Jump to content

Citizens (Spanish political party)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Citizens–Party of the Citizenry
Ciudadanos–Partido de la Ciudadanía
Catalan nameCiutadans–Partit de la Ciutadania
AbbreviationCs
Secretary-GeneralVacant
SpokespersonJordi Cañas
FounderAlbert Rivera
Founded7 June 2005 (CC)
9 July 2006 (Cs)
Youth wingGroup of Young Citizens (J's)
Membership(2022)Decrease7,642[1]
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right[9][10][11]
European affiliationAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
European Parliament groupALDE Group(2014–2019)
Renew Europe(2019–2024)
ColoursOrange[12]
Dark teal[12]
Congress of Deputies
0 / 350
Senate
0 / 266
European Parliament
0 / 61
Regional Parliaments
0 / 1,248
Local Government
392 / 67,611
Website
www.ciudadanos-cs.orgEdit this at Wikidata

Citizens(Spanish:Ciudadanos[θjuðaˈðanos]listen;Catalan:Ciutadans[siwtəˈðans];shortened asCsC'suntil January 2017), officiallyCitizens–Party of the Citizenry(Ciudadanos–Partido de la Ciudadanía),[13]is aliberal[13][14][15][16][17]political party in Spain.

Founded inCataloniain 2006, its political ideology was initially unclear beyond a strong opposition toCatalan independenceandCatalan nationalismin general.[18][19][20]Citizens describes itself aspostnationalist,[21][22]having used the motto "Catalonia is my homeland, Spain is my country and Europe is our future" in its early days; however, it has been deemed by journalists and academics as professing a populistSpanish nationalistideology.[23][24][25]The party has also been variously described asconservative-liberal,[26]populist,[27][28]andpro-European.[29]

Citizens initially presented itself as aleft-of-centreparty that promotedsocial democraticandprogressive liberalpositions,[30]but it removed any mention of social democracy from its platform in February 2017,[31]moving closer to thepolitical centre.By 2018, it was judged by commentators to have drifted further away from the left, as its focus shifted to competing against both thePeople's Party(PP) andVoxas the leading party of the Spanish right.[32][33][34][35]This was concurred by opinion polling and the research instituteCIS,who also deemed the party to be right-leaning.[36][37][38]

The party initially enjoyed growing support throughout the 2010s on a regional and national level, owing to its staunch opposition to Catalan independence as well as the PP's decline in popularity under then-Prime MinisterMariano Rajoy.Entering theCongress of Deputiesin2015in fourth place, it became the single largest party in theParliament of Cataloniain2017and entered government in multiple autonomous communities. Citizens reached its zenith of popularity at theApril 2019 general election,where it became the third-largest party in the country and pulled ahead of the PP in several regions. This popularity did not last long: after refusing to form a coalition government with theSpanish Socialist Workers' Party(PSOE),[39]that year'sNovember snap electionsaw Citizens lose 47 seats and become the country's smallest national party, resulting in leaderAlbert Rivera's resignation and departure from politics.[40]This proved to be the first of a succession of electoral defeats that Citizens would endure over the following years, with the party's gradual collapse mainly benefitting the PP and Vox.

In 2021, the party failed to pass a no-confidence vote against its ownregional government with the PP in Murcia,[41]after which its coalition partner in theAssembly of Madridtriggered a snap election over fears of meeting the same fate — this resulted in Citizenslosing all of its Madrilenian seats,having alreadylost 30 of its 36 seatsinCataloniaearlier that year. The following year, the party lost all but one of its seats in theCortes of Castile and León,as well as all of its seats in theParliament of Andalusia.It was reduced yet further in 2023, with the partying choosing not to contest the2023 Spanish general election[42]after facing a near-total collapse in that year'sregionalandlocal elections.[43]Save for a handful of remaining municipal seats, 2024 has seen the party lose the last of its electoral representatives in theCatalanandEuropean Parliamentelections, receiving less than one percent of the vote in both cases.[44]

History

[edit]

Citizens was preceded by the political platformCiutadans de Catalunya(Citizens of Catalonia), which was formed on 7 June 2005 by a group of fifteen academics, writers and other figures of Catalan civic soviety (includingAlbert Boadella,Félix de Azúa,Francesc de Carrerasand Arcadi Espada) in reaction to theGeneralitat's plans to reform theStatute of Autonomy.The group presented their manifesto at theCentre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelonaon the 21st of the same month, where they called on "citizens of Catalonia who identify with our proposal to demand a political party which will contribute to the restoration of realism", expressing their lacking confidence in the government to "address the real problems faced by the general public." In this manifesto, they declared that "the rhetoric of hatred promulgated by official Catalan government media against everything Spanish is more alarming than ever" and that "the [Catalan] nation, postulated as an homogenous entity, has taken over the space where an undeniably diverse society lives".[45]

Leading up to their formation as a political party,Ciutadans de Catalunyaorganised several round table meetings and conferences that were occasionally met with controversy; at one event held ahead of thereferendum on the 2006 Catalan Statute of Autonomy,several members of the group were assaulted by pro-independence activists.[46][47]A second manifesto was presented at theTeatro Tívolíin Barcelona on 4 March 2006.[48]

Their founding conference was held in July in Barcelona, where Citizens was formally incorporated as a political party under the full name ofCiudadanosPartido de la Ciudadanía(Citizens–Party of the Citizenry):Albert Rivera,26 years old at the time, was elected its first leader.

In the2006 elections for the Parliament of Catalonia,Citizens won 3% of the votes and returned three MPs, including Rivera. In the2010 elections,a similar result was achieved (3.4%, 3 MPs). Mainly as a counterweight to the growing public support for independence in Catalonia, the party grew substantially as one of its most outspoken opponents. In the2012 snap elections,the number of votes more than doubled (7.6%, 9 MPs). All but one of these seats were in theProvince of Barcelona.In the2015 elections,Citizens more than doubled its votes again (17.9%, 25 MPs), becoming the second largest faction in the Catalan parliament.

In 2013, the party started organising in the rest of Spain with a manifesto called "La conjura de Goya" ( "Confederacy of Goya" ) that took place in the Congress Palace ofMadrid.In the2015 general elections,Cs entered parliament with 13.9% and 40 seats. As PP'sMariano Rajoyrefused the mandate to form a government, Citizens promised theSpanish Socialist Workers' Party(PSOE) its support in parliament in exchange for a number of political concessions. However, this pact would have needed the support ofPodemos,which Citizens could not abide by; this deadlock ultimately led to the2016 snap elections,where the party lost 0.8% of the popular vote and eight seats. After these elections, Citizens struck a deal with the conservative PP in supporting its government in exchange for a number of political concessions.After a 10-month political deadlock,PP leader Mariano Rajoy was able to win investiture as Prime Minister and retain power.

