Progressive Action Party

{{Short description|Former political party in Cuba (1949–59)}}

{{More citations needed|date=April 2025}}

{{Infobox political party

| colorcode = {{party color|Progressive Action Party}}

| name = Progressive Action Party

| native_name = Partido de Acción Progresista

| logo = Partido Accion Progresista.png

| logo_size = 100px

| abbreviation = PAP

| leader = Fulgencio Batista

| foundation = {{Start date|1949}}

| dissolution = {{End date|1959}}

| split = Liberal Party of Cuba

| headquarters = Havana

| ideology = Authoritarianism
Conservatism
Economic liberalismhttps://scholarship.miami.edu/esploro/outputs/doctoral/Fulgencio-Batistas-Economic-Policies-1952--/991031447484202976
Liberalismhttps://www.latinamericanstudies.org/book/Batista_Economic_Policies.pdfhttps://prezi.com/p/ncjv0ma4fije/fulgencio-batista/
Anti-communism
Right-wing populism
Pro-foreign investmenthttps://cubanstudiesinstitute.us/principal/background-to-revolution-the-batista-dictatorship-and-the-decline-of-democracy-in-cuba/

| position = Right-wing

| international =

| country = Cuba

}}

The Progressive Action Party ({{langx|es|Partido de Acción Progresista}}, PAP) was a Cuban political party led by Fulgencio Batista. The party was founded on 1 April 1949, in the aftermath of the 1948 general elections, under the name of Unitary Action Party ({{langx|es|Partido de Acción Unitaria}}, PAU). It presented its first manifesto a few months later, on 1 August. In 1952, certain to lose the election, Batista made a coup d'etat by seizing the Presidency.

The party also ran in the elections of 1954 and 1958, winning due to the early withdrawal of opponents, as well as electoral fraud.

The party was based on a combination of strong conservatism and economic liberalism on a large scale, to attract American capital in Cuba. This led to a high level of corruption and poverty plaguing the country. The other bulwark of the party was anti-communism, not only because of the alignment with the United States but also because most of the members of the anti-Batista left-wing nationalist 26th of July Movement could be branded as Communists, including Fidel Castro and Camilo Cienfuegos, along with genuine communists like Raúl Castro and Che Guevara. Batista's authoritarian rule and repression in response to Castro's movement led to the deaths of 20,000 Cubans (disputed) through torture and extrajudicial killing.

The party was dissolved following the Cuban Revolution of 1959, which ousted Batista causing it to flee abroad and led to the establishment of the revolutionary government of Fidel Castro, which officially became a communist regime in 1961.

Electoral history

= Presidential elections =

class=wikitable style=text-align:center

!Election

!Party candidate

!Votes

!%

!Result

1954

|Fulgencio Batista

|1,262,587

|

|Elected {{Y}}

1958

|Andrés Rivero Agüero

|428,166

|70.40%

|Elected {{Y}}

Note

Andrés Rivero Agüero was unable to take office due to the Cuban Revolution

= House of Representatives elections =

class=wikitable style=text-align:center

!Election

!Party leader

!Seats

!+/–

!Position

1950

| rowspan="3" |Fulgencio Batista

|{{composition bar|4|66|hex={{party color|Progressive Action Party}}}}

|{{increase}} 4

|{{increase}} 4th

1954

|{{composition bar|60|130|hex={{party color|Progressive Action Party}}}}

|{{increase}} 56

|{{increase}} 1st

1958

|{{composition bar|65|130|hex={{party color|Progressive Action Party}}}}

|{{increase}} 5

|{{steady}} 1st

= Senate elections =

class=wikitable style=text-align:center

!Election

!Party leader

!Votes

!%

!Seats

!+/–

!Position

1954

|Fulgencio Batista

| colspan="2" |{{Small|(part of the National Progressive Coalition{{efn|The National Progressive Coalition was an alliance of PAP, the Radical Union, the Republican Democratic Party and the Liberal Party.}})}}

|{{Composition bar|36|54|{{party color|Progressive Action Party}}}}

|{{increase}} 36

|{{increase}} 1st

{{notelist}}

References

{{Reflist}}