Dereita Galeguista

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Dereita Galeguista
Leader Vicente Risco, Xosé Filgueira Valverde
Founded 1935 (1935)
Dissolved 1936 (1936)
Split from Partido Galeguista
Ideology Galician nationalism
Conservatism
Political Catholicism[1]
Völkisch nationalism[2]
Politics of Galicia
Political parties

Dereita Galeguista (Galicianist/Galician Nationalist Right, in English language) was a right-wing Galician nationalist party active in the final months of the Second Spanish Republic.

The origin of this short-lived party was the opposition of the catholic and conservative sectors of the Partido Galeguista to potential agreements with left parties to enter the antifascist Popular Front. In May 1935, a group of militants Partido Galeguista in Pontevedra, headed by Xosé Filgueira Valverde left the party in protest against the policy of pacts with the left, and created a new organization known as Dereita Galeguista. In February 1936, and due to the formal incorporation of the Partido Galeguista to the Popular Front, Vicente Risco and other seven relevant Ourense members of the party left the PG. In Santiago de Compostela Mosquera Pérez and Manuel Beiras García also joined Dereita Galeguista. In its founding manifesto the organization declared itself as progressive, democratic, republican, cooperative and social-christian.

After the start of the Spanish Civil War, Vicente Risco and some other militants joined the Francisco Franco regime, due to their Catholic ideology. Other militants opposed the regime, like Otero Pedrayo or Manuel Beiras García.

References

  • Bernardo Máiz, Galicia na II República e baixo o franquismo, Vigo, 1988.
  • Beramendi, X.G. and Núñez Seixas, X.M. (1996): O nacionalismo galego. A Nosa Terra, Vigo
  • Beramendi, X.G. (2007): De provincia a nación. Historia do galeguismo político. Xerais, Vigo