In the2014 European elections,the party received 3.16% of the national vote and elected twoMEPs.[49]Both MEPs joined theAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe(ALDE) group. In the2019 European elections,the party obtained 12% of the vote, and won a total of seven MEPs (which, post-brexit, has become eight MEPs).[50]

The party was accepted into theAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Partyon 4 June 2016.[51]

Rivera resigned as party president on 11 November 2019 after the party lost 80% of its seats in theNovember 2019 general election.He was succeeded byInés Arrimadas.[52]

In March 2021, Citizens, together with theSpanish Socialist Workers' Party,presented a surprise no-confidence motion in theRegion of Murciaagainst their own regional coalition government with thePeople's Party.[53]The motion failed due to defection of several Ciudadanos deputies, and triggered a "political earthquake" across the country, leading to a number of high-ranking members abandoning the party.[54]In the aftermath, Cs also lost all its 26 deputies in Madrid in the2021 Madrilenian regional election,and fell incountry-wide pollsfrom ≈7% support (≈10 deputies) down to ≈3% (≈1 deputy).

In September 2023,Francisco IgeaandEdmundo Balwere expelled from Citizens for criticising the party's decision not to contest the2023 Spanish general election.Igea did not appeal the decision and did not resign his seat.[55]This left Cs without any seats in Spanish regional parliaments, outside of Catalonia. The party would lose all of its seats in the Parliament of Catalonia in the2024 election,and all of its seats in the2024 European Parliament electiona month later.[44]After the European Parliament election, the party was left with no members of the Congress of Deputies, Senate, European Parliament, or any regional parliament, but still retained 392 at the municipal level.

Ideology

[edit]

At first, Citizens branded itself as acentre-leftparty in its statement of principles (ideario). While Rivera refused to locate Citizens on the political spectrum for a time, he later placed Cs in thepolitical centre.[56]Although some observers agreed with the party'sidearioby describing Cs as centre-left[57][58][59][60][61][62]and others agree with Rivera's last definition by describing the party as centrist,[63][64][65][66][67][68][69]the vast majority of them have positioned Citizens on thecentre-right.[70][71][72][73][74][75][76][77][78][79][80]In a 2014 interview, Congress spokesmanJuan Carlos Girautaexplicitly stated that he did not perceive any significant differences between Citizens, the centristUnion, Progress and Democracyand the far-rightSpanish nationalistpartyVox.[81]Federico Finchelsteinidentifies Citizens with a light brand of "neo-liberalpopulism".[82]

Official stance

[edit]

Ideologically, Cs describes itself as aprogressive,[83]secular,constitutional,European federalistandpostnationalistpolitical party.[22]Ciudadanos rejects theautonomous communities' right toself-determinationoutside of the Spanish state. As an originally Catalan party, it specifically opposesCatalan nationalismdue to viewing it as an outdated, authoritarian and socially divisive ideology which fuels hatred among both Catalans and Spaniards.[18][19][20]Rivera uses the phrase "Cataloniais my homeland,Spainis my country andEuropeis our future "to describe the party's ideology.

The party opposes separatist movements such as theCatalan independence movement[84][8]and federating the autonomous communities. Even though Citizens is currently a supporter ofEuropean federalism,[85]it ran in the2009 European Parliament electionin coalition with the pan-European, Eurosceptic partyLibertas.[86]Although reconsidering the current head of state is not a priority for the party, Rivera has said that Citizens is "arepublicanparty which claims that Spanish citizens are who have to decide whether they prefer a once-modernized monarchy or a republic through a referendum in the context of a constitutional reform ".[87][88][89]

According to its declared identity signs, Cs advocates four basic lines of action:

  1. Defence ofindividual rights
  2. Defence ofsocial rightsas well as thewelfare state
  3. Uphold the State of Autonomies and Europe's unity[clarification needed]
  4. Regeneration ofdemocracyand of political life[clarification needed]

Main tenets

[edit]
Albert Rivera,former president of the party

Cs displays a political discourse mainly centered around opposition toCatalan nationalism,[90]to the extent that it has been frequently criticised for being asingle-issue party,a label rejected by its members. In the 2006–2012 period, the number of Cs voters who had voted for centre-right parties in previous elections was similar to the number who had voted for centre-left parties, suggesting that the party's positions on general economic and social issues are not its main draw.[91]Cs criticises any sort of nationalism, "including the Spanish nationalism that Mr. Ynestrillas defends".[92]

One of the main issues raised by the party is the Catalanlanguage policywhich actively promotes the use ofCatalan languageas the sole working language of Catalan public administration.[93][94]The party challenges this policy and defends equal treatment of the Spanish and Catalan languages.[94]It also opposes the current language policy within the Catalan educational system in accordance with which all public schooling is delivered in Catalan. The party also supports strengthening the powers of the Spanish central institutions and curtailing the powers of regional administrations.[95]

Other topics include a thorough reform of theelectoral systemwith the aim of creating greater proportionality that would give less weight to single constituencies. They also support some changes in the1978 Constitution,especially regarding regional organisation. Regarding the chartered autonomous communities' tax regimes, the party respects and does not want to remove the Basque Country's and Navarre's chartered regimes because it believes that "they aren't discriminatory in and of themselves". However, it criticises what it calls the miscalculation of the quota or contribution which is negotiated between governments and has been causing significant differences that they regard as having become outrageous.[96]It proposes a review and a recalculation of theBasqueand Navarrese Economic Agreements[clarification needed]in order to stop the Basque Country and Navarre being "net beneficiaries".[97]Among other policies, they also support legalisation ofmarijuana,euthanasia,andgestational surrogacy.

Prominent meetings of the party have been reportedly picketed byCatalan separatistgroups on several occasions.[98]Its leaderAlbert Riverahas received anonymous death threats urging him to quit politics. Two members of theERC Youthwere sentenced to prison for it.[99][100][101][102][103]Members of Ciudadanos have repeatedly taken part in violent attacks on Catalan targets[104][105][106][107]and far-right and ultranationalist groups are usually present in their demonstrations.[108][109]In one instance, aTelemadridcameraman was assaulted, allegedly because he was mistaken for a member of Catalan broadcasterTV3.[110][111][112]

Policies

[edit]
Former Barcelona Citizens Headquarters (2015-2021) inSant Gervasi – Galvany.From 2015 to 2017 it also served as its Central HQ before its relocation toMadrid.

