Book contents
- Diminished Parties
- Diminished Parties
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Case of Uruguay’s Frente Amplio
- 3 Horizontal Coordination and Vertical Aggregation Mechanisms of the PRO in Argentina and Its Subnational Variations
- 4 Bolivia’s Movement toward Socialism: A Political Party Based on and Anchored in Social Movements
- 5 The Complex Interaction between Vertical Interest Aggregation and Horizontal Coordination: The PRD and MORENA in Mexico
- 6 PLN and PAC: Two Costa Rican Parties with Constituencies Evolving in Opposite Directions
- 7 The Case of the Traditional Parties in Paraguay
- 8 The Colombian Liberal Party and Conservative Party: From Political Parties to Diminished Subtypes
- 9 “Normal” Parties in Extraordinary Times: The Case of Primero Justicia and Voluntad Popular in Venezuela
- 10 Diminished by Design: Ecuador’s Alianza PAIS
- 11 The Chilean PPD: A Loose Confederation of Leaders
- 12 Fujimorismo and the Limits of Democratic Representation in Peru, 2006–2020
- 13 The Unidad Nacional de la Esperanza: Guatemala’s Only True Political Party?
- 14 Conclusions
- References
- Name Index
- Organization Index
- Subject Index
10 - Diminished by Design: Ecuador’s Alianza PAIS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 December 2021
- Diminished Parties
- Diminished Parties
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Case of Uruguay’s Frente Amplio
- 3 Horizontal Coordination and Vertical Aggregation Mechanisms of the PRO in Argentina and Its Subnational Variations
- 4 Bolivia’s Movement toward Socialism: A Political Party Based on and Anchored in Social Movements
- 5 The Complex Interaction between Vertical Interest Aggregation and Horizontal Coordination: The PRD and MORENA in Mexico
- 6 PLN and PAC: Two Costa Rican Parties with Constituencies Evolving in Opposite Directions
- 7 The Case of the Traditional Parties in Paraguay
- 8 The Colombian Liberal Party and Conservative Party: From Political Parties to Diminished Subtypes
- 9 “Normal” Parties in Extraordinary Times: The Case of Primero Justicia and Voluntad Popular in Venezuela
- 10 Diminished by Design: Ecuador’s Alianza PAIS
- 11 The Chilean PPD: A Loose Confederation of Leaders
- 12 Fujimorismo and the Limits of Democratic Representation in Peru, 2006–2020
- 13 The Unidad Nacional de la Esperanza: Guatemala’s Only True Political Party?
- 14 Conclusions
- References
- Name Index
- Organization Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Launched as a leftist vehicle for the presidential candidacy of Rafael Correa, the Alianza País (AP) dominated Ecuador’s electoral politics for a decade. Electoral success, however, was never paired with a democratically minded project of party building. Wielding expansive executive powers as president from 2007 to 2017, Correa consolidated his personal control over the AP and set the country on a course of democratic backsliding. Horizontal coordination among elites and operatives inside the party was enforced through a top-down command structure. Decisions about messaging, candidates, and discipline were tightly controlled by Correa and his inner circle of hand-picked loyalists. Eschewing grassroots participation in favor of technocratic governance, Correa systematically undercut independent groups in civil society and used executive-branch resources to subsidize select groups and maintain electoral support. For the most part, the AP was consigned to the sidelines, purposefully diminished by its leader. While mobilizing effectively for elections, the AP failed to develop as a conduit for citizen participation and interest representation. Rather than acting as a democratizing agent of change, the AP evolved into a caudillista-style vehicle reminiscent of personalistic parties in the country’s past.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Diminished PartiesDemocratic Representation in Contemporary Latin America, pp. 197 - 219Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
- 1
- Cited by