COPEI , also referred to as the Social Christian Party ( Spanish : Partido Socialcristiano ) or Green Party (Spanish: Partido Verde ), is a Christian democratic party in Venezuela . The acronym stands for Comité de Organización Política Electoral Independiente (English: Independent Political Electoral Organization Committee ), but this provisional full name has fallen out of use. The party was influential during the twentieth century as a signatory of the Puntofijo Pact and influenced many politicians throughout Latin America at its peak.
22-470: Guanipa is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Juan Pablo Guanipa (born 1964), Venezuelan lawyer and politician Tomás Guanipa (born 1971), Venezuelan administrator and politician [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with the surname Guanipa . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding
44-506: A Zulian politician, leader of Copei. At 13 years he worked as a clerk in a bookstore, where his young age stood out receiving recognition as owner of the best store clerk. He is the brother of Tomás Guanipa, also a deputy for Zulia and Secretary General of Justice First . He served as a student leader and union representative of the employees of the Judicial District of Zulia . He studied Basic and Diversified Education at
66-769: Is a Venezuelan lawyer and politician who served as deputy and First Vice President of the National Assembly , leader of the Justice First political party and former governor of Zulia . He was a presidential candidate in the 2018 elections until boycott. Guanipa is the regional coordinator of the Justice First party in Zulia and chairs the Maracaibo Posible foundation. He is the third of seven brothers, six boys and one woman, children of: Corina Villalobos de Guanipa and father Manuel Guanipa Matos,
88-446: The 1998 Venezuelan presidential election . With the election of Chávez, Venezuela entered into a period of a dominant-party system led by his United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) . In the 2000 legislative elections COPEI won a meager five of 165 seats in the National Assembly , with the party receiving 5.10% of valid votes. In the 2005 legislative elections COPEI staged an electoral boycott and did not win any seats in
110-496: The National Electoral Council , ruling out any intention of Guanipa in the electoral race. Alternate deputy of Guanipa, José Sánchez "Mazuco", announced in the day of the election that he was operated and hospitalized, so he would not be able to attend to the session, but assured that his vote would not make a difference since the main deputy Guanipa would attend instead. After being blocked from entering
132-514: The Palacio Federal Legislativo on 5 January 2020, Juan Guaidó announced that a separate session of the National Assembly would happen in the building of El Nacional , a Venezuelan newspaper. National Assembly deputies signed their names on an attendance list upon entering the facility. Guanipa and Carlos Berrizbeitia [ es ] were elected as first and second vice-presidents, respectively, taking oath at
154-564: The 1999 constitutional process, leaving Copei and from 2003 is part of Primero Justicia. He was popularly elected as Alternate Deputy to the National Assembly for the period 2000–2005. He was popularly elected to carry out the position of Councilor of the Maracaibo Municipality in the period 2005–2009, but his performance extended for a further period, until 2013, as a consequence of the electoral body not calling
176-1108: The IV International Senior Management Course offered by the Latin American Institute for Social Research in Caracas. In 1997, he participated in the Leadership and Vision Program offered by the Center for the Dissemination of Economic Knowledge (CEDICE) in Caracas . In the same year, he studied the Advanced Program of Government Sciences and Techniques sponsored by the Institute of Higher Administration Studies (IESA) in Maracaibo . In 2002, he completed
198-606: The Liceo Los Robles de Maracaibo and graduated as a Bachelor of Humanities from the Colegio San Vicente de Paúl . He is a lawyer, graduated from the University of Zulia in 1990. After receiving the university degree, he continued a rigorous training process in the political and community area, as well as in the area of public management, citizen participation and leadership. In 1991, he completed
220-784: The Master in Applied Political Studies offered by the International Foundation for Ibero-America of Administration and Public Policies in Madrid , Spain, obtaining with cum laude honors. Guanipa joined politics with Rafael Caldera 's presidential campaign in the 1983 presidential election , thereby entering the Copei party. He was elected as a deputy to the Legislative Assembly of
242-460: The National Assembly. In the 2010 parliamentary election , COPEI was part of the broad oppositional Coalition for Democratic Unity and won eight of the 165 seats. Prior to the 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary election , the pro-government Supreme Tribunal of Justice designated new leaders of COPEI, leading some to state that the party was infiltrated by the PSUV. By 2017, Caracas Chronicles said