The Cs outlined some policies for the2015 general election:

  • Lower corporation tax to 25%[113]
  • Lower and harmonise VAT to a rate between 16% and 19%
  • Cap the top-rate of income tax at 40%
  • Increase research and development spending to 3% of GDP
  • Abolish or merge municipalities with a population of less than 5,000
  • Reduce bureaucracy and red tape
  • More transparent party funding
  • Crack down on corruption
  • Reform or abolish theSenate.[114]
  • Instate an earned income tax credit to fight in-work poverty
  • "Austrian Backpack"[114]transferable unemployment compensation where a worker accumulates funds throughout their career which are accessible upon job loss or retirement
  • Devolve training to the citizens from employers associations and trade unions
  • Ease immigration policies to attract talent and investors
  • Legalize marijuana

Spanish nationalism

[edit]

Although the party defines itself aspostnationalist,it has been deemed by a variety of sources (including peer-reviewed expert texts)[23]to profess apopulistSpanish nationalistideology.[24][25]In a party conference held on 20 May 2018 to present its platformEspaña Ciudadana,Rivera said in a hall filled with Spanish flags:

I do not see reds and blues, I see Spaniards. I do not see, as they say, urban people and rural people, I see Spaniards. I do not see young or old, I see Spaniards. I do not see workers and entrepreneurs, I see Spaniards. I do not see believers or agnostics, I see Spaniards. [...] So, compatriots, with Citizens, let's go for that Spain, let's feel proud of being Spaniards again.[115][116]

Controversy

[edit]

Alternative views and past membership

[edit]

In 2006, the newspaperEl Periódico de Catalunyarevealed that Rivera was a card-carrying member of the conservativePeople's Party(PP) between 2002 and 2006 and that he had left the PP only three months before running for election for the Citizen's Party. This was corroborated byEl MundoandEl País.[117][118]Despite these revelations, Rivera denied having been a full member of PP and implied that he had voted for thePSOEuntil recently.[119]Past PP membership is common among Cs members. FormerPSCactivistJuan Carlos Girautahad joined the PP[120]and became a prolific contributor to conservative journalism from hisLibertad Digitalcolumn[121]before becoming a Citizens member and candidate in the 2014 European election.[122]During his long tenure asLibertad Digitalcolumnist and COPE debater, Girauta expressed strong sympathies for right-wingZionism(to the point of callingthen-President Zapateroanantisemite)[123]and lent credibility[124][125]to the now discredited book byVictor Farías[126]dismissing socialist politicianSalvador Allendeas a racist and asocial Darwinist,without clarifying that the quotations about genetic determinism in Allende's doctoral dissertation were themselves quotations from other authors (mostlyCesare Lombroso) or the fact that Allende was highly critical of these conclusions in his thesis which was later published as a rebuttal to Farías' position.[127]Farías was later sued for this,[128]but Girauta never retracted his statements.

In 2015, a member of the Citizens electoral list forGijónto the city council and regional elections posted pro-Falangist,pro-Blue Divisionand pro-Hitler Youthmessages on Facebook.[129]Those same elections carried news of at least five other former card-carryingFalangeand/orEspaña 2000members.[130]

An altercation took place inCanet de Maron 21 Ma, 2018 between pro-independence local residents, who had planted yellow crosses on the beach to honor imprisoned and fugitive politicians; and anti-independence individuals who decided to remove said crosses. The altercation left at least three people wounded, including an 82-year-old man and a localCUPcouncilor who explicitly accused Citizens andFalangemilitants from across thewhole regionto be among the provocateurs. Citizens Member of Parliament Carlos Carrizosa dismissed the claim that either "councillors or party activists" from the party were involved in the incidents.[131][132][133]Four days later and despite admonishments and warnings by President of the ParliamentRoger Torrent,Carrizosa himself removed a yellow ribbon from the seats reserved for absent Cabinet ministers, forcing the President to suspend the entire session.[134]

Relations with the media

[edit]

During the2006 Catalan electioncampaign, the party's president Albert Rivera appeared completely naked in a poster in order to attract publicity to the party.[135][136]In the beginning, the party frequently complained about an alleged boycott on the part of Catalan media. In their opinion, the party was given too little airtime to present its views on the Catalan public television.[137]

2009 European election internal dispute

[edit]

In 2009, it was announced that Cs would run for theEuropean electionallied with theLibertascoalition. The party's association withDeclan Ganley'sLibertasplatform raised some concern on account of the coalition formed by the latter with nationalist and ultranationalist parties in each of its local European chapters, seemingly at odds with the professed ideology of Cs.[138][139][140]

Several intellectuals that had participated in the formation ofCiutadanslater withdrew their support. For example,Albert Boadellabecame one of the co-founders of theUnion, Progress and Democracy(UPyD) party led by formerBasque SocialistpoliticianRosa Díez.

According to some members of Cs, the negotiations prior to this electoral pact were led personally and secretly by the party leader Albert Rivera. This alienated the other two MPs (besides Rivera himself) and a significant part of the party from his leadership.[141]In turn, the official stance of Cs is that the critics are using the dispute as a pretext to canvass support for the ideologically similar UPyD.[142]

Position in the political spectrum

[edit]

On June 24, 2019, the party's economics spokesman,Toni Roldán,announced that he was leaving Citizens and renouncing his seat in the Spanish parliament in protest at the party's drift to the right and its willingness to enter alliances with the far right after regional and municipal elections.[143]Following Roldán's resignation, MEPJavier Nartand the Asturian leaderJuan Vázquezstepped down as well, leaving their political offices in the party's committee and theAsturian Parliament,respectively.[144][145]

Some days later,Francesc de Carreras,one of the party's founders, and Francisco de la Torre, MP and economist, also announced that they would leave the party due to its stances against the PSOE and inclination to alliances with the far right.[146][147]

This crisis came after President of FranceEmmanuel Macron's government sent a warning to Citizens, with which hisEn Marche!party shares membership of a group in the EU Parliament, over its willingness to work with the far right.[148]

Funding

[edit]

A credit was requested for party funding in 2015 toBanco Popular Español,up to 2017 anIBEX 35member.[149][clarification needed]

In 2017, theCourt of Auditfound irregularities in the accounting books of several political groups, Citizens among them. In respect of Citizens, the irregularities included illegal expenses for advertising on local television in 2015.[150][151]

Cs memberJorge Solerappeared in December 2017 on theTV3debatePreguntes Freqüents,during which journalistBeatriz Talegón[es;ca]addressed him about the 2.1 million euros spent by Cs in the21-DCatalan election campaign—higher than the budget spent by any other party on that election. Talegón inquired about the sources of this funding. Soler replied that this ample budget could be ascribed to the austerity of their party.[152]

European representation

[edit]

