Each of the following sections describes an element of Spanish liberalism and radicalism, mostly beginning with the 19th century.
From Liberals to Liberal Fusionist Party '', Madrid. • 1808–12: Until 1839 the Spanish liberals were not organized in a well-established party, but formed their own factions. During the
War of Independence and the
Constitution of Cádiz the term
Liberals (Liberales, 1812–1820) was used to describe the diverse range of currents influenced by the
Enlightenment and
French Revolution and united in rejecting the absolutism of the Bourbon monarchy. • 1820–39: Between 1820 and 1839 the Liberals split into two factions. The 'Radicals' (
Exaltados), known as
Veinteanistas (Supporters of 1820) were inspired by French Jacobinism and Radicalism and wished to draft a new more progressive constitution based on universal suffrage; the '
Moderates' (
Moderados), closer to classical liberalism, were known as
Doceanistas (Supporters of 1812) as they wished simply to restore the more limited constitution of 1812. • 1839–1879: Finally in 1839 most of the Radicals and
Moderates organized themselves into a loose parliamentary group known as the Progressives (
Progresistas, 1839–1880), led by people like
Baldomero Espartero,
Salustiano Olózoga,
Juan Prim,
Práxedes Sagasta and
Francisco Serrano y Domínguez, Duke de la Torre. Out of this current various factions splintered off to form successor parties: the • in 1843, the ⇒Democratic Party • in 1854 the ⇒Liberal Union; • in 1869 the Democratic Radical Party; • in 1879 the ⇒
Democratic Progressive Party. • 1880: The majority of Liberal currents united in the
Fusionist (i.e. merged) Liberal Party (
Partido Liberal Fusionista), led by Sagasta, though some more Radical factions remain outside the party • 1882: A left-wing faction of the party established the ⇒
Dynastic Left, most of its members returned between 1884 and 1886 to the Liberal Fusionist Party • 1890: The ⇒
Possibilist Democratic Party joined the party • 1907: A left-wing faction of the party seceded as the ⇒ Monarchist Democratic Party • 1918: A faction seceded as the ⇒ Liberal Left • 1923: The party disappeared due to the
Miguel Primo de Rivera coup
Democratic Party • 1843: The left wing of the ⇒ Progressives established the
Democratic Party (
Partido Demócrata) as a rally of left-wing liberals and moderate socialists • 1868: The republican wing formed the ⇒ Federal Republican Party • 1871: The party disappeared and remnants of the party continue as a monarchist party
Liberal Union • 1854:
Moderate ⇒ progressives established the
Liberal Union (
Unión Liberal), led by
Leopoldo O'Donnell • 1868: The party merged with the conservative
Moderates into the Liberal Conservative Party
Federal Republican Party • 1868: The republican wing of the ⇒ Democratic Party established the
Federal Democratic Republican Party (
Partido Republicano Democrático Federal), also known as the Republican-Democratic Party • 1878: A faction joined the ⇒ Reformist Republican Party • 1879: A faction seceded as the ⇒
Possibilist Democratic Party • 1891: The party absorbs a faction of the ⇒ Democratic Radical Party • 1923: The party disappeared due to the Primo de Rivera coup
From Democratic Radical Party to Centralist Party • 1869: A left-wing faction of the Progressives seceded as the
Democratic Radical Party (
Partido Radical Demócrata), led by
Ruiz Zorilla • 1876: The party is reorganised into the
Reformist Republican Party, led by
Nicolás Salmerón • 1878: A faction of the ⇒ Federal Republican Party joined the party • 1879: A faction joined the ⇒
Democratic Progressive Party • 1890: The party is renamed
Centralist Party (
Partido Centralista) • 1891: The party is absorbed by the ⇒ Federal Republican Party
Possibilist Democratic Party • 1879: A faction of the ⇒ Federal Republican Party formed the
Possibilist Democratic Party ('
Partido Posibilista'), led by
Emilio Castelar • 1890: The party joins the ⇒
