In 1940, the National Republican Party won the elections. Criticism over corruption, authoritarianism and voting fraud against the party and the results of the 1948 election in which the republican-dominated Congress overturned the elections because its candidate Calderón apparently lost because of the 1948 Civil War.[2] After that the party was banned for a while and its leaders Calderón and Picado in exile. The party would still remain relevant in the political system once democracy was restored but would only attain power in coalition with liberal forces (the party endorsed the successful candidacies of Mario Echandi and José Joaquín Trejos as part of alliances with other parties), eventually disappearing.[2]
While the party was initially associated with coffee growing oligarchs and liberal elites and supported policies favorable towards these groups, the party moved towards Catholic socialist principles and alliance with the communists in the 1940s.[3] Under the presidency of Calderón Guardia, the party "eschewed the support of the coffee oligarchy and developed a broad coalition, which included the Catholic Church and the Communist Party", and the party reoriented itself as "an instrument of the working and middle groups".[4]
References
^Carlisle, Rodney P. (2005). Encyclopedia of Politics: The Left and The Right. Vol. 1. Sage Publications, Inc. p. 74. ISBN1-4129-0409-9.