In theNinth European Parliament,Ciudadanos sat in theRenew Europegroup with six MEPs.[153][154][155][156][157][158]

Electoral performance

[edit]

Cortes Generales

[edit]
Cortes Generales
Election Leading candidate Congress Senate Government
Votes % Seats +/– Seats +/–
2008 Albert Rivera 46,313 0.18 (#13)
0 / 350
0
0 / 208
0 No seats
2015 3,514,528 13.94 (#4)
40 / 350
40
0 / 208
0 Snap election
2016 3,141,570 13.06 (#4)
32 / 350
8
0 / 208
0 Opposition
Apr. 2019 4,155,665 15.87 (#3)
57 / 350
25
4 / 208
4 Snap election
Nov. 2019 1,650,318 6.80 (#5)
10 / 350
47
0 / 208
4 Opposition
2023 Did not contest
0 / 350
10
0 / 208
0 No seats

European Parliament

[edit]
European Parliament
Election Leading candidate Votes % Seats +/–
2009 Miguel Durán WithinLibertas
0 / 54
New
2014 Javier Nart 497,146 3.16 (#8)
2 / 54
2
2019 Luis Garicano 2,731,825 12.18 (#3)
8 / 59
6
2024 Jordi Cañas 121,031 0.69 (#11)
0 / 61
8

Regional parliaments

[edit]
Region Election Votes % Seats +/– Government
Andalusia 2022 121,567 3.30 (#6)
0 / 109
21 No seats
Aragon 2023 8,595 1.28 (#9)
0 / 67
12 No seats
Asturias 2023 4,774 0.92 (#8)
0 / 45
5 No seats
Balearic Islands 2023 6,035 1.35 (#8)
0 / 59
5 No seats
Basque Country 2024 Did not contest
0 / 75
2 No seats
Canary Islands 2023 3,409 0.39 (#12)
0 / 70
2 No seats
Cantabria 2023 7,527 2.32 (#6)
0 / 35
3 No seats
Castile and León 2022 54,721 4.50 (#5)
1 / 81
11 Opposition
Castilla–La Mancha 2023 10,885 1.00 (#5)
0 / 33
4 No seats
Catalonia 2024 22,481 0.72 (#10)
0 / 135
6 No seats
Ceuta 2023 236 0.69 (#6)
0 / 25
0 No seats
Extremadura 2023 5,463 0.89 (#6)
0 / 65
7 No seats
Galicia 2024 Did not contest
0 / 75
0 No seats
La Rioja 2023 1,473 0.88 (#7)
0 / 33
4 No seats
Madrid 2023 52,394 1.56 (#6)
0 / 136
0 No seats
Melilla 2023 Did not contest
0 / 25
1 No seats
Murcia 2023 10,234 1.53 /#6)
0 / 45
6 No seats
Navarre 2023 1,209 0.38 (#10)
0 / 50
3 No seats
Valencian Community 2023 36,146 1.50 (#6)
0 / 99
18 No seats

Results timeline

[edit]
Year Spain
ES
European Union
EU
Andalusia
AN
Aragon
AR
Asturias
AS
Canary Islands
CN
Cantabria
CB
Castilla–La Mancha
CM
Castile and León
CL
Catalonia
CT
Ceuta
CE
Extremadura
EX
Galicia (Spain)
GL
Balearic Islands
IB

RI
Community of Madrid
MD
Melilla
ML
Region of Murcia
MC
Navarre
NC
Basque Country (autonomous community)
PV
Valencian Community
CV
2006 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 3.1 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
2007
2008 0.2 0.1
2009 [a]
2010 3.4
2011 N/A 0.2 0.2
2012 N/A 7.6
2013
2014 3.2
2015 13.9 9.2 9.4 7.1 5.9 6.9 8.6 10.3 17.9 6.0 4.4 5.9 10.4 12.2 6.8 12.6 3.0 12.5
2016 13.1 3.4 2.0
2017 25.4
2018 18.3
2019 15.9 12.2 16.7 14.0 7.4 7.9 11.4 14.9 4.5 11.1 9.9 11.5 19.5 5.6 12.0 [b] 17.7
6.8
2020 0.8 [c]
2021 5.6 3.6
2022 3.3 4.5
2023 N/A 1.3 0.9 0.4 2.3 1.0 0.7 0.9 1.4 0.9 1.6 N/A 1.5 0.4 1.5
2024 0.7 0.7 N/A N/A
Year Spain
ES
European Union
EU
Andalusia
AN
Aragon
AR
Asturias
AS
Canary Islands
CN
Cantabria
CB
Castilla–La Mancha
CM
Castile and León
CL
Catalonia
CT
Ceuta
CE
Extremadura
EX
Galicia (Spain)
GL
Balearic Islands
IB

RI
Community of Madrid
MD
Melilla
ML
Region of Murcia
MC
Navarre
NC
Basque Country (autonomous community)
PV
Valencian Community
CV

Boldindicates best result to date.
To be decided
Present in legislature (in opposition)
Junior coalition partner
Senior coalition partner

