People's Democratic Party

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People's Democratic Party

Factio Democraticae Populi
Partido Democrático Popular
Partita Demaukrata Popaulara
AbbreviationLatin: FDP
Pelaxian: PDP
Reform Tainean: PDN
PresidentCarmen Huerta
Secretary-GeneralFrancisco Carvalho
Deputy LeaderLuis Hidalgo
Peerage leaderEnrique, Baron Valdez
Commons leaderJaun Girou
FounderFrancisco Carvalho
Founded30 May 1991 (41 years ago)
Merger ofPST, PCD, PDI
Preceded bySocialist Workers' Party
HeadquartersSanta Maria, Rumahoki
NewspaperSocialist Action
Youth wingFISR
Membership (2028)Increase 487,068
IdeologyMajority:
(In practice, the PDP functions more akin to a social democratic party than a Marxist party)
Factions:
Cabacero Socialism
Democratic centralism
Permanent revolution
Revolutionary socialism
Political positionLeft-wing to Far-left
Colors  Red
Commons
256 / 500
Peerage
139 / 266
Local Government (2032-2036)
908 / 1,420
Regional Parliaments
1,216 / 1,900
Regional Government
12 / 19

The People's Democratic Party (PDP; Latin: Factio Democraticae Populi, FDP; Pelaxian: Partido Democrático Popular; Reform Tainean: Partita Demaukrata Nau, PDN) is a left-wing democratic socialist political party in Rumahoki. It was founded on 30 May 1991 by militants who were at the time members of the Socialist Workers' Party, one of the many groups in opposition to the Estado Social regime. The PDP has been the governing party of Rumahoki since the 1996 legislative election, the nation's first post-revolution election.

The PDP is serves as the dominant party in Rumahokian politics, having many of its values enshrined in the constitution much to the chagrin of the opposition on the political right. The current leader of the PDP is Francisco Carvalho, the current Prime Minister of Rumahoki and the party's founder. The party won 256 out of 500 seats in the National Assembly following the 2028 election, enough to retain a majority government.

History

Socialist Workers' Party (1982-1991)

People's Democratic Party (1991-present)

Ideology

Formal ideology

The core ideology of the party is the fundamental principles that emerged after the Velvet Revolution in 1994, in particular the moderate socialist "constitutionalists" that overthrew the radical far-left coup. As the PDP's founder Francisco Carvalho is also the party's incumbent leader and Rumahoki's incumbent prime minister, these principles have had minimal changes since its formalisation in 1997. Whether or not changes may be applied by his probable successor is entirely up for debate. However, with the democratic nature of the party structure, some have suggested that such changes are an inevitability when Carvalho steps down.

Marxism is the first official ideology of the PDP. According to the PDP, "Marxism reveals the universal laws of societal development as per historical truth." To the PDP, Marxism provides a "vision of the inherent flaws of societal capitalism and of the inevitability of the rise of societal socialism and the eventual achievement of communism." According to Socialist Action, Carvalhoism "is the Rumahokian application and development of Marxism for a society formerly under the rule of a reactionary dictatorship." Carvalhoism was conceived not only by Francisco Carvalho himself, but also by leading party officials.

The major ideas behind Carvalhoism are what spurred the ideas of "Crown socialism", the belief that the Emperor, as a long-term national ruler, plays an integral role in guiding the nation towards socialism and away from reactionary ideologies, and "constitutionalist socialism", the idea that the transition towards socialism must be a gradual one. Basically, for socialism to work, it must have both the support of the people, and a comfortable standard of living for those same people. If one or the other is not achieved, then the socialist revolution is in jeopardy before it even begins. These two ideas were added to the party constitution in 1996 after the 2nd National Congress.

Rumahokianism was added to the party constitution in 2001 after the PDP's 3rd National Congress. The concepts of "socialist patriotism" and "Sarpedonism" were credited to this theory. Rumahokianism can be defined as a belief that the Rumahokian national identity was not founded in the chauvinistic Delepasian exceptionalism or the Catholic Church, but in the shared history of the nation's four cultures and how they came together to form one stronger nation in Vallos from multiple weaker polities. In addition, Rumahoki's natural future lays not with the Leventines, but with the Sarpedonians. This meant closer ties with Sarpedon's superpower Caphiria.

There does exist more radical wings of the party that seek to do away with Carvalhoism and Velvetine Socialism in favour of what the far-left cabaceros would have wanted had they not have been overthrown by the constitutionalists. However, these wings are only at their strongest in the city of Adouka, which was the last pro-Cabacero stronghold in Rumahoki, itself having been defeated in late 1995.

Economics

Francisco Carvalho has never believed that the fundamental difference between the capitalist and socialist modes of production was central planning and free markets. He said, "Top-down economic planning is not an inherently socialist idea, nor are the existence of markets an inherently capitalist idea. Many capitalist nations have used elements of a planned economy both then and now, so has a few socialist nations have embraced a market economy with socialistic characteristics. In short, both markets and economic planning make for effective tools to ensure a healthy and, hopefully, ethical economy. If it works, then why not embrace it?". He has also said, "Socialism needs a strong foundation in order to make it work. That is why, until it is time, that Rumahoki must stick to a socialist market-based economy, albeit with heavy elements of state dirigism and collaborationistic tripartism to ensure that both the economy and the worker remain in pleasant harmony. Once that strong foundation is built, then Rumahoki may venture towards pure socialism, and most certainly at a faster rate than if we had directly started off with a purely socialist economy".

Based on those two statements, it is clear that Carvalho advocates for a form of market socialism as a necessary first step towards what he has called "pure" socialism, seeing state planning and free markets as not inherently capitalistic or socialistic. This economy would make use of dirigism for state economic planning, and tripartism for a more diplomatically democratic approach towards economic matters. The idea being that these kinds of economic policies would guarantee economic growth while still effectively protecting the worker from exploitation and market failures. This has also allowed for the establishment of special economic zones, most notably in Portas Gemeas and the Federal District, with plans to establish further SEZs in Bahia and Inaua well underway.

Analysis and criticism

Many foreign analysts have agreed that the PDP has rejected orthodox socialism and Marxism in favour of social democracy with elements of left-wing populism. The PDP, however, disagrees with that notion, claiming that "Franciso Carvalho has rid the Party of the ideological attachments to different kinds of ownership; he did not give up on Marxism or socialism altogether, but rather he provided the Party with a more nuanced and modernistic approach to understanding Marxism and socialism, hence why we still maintain our commitment towards the socialist revolution in both the Party's and the nation's constitutions even though we've adapted to meet the conventions of the world's economies." The attainment of true "communism" is still stated as the "natural endpoint" of both the PDP and Rumahoki. Although the PDP has claimed that Rumahoki is undergoing a transitional stage towards socialism, party theorists have argued that the current development stage "more closely resembles that of a mixed-market social democracy" than any form of socialism or even a step towards anything, leading to some amongst the more radical wings of the PDP having dismissed the concept as a cynical surrendering to reactionary forces.

Election results

National Assembly

Congress of the Commons

Congress of the Peerage

Regional Assemblies

Municipal Assemblies

List of lead party figures

Secretaries-General

Party presidents

Leaders of the Commons

Leaders of the Peerage

Prime Ministers

See also