Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Independent Popular Action

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Founder
  
Rafael Tarud Siwady

Dissolved
  
8 October 1973

Political position
  
Left-wing

Founded
  
27 April 1968

Headquarters
  
Santiago, Chile

Ideology
  
Left-wing nationalism Populism

The Independent Popular Action (Spanish: Acción Popular Independiente, API) was a Chilean political party, created on 27 April 1968, intended to be part of the Popular Unity and support the candidacy of Salvador Allende in the presidential election of 1970. Its main leader was Rafael Tarud.

In 1969, together with the Popular Unitary Action Movement, the Radical Party, the Socialist Party and the Communist Party, was part of the political agreement called Popular Unity of Marxist ideals, to support the government of Salvador Allende. In the case of API, it was an organization that brought together left-wing independent elements, and less revolutionary than the MAPU and the MIR. The party joined the moderate wing of the UP, maintaining a critical position.

In the parliamentary elections of 1973 the party achieved to elect two deputies: Silvia Araya González and Luis Osvaldo Escobar Astaburuaga.

The party was dissolved and banned by Decree Law No. 77 of October 8, 1973, signed by the military Junta. The same situation was repeated for all parties that made up the Popular Unity. API President Rafael Tarud, went into exile, and in 1987 was one of the founders of the Party for Democracy (PPD).

References

Independent Popular Action Wikipedia