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"'Yo sigo siendo afiliado de Ciudadanos'".15 October 2023.
  2. ^"Parties and Elections in Europe".parties-and-elections.eu.
  3. ^"Spaniens Liberale ziehen in den Kampf gegen die Regierung".Die Welt.12 March 2015 – via welt.de.
  4. ^"La nueva hoja de ruta de Ciudadanos:" enfatizar "la etiqueta" liberal "y desplazar la de" centro "".12 May 2021.
  5. ^"Lessons from Ciudadanos: How liberal parties struggle to deal with the radical-right".5 July 2019.
  6. ^"Elections in Spain 2019: the progressive majority wins".5 October 2019.
  7. ^[2][3][4][5][6]
  8. ^abAuzias & Labourdette 2014,p. 31: «Enfin, Ciutadans (C's), avec 9 députés au parlement, s'oppose aux nationalistes et défend le modèle de l'Etat des autonomies».
  9. ^Georgia Mavrodi; Michalis Moutselos (2017)."Is Spain Becoming a Country of Emigration Again? Data Evidence and Public Responses".In Jean-Michel Lafleur; Mikolaj Stanek (eds.).South-North Migration of EU Citizens in Times of Crisis.Springer. p. 93.ISBN978-3-319-39763-4.
  10. ^Bonnie N. Field; Caroline Gray (2019)."The Spanish Parliament in Context".In Jorge M. Fernandes; Cristina Leston-Bandeira (eds.).The Iberian Legislatures in Comparative Perspective.Taylor & Francis. p. 53.ISBN978-1-351-06520-7.
  11. ^Marta Fraile; Enrique Henández (2020)."Determinants of Voting Behaviour".In Diego Muro; Ignacio Lago (eds.).The Oxford Handbook of Spanish Politics.Oxford University Press. p. 383.ISBN978-0-19-882693-4.Ciudadanos.. petes with the PP in the centre-right of the ideological continuum.
  12. ^ab"Manual de Estilo"(PDF).15 January 2023.Retrieved19 April2023.
  13. ^abNordsieck, Wolfram (2019)."Spain".Parties and Elections in Europe.Retrieved28 April2019.
  14. ^Barcelona (12 March 2015)."Spaniens Liberale ziehen in den Kampf gegen die Regierung".DIE WELT.Retrieved18 April2021.
  15. ^"La nueva hoja de ruta de Ciudadanos:" enfatizar "la etiqueta" liberal "y desplazar la de" centro "".ELMUNDO(in Spanish). 12 May 2021.Retrieved22 May2021.
  16. ^"Lessons from Ciudadanos: How liberal parties struggle to deal with the radical-right".EUROPP.5 July 2019.Retrieved22 May2021.
  17. ^Office, Vera Bartolomé & Amelia Martínez Lobo, RLS Madrid Liaison (5 October 2019)."Elections in Spain 2019: the progressive majority wins – RLS Brüssel".rosalux.eu.Retrieved22 May2021.{{cite web}}:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  18. ^abdía, Salamanca RTVE al."Albert Rivera:" El nacionalismo es una ideología obsoleta "".
  19. ^ab"Albert Rivera, a los que le llaman facha:" En Cataluña, lo más progresista es facha "".cuatro.8 November 2015.Retrieved15 February2021.
  20. ^ab"Catalexit?".The Economist.Vol. January 7th-13th. 2017. p. 19.
  21. ^Ciudadanos – Partido de la Ciudadanía."Citizens' Ideario"(PDF).ciudadanos-cs.org(in Spanish). Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 22 January 2015.Retrieved27 September2016.Tercera, por el vacío de representación que existía en el espacio electoral de ultra-derecha no nacionalista
  22. ^abDiari de Terrassa (9 April 2009)."Javier González: 'Nuestro objetivo es impulsar una tercera vía política en España".ciudadanos-cs.org(in Spanish).Retrieved27 September2016.Somos postnacionalistas y no queremos luchar contra un nacionalismo con otro. Vamos sin banderas, casi desnudos, abriendo camino sin fronteras desde la Constitución
  23. ^abAnduiza, Eva; Guinjoan, Marc; Rico, Guillem (2018)."Economic Crisis, Populist Attitudes, and the Birth of Podemos in Spain".In Giugni, Marco; Grasso, Maria T. (eds.).Citizens and the Crisis: Experiences, Perceptions, and Responses to the Great Recession in Europe.Springer. p. 67.ISBN978-3-319-68960-9.
  24. ^ab"Nacionalismo y cinismo".Ara.cat. 21 November 2017.Retrieved21 May2018.
  25. ^ab"¿Adónde va el nacionalismo español?".Eldiario.es. 20 February 2018.Retrieved21 May2018.
  26. ^Caroline Close (2019)."The liberal party family ideology: Distinct, but diverse".In Close, Caroline; van Haute, Emilie (eds.).Liberal Parties in Europe.Routledge.pp. 338–339.ISBN9781351245487.
  27. ^Marco Damiani (2020).Populist Radical Left Parties in Western Europe: Equality and Sovereignty.Taylor & Francis. p. 97.ISBN978-1-351-02264-4.
  28. ^Leonardo Morlino; Francesco Raniolo (2017).The Impact of the Economic Crisis on South European Democracies.Springer. p. 50.ISBN978-3-319-52371-2.
  29. ^Niall Walsh (2 January 2018)."Catalonia: The rise of Ciudadanos".Retrieved2 February2018.
  30. ^"Albert Rivera, la cara visible de Ciutadans".laSexta. 1 December 2013. Archived fromthe originalon 4 March 2016.Retrieved23 June2015.Somos un partido de tradición socialdemócrata y liberal-progresista
  31. ^Mateo, Juan José (4 February 2017)."Ciudadanos elimina la socialdemocracia de su ideario y abraza el liberalismo progresista".El País.
  32. ^Juliá, Santos(20 April 2019)."Derechas".El País.
  33. ^Torres, Diego (3 May 2018)."All-out war on the Spanish right".Politico.
  34. ^"Spain's open election highlights its polarisation problem".Financial Times.20 April 2019.
  35. ^Jones, Sam (3 December 2018)."Far-right success in Andalucía reflects Spain's fragmented politics".The Guardian.
  36. ^"Numerosos comentarios por cómo define a Ciudadanos un periódico francés".El HuffPost.21 April 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  37. ^Gasquez, Antoine (20 April 2018)."Catalogne: le parti d'extrême-droite Ciudadanos propose à Manuel Valls d'être candidat à Barcelone".Archived fromthe originalon 10 June 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  38. ^"Ciudadanos: del centro a la derecha según el CIS".El Español.5 February 2016.Retrieved15 February2021.
  39. ^"El 28A deriva en una batalla campal entre las tres derechas a menos de un mes de otras elecciones".eldiario.es(in Spanish). 3 May 2019.Retrieved4 May2019.
  40. ^"Lessons from Ciudadanos: How liberal parties struggle to deal with the radical-right".EUROPP.5 July 2019.Retrieved22 July2023.
  41. ^"Ciudadanos in crisis: How Spain's center couldn't hold".Politico.26 April 2021.
  42. ^"Ciudadanos anuncia que no concurrirá a las elecciones generales del 23J".ABC.30 May 2023.
  43. ^Marcos López, Minerva (28 May 2023)."Ciudadanos certifica su casi total extinción de las instituciones tras su debacle en las municipales y autonómicas"[Citizens certifies its near total extinction from institutions of power after its debacle in the municipal and autonomous community elections].Cadena SER.Retrieved29 May2023.
