Maurist Party

Maurist Party
Partido Maurista
LeaderAntonio Maura
Antonio Goicoechea
Founded27 October 1913[1]
Dissolved1931 (1931)
Split fromConservative Party
IdeologyMaurism

The Maurist Party (Spanish: Partido Maurista, PM), also known as the Maurists (Spanish: Mauristas), was a political faction within the Liberal Conservative Party, led by Antonio Maura, which split from the party after Eduardo Dato's appointment as prime minister of Spain on 27 October 1913.[1][2][3]

The party lost relevance after Miguel Primo de Rivera's coup d'état in 1923 and Maura's death in 1925, with Antonio Goicoechea being elected as new party leader.[4] In early 1931, the Constitutional Centre party was founded by three leading maurists (Goicoechea, César Silió, and Maura's son Gabriel) after negotiations in late 1930 in order to establish a federation of right-wing forces between Catalan regionalists and maurists.[5]

Electoral performance

Election Seats Leader
1914
22 / 408
Antonio Maura
1916
17 / 409
1918
31 / 409
1919
104 / 409
1920
24 / 409
1923
12 / 409

References

  1. ^ a b Soldevilla 1914, pp. 462–470 & 485–488.
  2. ^ Cuenca Toribio, José (2022). "Historia Hispánica. Personajes: Antonio Maura y Montaner". historia-hispanica.rah.es (in Spanish). Royal Academy of History. Retrieved 19 August 2025.
  3. ^ Lozano, Carles. "Partido Liberal Conservador (1868-1931)". Historia Electoral.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 25 August 2025.
  4. ^ Soldevilla 1927, pp. 10 & 472–473.
  5. ^ Gil Pecharromán 1993, p. 264.

Bibliography