Liberal Fusionist Party Democratic Progressive Party • 1879: A left wing faction of the ⇒ Progressives with dissidents of the Reformist Republican Party formed the
Democratic Progressive Party (
Partido Progresista Democrático) • 1882: The party merges into the ⇒
Dynastic Left Dynastic Left • 1882: A faction of the ⇒
Liberal Fusionist Party together with the
Democratic Progressive Party established the
Dynastic Left (
Izquierda Dinástica), led by
Francisco Serrano and
Adolfo Posada • 1886: Between 1884 and 1886 most of the members returned to the ⇒ Liberal Fusionist Party
Liberal Democratic Party • 1913: A faction of the ⇒ Fusionist Liberal Party seceded and formed the
Liberal Democratic Party, led by
Manuel García Prieto • 1923: The party disappeared
Republican Union (1906) • 1906: A faction of the ⇒ Federal Republican Union seceded as the
Republican Union (
Unión Republicana), led by
Nicolás Salmerón • 1908: A faction seceded as the ⇒ Radical Republican Party • 1923: The party disappeared due to the Primo de Rivera coup
Monarchist Democratic Party • 1907: A left-wing faction of the ⇒ Liberal Fusionist Party seceded as the
Monarchist Democratic Party (
Partido Democrático Monnárquico) of
José Canalejas • 1923: The party disappeared due to the Primo de Rivera coup
Radical Republican Party • 1908: A faction of the ⇒ Republican Union established the
Radical Republican Party (
Partido Republicano Radical), led by
Alejandro Lerroux • 1929: A left-wing faction established the ⇒ Radical Socialist Republican Party • 1933: Due to the development into a conservative party, the liberal wing seceded as the ⇒ Radical Democratic Party. The original party disappeared in 1939
Liberal Left • 1918: A faction of the ⇒ Fusionist Liberal Party seceded to form the
Liberal Left (
Izquierda Liberal) • 1923: The party disappeared due to the Primo de Rivera coup
From Republican Action to Republican Left • 1926:
Manuel Azaña established the
Republican Action (
Acción Republicana), as a cross-party thinktank which initially worked closely alongside the Radical Republican party. • 1931: Republican Action was converted into a political party. • 1934: The party merged with a politically similar Galician regional party and the left-wing faction of the ⇒ Radical Socialist Republican Party into the
Republican Left (
Izquierda Republicana) • 1939: The party is banned, though there were later attempts to revive the party after 1976
Radical Socialist Republican Party • 1929: A left-wing faction of the ⇒ Radical Republican Party established the
Radical Socialist Republican Party (
Partido Republicano Radical Socialista) • 1934: The party is dissolved, members joined the ⇒ Republican Left or the ⇒
Republican Union From Democratic Radical Party to Republican Union • 1933: Due to the development of the ⇒ Radical Republican Party, the liberal wing seceded as the
Democratic Radical Party (
Partido Radical Demócrata) • 1934: The party merged with a faction of the ⇒ Radical Socialist Republican Party into the
Republican Union (
Unión Republicana) • 1939: The party is banned
Democratic Convergence of Catalonia • 1974: Democrats in
Catalonia established the
Democratic Convergence of Catalonia, a democratic nationalist party with liberal values, led by
Jordi Pujol.
Democratic and Social Centre • 1982: Former prime minister
Adolfo Suárez left the
Union of the Democratic Centre and established the liberal
Democratic and Social Centre (
Centro Democrático y Social). The party lost parliamentary representation in 1993, but continued to exist until 2006.
Citizens • 2005:
Citizens (
Ciudadanos) was founded.
Union, Progress and Democracy • 2007: The leader of
Union, Progress and Democracy (
Unión, Progreso y Democracia) became the former member of the
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party Rosa Díez. She created it with the philosophers
Fernando Savater and
Carlos Martínez Gorriarán. ==Liberal leaders==