  44. ^ab"Resultados provisionales - Catalunya".resultats.eleccionsparlament.cat(in Spanish).Government of Catalonia.12 May 2024.Retrieved13 May2024.
  45. ^"For a new political party in Catalonia"(PDF).Ciutadans de Catalunya.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 27 February 2008.Retrieved6 February2024.
  46. ^"elmundo.es - Yo vi a los fascistas pegar a los Ciutadans".elmundo.es.Retrieved5 February2024.
  47. ^"Al nacionalismo por el terror / EL MUNDO".2 February 2007. Archived fromthe originalon 2 February 2007.Retrieved5 February2024.
  48. ^"Second Manifesto of Ciutadans de Catalunya".Ciutadans de Catalunya.Archived fromthe originalon 16 December 2011.
  49. ^"Official Gazette"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 1 July 2014.Retrieved3 July2014.
  50. ^Abellán, Lucía (27 May 2019)."Socialist Party wins the European elections in Spain".El País.Retrieved15 February2021.
  51. ^"Ciudadanos, Nowoczesna, Naša stranka and Civic Position join ALDE Party | ALDE Party".Archived fromthe originalon 6 October 2016.Retrieved15 July2016.
  52. ^García de Blas, Elsa (11 November 2019)."Ciudadanos leader Albert Rivera quits after election debacle".El País.ISSN1134-6582.Retrieved14 November2019.
  53. ^"Murcia government faces unexpected vote of no confidence and new female president".Murcia Today.10 March 2021.
  54. ^""Political earthquake" as PP and Cs party move apart ".SUR.12 March 2021.
  55. ^"Ciudadanos expulsa a Edmundo Bal y a Francisco Igea"[Citizens expel Edmundo Bal and Francisco Igea].Público(in Spanish). 28 September 2023.Retrieved9 April2024.
  56. ^García de Blas, Elsa (18 January 2020)."La nueva estrategia de Ciudadanos: presentarse como el" centro liberal progresista "contra los populismos".El País.
  57. ^Delgado Ramos, David (2011)."Elecciones al Parlament 2010: fin de ciclo en Cataluña"(PDF).Revista de Derecho Político(in Spanish).80.UNED.Retrieved28 May2015.El incremento se produjo a costa del PSC, donde en algunos de sus tradicionales «feudos» su electorado optó por votar a Ciutadans como opción «españolista» y de centro-izquierda más adecuada para no votar a su otra opción, el Partido Popular, más alejada ideológicamente de sus postulados.[permanent dead link]
  58. ^Gutiérrez Díez, José Manuel (January 2014)."A case of misreckoning: the Catalan election of 2012"(PDF).BORDA: Working Papers (University of Salamanca).Retrieved8 August2015.Cs (Ciudadanos). Catalan party (in practice), without reference in Spain. Centre-left
  59. ^Catalan vote sends mixed messages-Economist Intelligence Unit
  60. ^Díez, Anabel (9 February 2015)."Latest poll shows support for new party Podemos leveling out".El País.Retrieved5 May2015.new left-wing party Podemos and the center-left non-nationalist Catalan formation Ciudadanos are faring well in the polls
  61. ^(in Spanish)«Cs Ciudadanos Centro-izquierda»,Ayuntamiento de Barcelona
  62. ^Ciutadans ja es veu amb grup parlamentari propi al nou ParlamentArchived18 May 2015 at theWayback Machine-Directe!cat
  63. ^"Spanish politics: Socialists attempt to end political impasse by forming coalition with centrist Ciudadanos party".The Independent.24 February 2016.Spain's Socialists have taken a first step towards ending weeks of political paralysis by joining by the centrist Ciudadanos party in a bid to form a new coalition government.
  64. ^Stothard, Michael (6 February 2018)."Spain's centrist pro-unity party gains from Catalan chaos".Financial Times.
  65. ^"Spain's centrist Ciudadanos are on the march".The Economist.10 February 2018.His party was formed by disillusioned Catalan Socialists who disliked temporising with nationalists. Last year Mr Rivera repositioned it as a centrist, progressive liberal party.
  66. ^Castillo, Jésus (18 March 2015)."Spain: Podemos, or how to square a circle".Flash Economics, Economic Research(243). Natixis: 2.ISSN2117-9387.Retrieved30 January2016.C's - Ciudadanos - Partido de la Ciudadanía (Citizens - Party of the Citizenry). Creation: 2006. Positioning: Republican centre
  67. ^EUROPA PRESS (20 December 2015)."Rivera: Ciudadanos ha demostrado que" el centro político existe "y será" fundamental en la nueva Transición "".Navarra News. Archived fromthe originalon 22 December 2015.Retrieved13 April2016.
  68. ^RAPHAEL MINDER (2 December 2015)."Citizens made his way from the center and shakes to the political establishment in Spain".The New York Times.Retrieved13 April2016.
  69. ^Ashifa Kassam (10 December 2015)."Centre party Ciudadanos throws Spanish election results into question".The Guardian.Retrieved13 April2016.
  70. ^Medda-Windischer & Carlà 2015,p. 178: «It should be said that not all political parties and social entities signed the Agreement: the People's Party (center-right) andCiutadans(center-right, recently-created pro-Spanish party in the Catalan Parliament) rejected the Agreement on the basis that it had been conceived in a clearly nationalist fashion, whereas the NGO SOS-Racisme and the Trade UnionCommissions Obreresconsidered the document not progressive enough».
  71. ^Ancelovici, Dufour & Nez 2016,p. 86: «The voters have been turning to either Podemos, a new radical left-wing party that grew out of the Indignados movement, or to Ciudadanos, a new center-right party that originated in Catalonia but has mobilized more broadly in recent years».
  72. ^Ferrán & Hilbink 2016,p. 144: «Ciudadanos is a center-right political party launched in Catalonia in 2006 by a group of self-styled intellectuals (who had published a “manifesto” in 2005) that extended across Spain after the Catalan elections of 2012».
  73. ^Butler 2016,p. 24: «On the centre-right of the political continuum, the Ciudadanos ('Citizens') party had less impact in the Basque Country or Navarre».
  74. ^Cohen & Muñoz 2016,p. 6: «A center-right party in Spain also emerged, which is called Ciudadanos ( “Citizens” ), whose base is primarily young and urban and whose focus for addressing income disparity and unemployment is by concentrating on growing the innovation economy in cities throughout the country».
  75. ^After Syriza: What's next for Spain?,Eastminster
  76. ^Protesters march against austerity measures in Madrid,The Guardian
