Jaque, Enrique Silva Cimma, Luis Fernando Luengo ; Gabriel Valdés, Patricio Aylwin ; Ramón Silva Ulloa, and Julio Hernán Vodanovic Stuardo.
On August 6, 1983, in a ceremony held in the Círculo Español de Santiago, it announced the creation of the alliance between the Christian Democratic Party, Social Democracy, Radical, Popular Socialist Union and Republican Right plus other groups that did not sign at the time the Democratic Manifesto, such as the "renovated" sector of the Socialist Party of Chile led by Carlos Briones on behalf of the Socialist Bloc and the Liberal Party. In 1987 the Republican and Liberal parties merged to form the Liberal-Republican Union. The left-wing parties and groups not represented in the AD, created the People's Democratic Movement in September 1983.
On August 22, 1983, the Democratic Alliance was created officially by signing a document called "Bases of the Dialogue for a Grand National Agreement", which contained three basic elements:
It was the first time since the coup of 1973, which was publicly formalized an opposition coalition to the military dictatorship of Pinochet. It held on November 18 in O'Higgins Park the first public event since the coup. A crowd of 500,000 people was estimated.
Taking support in the national protests and in collaboration with the Catholic Church sought a dialogue to end the dictatorship. The Minister of the Interior, Sergio Onofre Jarpa, began a round of talks with the Democratic Alliance and other political groups, however, in a public speech Pinochet evicted and removed his minister from office in November 1984. With this ended any possibility dialog and began a stage of tightening censorship of the press, that had been relaxed in 1983.
In October 1983, the Popular Unitary Action Movement joined the Democratic Alliance, Jorge Molina being its representative in the coalition.
In August 1985, the Democratic Alliance participated with other groups in the signing of the National Agreement, sponsored by the Catholic Church. This document stated commitment to a democratic and peaceful transition to democracy. The government ignored the document and closed any possibility of dialogue that was not to ensure the continuity.

Dissolution

In 1986, with the removal of PS Núñez and the Socialist Bloc, the Democratic Alliance entered a phase of low profile because of the inability to fulfill their initial objectives and unwillingness to dialogue Pinochet government. The member parties of the Democratic Alliance and other political groups formed the February 2, 1988 the National Command for the No to direct the voting campaign against the nomination of Pinochet as president for a period of 8 years in the 1988 plebiscite. This is why the Democratic Alliance is considered one of the forerunners of the Concertación.