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when once again his candidacy for the
Presidency fell well short of success. By that point Borregales' fruitless attempts to become President of Venezuela had led to his becoming a popular target for the country's satirists. This was to be his final election and he faded from public life thereafter.
131:, although neither attempt succeeded. Indeed the purpose of his campaign was widely questioned due to the MAN's lack of any support base and the final vote tallies for Borregales were derisory. Nonetheless the party returned in
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120:(MAN) in 1960. A small party with little popular support, it functioned largely as the personal party of Borregales, a common set-up in Latin American politics at the time.
109:, considering it both unproductive and unfair and when he voiced his objections to such plans. As a result he resigned from the party and distanced himself from
317:
135:
and, whilst once again
Borregales failed to come close to the Presidency, he was elected to the Assembly as MAN's sole representative. He lost the seat in
31:
journalist, author and politician. Belonging to the rightist tendency within
Venezuelan politics, he became notorious as a regular candidate for the
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181:, Fundación La Salle de Ciencias Naturales, Instituto Caribe de Antropología y Sociología , 1973, p. 242
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Political
Parties of the Americas, 1980s to 1990s: Canada, Latin America, and the West Indies
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Borregales was born into a high-ranking family who were prominent in the provincial state of
93:. Borregales espoused strongly conservative views and was characterised as belonging to the
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Religion and
Politics in Latin America: Liberation Theology and Christian Democracy
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Having resigned from COPEI, Borregales established his own political party, the
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47:. He trained as a journalist at several international institutions, notably in
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Borregales presented as a candidate for both the
Presidency and a seat in the
113:, due to his stances with communist ideology. Including relations with China.
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55:. As a journalist Borregales wrote for several newspapers, including
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Conservative
Parties, the Right, and Democracy in Latin America
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73:, generally taking a confrontational tone towards the left.
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Columbia
University Graduate School of Journalism alumni
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Rómulo
Betancourt and the Transformation of Venezuela
195:Democracy in Latin America: Colombia and Venezuela
85:, he combined his religious views with his strong
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101:, Borregales was for many years a close ally of
97:of Venezuelan politics. Initially a member of
318:Members of the National Assembly (Venezuela)
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252:, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1992, p. 623
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65:as well as a journal he founded himself,
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210:, Oxford University Press, 1965, p. 198
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353:Candidates for President of Venezuela
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105:. He was however strongly opposed to
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281:, Transaction Publishers, p. 574
221:Latin American Political Parties
265:, JHU Press, 2000, pp. 115-116
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323:Leaders of political parties
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333:Venezuelan Roman Catholics
328:Venezuelan anti-communists
277:Robert Jackson Alexander,
219:Robert Jackson Alexander,
81:A strong supporter of the
69:. His writing was highly
348:20th-century journalists
118:National Action Movement
236:, Praeger, 1991, p. 115
223:, Praeger, 1973, p. 210
197:, Praeger, 1988, p. 162
308:Venezuelan journalists
261:Kevin J. Middlebrook,
248:Charles D. Ameringer,
53:Columbia University
338:People from Falcón
193:Donald L. Herman,
313:Copei politicians
232:Edward A. Lynch,
164:Germán Borregales
129:National Assembly
17:Germán Borregales
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58:El Universal
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303:1984 deaths
298:1909 births
107:land reform
87:nationalism
63:La Religión
21:Coro region
292:Categories
144:References
67:Falconidad
39:Journalism
33:presidency
29:Venezuelan
208:Venezuela
95:far right
77:Politics
27:) was a
25:Caracas
49:Geneva
45:Falcón
99:COPEI
137:1973
133:1968
125:1963
89:and
61:and
51:and
123:In
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270:^
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35:.
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