  77. ^Buck, Tobias (24 February 2015)."Rajoy promises jobs and growth as fringe parties gain ground".Financial Times.Retrieved11 April2015.On the center-right, Ciudadanos is winning backing from former supporters of the PP, suggesting the ruling party's stranglehold on the conservative camp is drawing to an end
  78. ^Triviño Salazar, Juan Carlos (2014)."Immigrant Organizations and the Politicization of Cultural Diversity in the City"(PDF).European University Institute-Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies.Retrieved2 January2016.Party: Ciutadans (Cs) (Citizens). Left/right cleavage: Centre-right{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)
  79. ^Gómez Fortes, Braulio; Urquizu, Ignacio (23 September 2015)."Political Corruption and the End of two-party system after the May 2015 Spanish Regional Elections".Regional and Federal Studies.25(4). Routledge: 379–389.doi:10.1080/13597566.2015.1083013.ISSN1743-9434.S2CID153736868.Retrieved2 January2016.Yet the real change that makes these elections so groundbreaking has been the emergence of two change that makes these elections so groundbreaking has been the emergence of two new political forces in all the regional parliaments—one leftist party, Podemos, and one centre-right party, Ciudadanos—which have accounted for 20% of the regional vote and proved decisive in forming regional governments in the 17 autonomous communities, whether via coalition pacts, investiture agreements or legislative pacts
  80. ^"Spanish voters head back to polls in bid to break deadlock".bbc.co.uk.BBC News.26 June 2016.Retrieved26 June2016.The centre-right, pro-business party Ciudadanos (Citizens) is forecast to take fourth place.
  81. ^Marcos Lema (16 February 2014)."Juan Carlos Girauta: "Entre UPyD, Ciutadans y VOX no encuentro las diferencias"".
  82. ^Finchelstein, Federico(28 July 2019)."Nacionalismos transatlánticos".Clarín.
  83. ^(in Spanish)«Cs es un partido progresista y constitucionalista»,El País
  84. ^Rivera: "Hemos visto documentos que demuestran que CiU se ha estado llevando una parte de las comisiones de obras en Cataluña",Crónica Global
  85. ^Terry, Chris (20 May 2014)."Citizens – Party of the Citizenship (C's)".The Democratic Society.Archived fromthe originalon 24 December 2019.Retrieved24 December2019.
  86. ^(in Spanish)Ciutadans se divide tras aprobar acudir a las europeas con la coalición derechista Libertas,RTVE
  87. ^Albert Rivera: "Si un día la Monarquía no sirve, nosotros decidiremos",El Periódico
  88. ^Albert Rivera, president de Ciutadans, proposa un debat sobre monarquia o república,CCMA
  89. ^Albert Rivera: 'Sigo soltero',El Mundo
  90. ^"Pro-Spain Ciutadans group demands Mas step down as regional premier".El País.26 November 2012.Retrieved22 May2013.
  91. ^Lluís Orriols (13 August 2013)."Ciutadans, ¿un partido de izquierdas o de derechas?".El País(in Spanish).Retrieved28 February2014.
  92. ^(in Spanish)[1],Diario Crítico
  93. ^"City Council of Barcelona:" Catalan will continue to be the Council's working language "".City Council of Barcelona. Archived fromthe originalon 22 May 2014.Retrieved22 May2013.
  94. ^ab"Albert Rivera, Ciutadans candidate:" An independent Catalonia would fail "".20 minutos(in Spanish). 15 November 2012.Retrieved22 May2013.
  95. ^"Ciudadanos - Modelo de estado".Ciudadanos-cs.org. Archived fromthe originalon 15 March 2015.Retrieved10 July2014.
  96. ^(in Spanish)Futuro incierto en País Vasco y Navarra para Podemos, UPyD y Ciudadanos: ¿quitarán los fueros?Archived20 February 2015 at theWayback Machine-Vozpópuli
  97. ^(in Spanish)Ciutadans propone revisar el cupo vasco y navarro reformando la ConstituciónArchived20 February 2015 at theWayback Machine-Lainformación
  98. ^"Agreden al periodista Arcadi Espada en un acto de Ciutadans de Catalunya en Girona contra el Estatut".elmundo.es.Retrieved27 September2015.
  99. ^20Minutos (21 September 2007)."El presidente de Ciutadans, amenazado de muerte por" luchar contra el nacionalismo "".20minutos.es - Últimas Noticias.Retrieved27 September2015.{{cite web}}:CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  100. ^"Orbyt - El Mundo".elmundo.es.Retrieved27 September2015.
  101. ^Ediciones El País (21 September 2007)."El presidente de Ciutadans denuncia haber recibido amenazas de muerte".El País.Retrieved27 September2015.
  102. ^"Albert Rivera denuncia amenazas de muerte para que deje su política" contra el nacionalismo "- Lavanguardia.es – Noticias, actualidad, última hora en Cataluña y España".Archived fromthe originalon 27 January 2008.Retrieved10 January2008.
  103. ^Europa Press (16 June 2009)."Los acusados de amenazar a Rivera aceptan un año y diez meses de cárcel".europapress.es.Retrieved27 September2015.
  104. ^"Agressions ultres a Barcelona després de la manifestació espanyolista".VilaWeb.Retrieved15 February2021.
  105. ^"Identificadas seis personas por agresiones en manifestaciones españolistas".La Vanguardia.16 November 2017.Retrieved15 February2021.
  106. ^Catalunya, elDiario es (27 October 2017)."Ultras por la unidad de España agreden a varias personas y atacan la sede de Catalunya Ràdio".ElDiario.es.Retrieved15 February2021.
  107. ^"Agresiones y presencia de extrema derecha en la concentración de Cs contra la violencia".ElNacional.cat.29 August 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  108. ^"Representantes de PP, Ciudadanos y VOX encabezan la manifestación de Sociedad Civil Catalana en favor del 12 de Octubre".LaSexta.12 October 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  109. ^Ariztegi, Miguel M. (4 November 2018)."Humo, tensión, estiércol y campanas: rechazo en las calles de Alsasua al acto de Ciudadanos con PP y Vox".ElDiario.es.Retrieved15 February2021.
  110. ^"Tensió i agressions en la concentració de Ciutadans contra els llaços grocs".CCMA.29 August 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  111. ^"Identificado el autor de la agresión a un cámara de Telemadrid en Barcelona".12 November 2018.
  112. ^"El cóctel que provocó la agresión al cámara de TeleMadrid".La Vanguardia.30 August 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  113. ^"Ciudadanos".ciudadanos-cs.org.Archived fromthe originalon 15 March 2015.Retrieved27 September2015.
  114. ^ab"Ciudadanos".ciudadanos-cs.org.Archived fromthe originalon 17 February 2015.Retrieved27 September2015.
