Cidadania
Citizenship Cidadania | |
|---|---|
| President | Comte Bittencourt |
| General Secretary | Regis Cavalcante |
| Founded | 26 January 1992 |
| Registered | 19 March 1992 |
| Split from | Brazilian Communist Party |
| Think tank | Fundação Astrojildo Pereira |
| Membership (2023) | 431,846 |
| Ideology | |
| Political position |
|
| National affiliation | Always Forward |
| International affiliation | São Paulo Forum (1992–2004) |
| Colors | |
| Identification number | 23 |
| Federal Senate | 0 / 81 |
| Chamber of Deputies | 4 / 513 |
| Legislative Assemblies | 17 / 1,024 |
| Mayors | 141 / 5,568 |
| Municipal Chambers | 1,586 / 58,208 |
| Website | |
| cidadania23 | |
^ A: Currently, Cidadania is a centre-right party, but it officially still advocated social democracy through the early 2020s. | |
Cidadania (Portuguese pronunciation: [si.da.daˈni.ɐ]; lit. 'Citizenship') is a Brazilian political party. It was originally founded as the Popular Socialist Party (Portuguese: Partido Popular Socialista, PPS) by members of the former Brazilian Communist Party (PCB), as a centre-left social democratic and democratic socialist party.
The PPS launched Ciro Gomes as its presidential cadidate at the 1998 and 2002 elections, on the former Gomes became the third-most voted candidate. Despite its left-wing alignment, PPS moved to be opposition against the Workers' Party since 2004, forming alliances with centre-right parties, in particular the Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB), and supporting the Impeachment of Dilma Rousseff.
As the PPS moved more towards the center and demphasized most of its traditional socialistic politices, the party's National Convention adopted the new naming in March 2019, and it was later approved by the Superior Electoral Court that September. The party then began moving towards a more social liberal position akin to the third way.