Maurist Party

The Maurist Party (Spanish: Partido Maurista, PM), initially known as the Maurist Conservatives (Spanish: Conservadores Mauristas, CM) or simply the Maurists (Spanish: Mauristas), was originally a political faction within the Liberal Conservative Party, led by Antonio Maura, which split from the party in 1913 after Eduardo Dato's election as Conservative leader. A loose association of Maura's supporters at first, in 1918 it officially became a political party of its own.[1]

Maurist Party

Partido Maurista
LeaderAntonio Maura
Founded1913
Split fromConservative Party
IdeologyConservatism
Monarchism

The party lost relevance after Miguel Primo de Rivera's coup in 1923 and Maura's death in 1925. In early 1931, the Constitutional Centre party was founded by three leading maurists (César Silió, Antonio Goicoechea and the son of Antonio Maura, Gabriel) after negotiations in late 1930 in order to stablish a federation of right-wing forces between Catalan regionalists and maurists.[2]

Electoral performance

Restoration Cortes

Election Seats Leader
1914
22 / 408
Antonio Maura
1916
17 / 409
1918
31 / 409
1919
104 / 409
1920
24 / 409
1923
12 / 409
gollark: They're totally not the poisonous ones.
gollark: I sell *helpful* potatoes.
gollark: QUITE EASILY
gollark: You can borrow some of my turtles for 10KST/hour.
gollark: *IS HOLDING SHIFT RATHER THAN CAPSLOCK*(technically)

References

  1. "Partido Liberal Conservador (1868-1931)" (in Spanish). historiaelectoral.com. Retrieved 2016-12-25.
  2. Gil Pecharromán, Julio (1993). "Notables en busca de masas: El conservadurismo en la crisis de la Restauración" (PDF). Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, Serie V, Historia Contemporánea. Madrid: Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia. 6: 264.
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