  115. ^@Albert_Rivera (20 May 2018)."Recorriendo España yo no veo 'rojos' y 'azules', veo españoles; no veo jóvenes y mayores, veo españoles; no veo creyentes y agnósticos, veo españoles. Vamos a unirnos para recuperar el orgullo de pertenecer a esta gran nación. #EspañaCiudadana"(Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  116. ^"Susto de las redes con Albert Rivera:" Ha hecho un discurso peligrosísimo que sentó las bases de cosas espantosas el siglo pasado "".Publico.es. 20 May 2018.Retrieved21 May2018.
  117. ^Mundinteractivos."Albert Rivera estuvo afiliado en el PP hasta tres meses antes de presidir Ciutadans".elmundo.es.Retrieved27 September2015.
  118. ^""El presidente de Ciutadans militó en el PP hasta abril de 2006" (The president of Ciutadans was a PP member until April 2006) ".El País.22 November 2006.Retrieved23 November2006.
  119. ^"Ciutadans - Partido de la Ciudadanía - Comunicats".ciutadans-ciudadanos.Archived fromthe originalon 28 September 2007.Retrieved27 September2015.
  120. ^"Untitled Document".elmundo.es.Retrieved27 September2015.
  121. ^"liberalismo.org: La Hora de Todos: Juan Carlos Girauta se explica".liberalismo.org.
  122. ^abc (22 February 2014)."Nart, Girauta y Punset, candidatos de Ciudadanos a las elecciones europeas".ABC.es.Retrieved27 September2015.
  123. ^"Juan Carlos Girauta - El presidente y el gobierno, antisemitas".21 July 2006.
  124. ^Girauta, Juan Carlos (26 April 2005)."¿Quién era realmente Salvador Allende? (I)".Libertad Digital.Retrieved15 February2021.
  125. ^Girauta, Juan Carlos (3 May 2005)."¿Quién era realmente Salvador Allende? (y II)".Libertad Digital.Retrieved15 February2021.
  126. ^"Victor Farías and his phobia against Salvador Allende"./ lanacion.cl. Archived fromthe originalon 11 June 2016.Retrieved27 May2016.
  127. ^"Salvador Allende:Mental Hygiene and Delinquency(Doctoral Thesis) "(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 4 March 2016.Retrieved27 May2016.
  128. ^(in Spanish)Extractsfrom the suit filed by the Fundación Salvador Allende.
  129. ^Guzmán, Cecilia (14 May 2015)."Admirador de Hitler, falangista y candidato de Ciudadanos en Gijón".
  130. ^"Otros dos simpatizantes de Falange Española de las JONS se 'cuelan' en las listas de Ciudadanos".El Confidencial.13 May 2015.Retrieved15 February2021.
  131. ^"Hooded unionists remove yellow crosses at Barcelona beach, injuring five".In English.21 May 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  132. ^"Un enfrontament entre independentistes i unionistes a Canet de Mar acaba amb una trentena d'identificats i cinc ferits".La Vanguardia.21 May 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  133. ^"C's nega que hi hagués militants del partit entre els encaputxats a Canet de Mar".Capgròs.Retrieved15 February2021.
  134. ^"Roger Torrent suspende el pleno del Parlament después de que Carrizosa retire un lazo amarillo".La Vanguardia.25 May 2018.Retrieved15 February2021.
  135. ^"Desnudo para presidir la Generalitat".El País.16 September 2006.Retrieved10 July2014.
  136. ^"El partido Ciutadans de Catalunya presenta desnudo a su candidato a las autonómicas".elmundo.es.Retrieved10 July2014.
  137. ^Robles, Fermín (9 October 2008)."El CAC pide que se regule la publicidad institucional".El País.Retrieved10 July2014.
  138. ^"Albert Rivera acusa a Robles y Domingo de buscar el fracaso de Ciutadans".elmundo.es.Retrieved10 July2014.
  139. ^"Dos de los tres diputados de Ciutadans se unen para destronar a Rivera".El País.15 May 2009.Retrieved10 July2014.
  140. ^"Miguel Durán, cabeza de lista de la coalición Ciudadanos-Libertas".Libertad Digital. 15 April 2009.Retrieved19 July2014.
  141. ^"Dos de los tres diputados de Ciutadans se unen para destronar a Rivera".El País.15 May 2009.Retrieved10 July2014.
  142. ^Garriga, Josep (19 May 2009)."Ciutadans acusa a Rosa Díez de azuzar la revuelta contra Rivera".El País.Retrieved10 July2014.
  143. ^Jones, Sam (24 June 2019)."Spain's Citizens party under pressure over far-right deals".The Guardian.Retrieved15 February2021– via theguardian.
  144. ^"Javier Nart sigue los pasos de Toni Roldán y dimite de la ejecutiva de Ciudadanos".El Confidencial(in Spanish). 24 June 2019.
  145. ^"Juan Vázquez, candidato de Cs a la Presidencia de Asturias se suma a las dimisiones de Roldán y Javier Nart".europapress.es(in Spanish). 24 June 2019.
  146. ^García de Blas, Elsa (19 July 2019)."Francesc de Carreras:" Ciudadanos ha evolucionado hacia un nacionalismo español contrario a su ideario "".El País(in Spanish).ISSN1134-6582.Retrieved19 July2019.
  147. ^García de Blas, Elsa (26 July 2019)."Dimite de la dirección de Ciudadanos el diputado Francisco de la Torre por la estrategia de Albert Rivera".El País(in Spanish).Retrieved28 July2019.
  148. ^Garcia Valdivia, Ana (19 June 2019)."Ciudadanos: Spanish Liberal Party Alliance With Far-Right Provokes Macron's Government Rejection".Forbes.Retrieved1 July2019.
  149. ^"¿Quién financia a Ciudadanos? El partido de Rivera gastó 250.000 euros en Andalucía".29 March 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 15 December 2017.Retrieved27 May2018.
  150. ^"El Tribunal de Cuentas plantea reducir la subvención electoral a Ciudadanos por realizar gastos no autorizados en 2015".publico.es.12 June 2017.Retrieved15 February2021.
  151. ^"El Tribunal de Cuentas rechaza la contabilidad de Ciudadanos".30 December 2017.
  152. ^"Soler explains the honesty and transparency of Citizens".YouTube.24 December 2017.Archivedfrom the original on 13 December 2021.
  153. ^"Home | José Ramón BAUZÁ DÍAZ | MEPs | European Parliament".europarl.europa.eu.16 November 1970.Retrieved6 April2021.
  154. ^"Home | Jordi CAÑAS | MEPs | European Parliament".europarl.europa.eu.12 December 1969.Retrieved6 April2021.
  155. ^"Home | Luis GARICANO | MEPs | European Parliament".europarl.europa.eu.Retrieved6 April2021.
  156. ^"Home | María Soraya RODRÍGUEZ RAMOS | MEPs | European Parliament".europarl.europa.eu.Retrieved6 April2021.
  157. ^"Home | Susana SOLÍS PÉREZ | MEPs | European Parliament".europarl.europa.eu.Retrieved6 April2021.
  158. ^"Home | Adrián VÁZQUEZ LÁZARA | MEPs | European Parliament".europarl.europa.eu.5 May 1982.Retrieved6 April2021.

Bibliography

[edit]
[edit]

Media related toCiudadanos-Partido de la Ciudadaníaat Wikimedia Commons