Center Front
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Republic of Peru | ||
This article is part of the series: |
||
|
|
||
| Government | ||
|---|---|---|
| Constitution of Peru
|
||
| President
Vice President |
||
|
||
| Judicial System
Supreme Court of the Republic |
||
| Elections | ||
| Presidential elections National elections Peruvian Constituent Assembly elections, 1978 |
||
| Political Parties | ||
| A.P.R.A. List of political parties in Peru |
||
| Region & Local government | ||
| Regional Governments Governors Provinces, Cities, and Districts Municipalities |
||
|
Other countries · Politics Portal |
||
The Center Front (Frente de Centro) is a Peruvian political coalition formed by parties Acción Popular (AP), Somos Perú (SP) and Coordinadora Nacional de Independientes (CNI) for the 2006 national election. Its leader and presidential candidate is former Peruvian president Valentín Paniagua Corazao. The alliance was unsuccessful in the presidential race. At the legislative elections held on 9 April 2006, the party won 7.1% of the popular vote and 5 out of 120 seats in the Congress of the Republic.
The alliance was created to join forces for the 2006 election. As a result of the internal election, the following presidential ticket was chosen:
- For President: Valentín Paniagua Corazao (AP)
- For First Vice-President: Alberto Andrade Carmona (SP)
- For Second Vice-President: Gonzalo Aguirre Arriz (CNI)
Paniagua had become president of Congress in October 2001 before becoming the interim President of Peru from November 2000 to July 2001, following the resignation of Alberto Fujimori and his vice-presidents. Andrade is a former mayor of Lima from 1996 to 2002. Aguirre is an entrepreneur and a former member of Unidad Nacional. Both Andrade and Aguirre also ran for Congress, under candidate numbers 1 and 3 in the Front's list for Lima.
The coalition's logo, shows Peru's national colors in the background, in the style of Acción Popular's own logo, but replacing AP's shovel with a "V" similar to a check, as well as serving as the initial to Paniagua's first name and to the word for "victory" (victoria).
| Peruvian Political Parties | |
|---|---|
| Peruvian Aprista Party | Peruvian Nationalist Party | Socialist Party of Peru | Popular Action | Christian People's Party | Independent Moralizing Front | Change 90-New Majority | National Renewal | Peru Possible | Union for Peru | With Force Peru | Party for Social Democracy-Peruvian Compromise | We Are Peru | National Solidarity | Andean Renaissance | Peruvian Humanist Movement | Sí Cumple | Peruvian Communist Party | Communist Party of Peru - Red Fatherland | |
|
|