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#1732776802623264-820: The Zulia State by Copei for the period 1994–1996, serving as President of the Legislation and Policy Commissions and as Vice President of the Sports, Recreation and Tourism and Regional Planning and Development Commissions. From February 1999 to March 2003, he served as General Director of the Regional Institute for Training and Sociopolitical and Sociocultural Studies for the Promotion of Man (IRFES), an institution located in Maracaibo, Zulia State. After
286-575: The end of 2017 when he separated from office to run as governor, where he was elected, however, unable to assuming his mandate before the refusal of the Zulia State Legislative Council (CLEZ) of an official majority to swear him in because he did not subordinate himself to the ANC (by the same request of this instance that was called and installed controversially), he returns to his seat in the national parliament in 2018. After that,
308-438: The person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Guanipa&oldid=1238262380 " Category : Surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description with empty Wikidata description All set index articles Monitored short pages Juan Pablo Guanipa Juan Pablo Isidoro Guanipa Villalobos (born 20 December 1964)
330-771: The possibility that Juan Pablo Guanipa was the party's presidential candidate – despite the fact that he could nominate Henrique Capriles Radonski for the third time in future elections of the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) primaries. Guanipa declared in November 2017 would not rule out taking such responsibility within PJ and compete for the nomination of the opposition coalition. However, on 19 February 2018, Justice First (PJ), Democratic Action and Popular Will (VP), announced they would not participate in presidential elections and expressed their rejection of
352-550: The presidency in 1984. Governing by COPEI and AD would continue through the rest of the century. Dissatisfaction with the established governmental system of patronage increased, culminating in the 1992 Venezuelan coup d'état attempts led by Hugo Chávez . For the 1993 Venezuelan general election , COPEI passed over choosing Caldera as their candidate. Caldera would afterwards win the election through his newly founded National Convergence party. Soon after being elected, Caldera freed Chávez, who became Caldera's successor following
374-548: The president of the CLEZ of the time Magdely Valbuena was appointed interim governor until new elections were held, which were scheduled for December 2017, where the official candidate Omar Prieto is elected. Guanipa was a candidate for governor of his state, a place that got winning the primary election of officers of the Unit, facing the mayor of Maracaibo , Eveling Trejo de Rosales on 10 September 2017. On 15 October 2017, during
396-601: The regional elections, he was elected Governor of the Zulia state, declared the winner with 691,547 votes and 51.06%. Arias Cárdenas , his opponent obtained 631,594 votes. On 27 October 2017, the Legislative Council of Zulia dismissed Guanipa as the governor and Magdely Valbuena was appointed as interim governor. The council declared that Guanipa; "By not taking the oath, he creates the absolute lack of office." On 26 January 2018, his brother and secretary general of Primero Justicia, Tomás Guanipa, communicated
418-481: The respective process. During that time he chaired the Legislation and Drafting Commission of that legislative body. During the 2015 Venezuelan parliamentary election , he was elected as a deputy for his home state, Zulia . He served as a councilor of Maracaibo for two continuous periods between 2005 and 2013. In 2015, he was elected deputy to the Venezuelan National Assembly until
440-589: The scene. Several deputies abroad followed and endorsed the vote remotely from Madrid , Spain. Copei COPEI was founded on 13 January 1946 by Rafael Caldera . COPEI, Democratic Action (AD) and Democratic Republican Union (URD) signed the Puntofijo Pact in October 1958, establishing themselves as the dominant political parties in the country. Signatories and supporters of the Pact stated that it
462-503: Was created to preserve democracy and to share governorship between parties. Critics believed that the Pact allowed signing parties to limit control over Venezuela's government to themselves. URD would later leave the pact in 1962 following Cuba's removal from the Organization of American States , leaving governing of Venezuela to COPEI and AD. The Puntofijo system ultimately created a network of patronage for both parties. Caldera
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#1732776802623484-578: Was elected president in December 1968 and for the first time in Venezuela's history, opposition parties transferred power peacefully. COPEI was also the first Venezuelan political party to assume power peacefully on its first attempt. The only other COPEI member to become president of Venezuela was Luis Herrera Campins , from 1979 to 1983. However, Herrera Campins fell from grace due to a drop in oil revenue, leading to AD candidate Jaime Lusinchi winning
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