The candidacy was boosted by the
UPG and was created as a group of voters to stand in the
general election of 1977, since both the
UPG and the
AN-PG were not legal. In these elections the BN-PG obtained 22,771 votes, 2.02% of the votes in
Galiza. BN-PG organized numerous protests over a variety of issues (self-determination, ecologist causes, normalization of the
Galician language, international solidarity, amnesty, ...). Among the biggest were the traditional demonstrations in the
National Day of Galicia, were the BN-PG usually convocated large crowds. The biggest one was the 1978 demonstration, with around 35.000 protestors (according to
Europa Press). The party was heavily linked to the
Intersindical Nacional Galega (industrial and services workers) and
Sindicato Labrego Galego (peasants) unions and to a series of mass
social movements and platforms, like the ecologist
ADEGA. The candidacy, already as a coalition, repeated in the
general election of 1979, in which obtained 60,889 votes and the 5.95% of the votes in
Galiza. In neither of the two elections the BN-PG won any parliamentary representation. In the
municipal elections of 1979 it reached its electoral ceiling, obtaining the 7.1% of the Galician vote and gained representation in a lot of
Galician municipalities (including five of the seven major municipalities in
Galiza), with a total of 253 town councillors. The BN-PG called to vote "no" for both the
Spanish Constitution of 1978 and the
Statute of Autonomy of Galicia. In the
Galician parliamentary elections of 1981 the BN-PG presented a joint list with the
Galician Socialist Party (PSG). The coalition won 61,870 votes (6.15%), which resulted in 3 seats (1 for
A Coruña, another
Lugo and another one for
Pontevedra). Two corresponded to BNPG and the remaining one for the
PSG. In 1982 the BN-PG became the
Galician Nationalist Bloc. ==Electoral results==