Anagram & Information om | Engelska ordet CEDA
CEDA
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Exempel på hur man kan använda CEDA i en mening
- In disagreement with the accession of the right-wing party CEDA to the Spanish government in the events of 6 October, he proclaimed a new Catalan State, for which he was imprisoned between 1934 and 1936.
- A neofalangist originally from the CEDA, Serrano Suñer came to embody the most totalitarian impetus within the regime.
- In the 1933 elections, the CEDA won the most seats in the Cortes in no small part because the massive CNT membership abstained, holding true to their anarchist principles.
- He was also a member of the CEDA Council on Economic Policy and Chair of the Advisory Board, Centre for Transformative Innovation, Swinburne University of Technology.
- The matter was debated at the Spanish Cortes in October 1935, which exonerated Salazar Alonso, with the help of CEDA.
- On the death of King Abdullah, there were as many as eleven government secretariats, and all of these were abolished and reconstituted as only two, the Council of Political and Security Affairs (CPSA), headed by Deputy Crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef, and the Council for Economic and Development Affairs (CEDA), headed by the Secretary-General of the Royal Court, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who was given free rein to completely reorganize the government and cementing the power of the Sudairi faction, to which both princes belong.
- Juventudes de Acción Popular (JAP), the youth wing of CEDA, a Spanish Catholic right-wing party in the 1930s.
- The Parliament appointed the ERC leader, Francesc Macià, as president of the Generalitat and, right after the election, the institution began to pass progressive legislation in different areas, such as health, culture and civil law, however, the institution was suspended between 1934 and 1936 when the Government of Catalonia attempted to create a Catalan State within a Spanish Federal Republic after, among other reasons, the rightward turn of the Republican government by its inclusion of CEDA ministers, self-proclaimed anti-Marxist and anti-democratic totalitarian traditionalists close to the European fascists, and the rejection by the Republican Court of Constitutional Guarantees (Constitutional Court of that time) of the emancipatory Crop Contracts Law land reform bill passed by the Parliament of Catalonia.
- During the February 1936 Spanish general election, the CEDA formed the largest part of the National Front coalition, which also included Alfonsine monarchists and Carlists.
- Alejandro Lerroux of the Radical Republican Party (RRP) formed a government with the support of CEDA and rolled back all major changes made under the previous administration, he also granted amnesty to General José Sanjurjo, who had attempted an unsuccessful coup in 1932.
- The Juventudes de Acción Popular (JAP) was the radicalised youth wing of the CEDA, the main Catholic party during part of the Second Spanish Republic.
- Even after the formation of CEDA the party's youth movement, Juventudes de Acción Popular (commonly known as the Greenshirts) continued to organise.
- The Spanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right's (CEDA) victory in the elections of 1933 was seen as a triumph for democratic means, and accidentalist opposition to the previous government.
- In September he toured the frontlines, hailing common Carlist-Falangist comradeship, lambasting CEDA and somewhat belittling the military.
- In early 1937 Carlism started to demonstrate agglutinatory appeal; some CEDA politicians discussed merger, a small Partido Nacionalista Español merged indeed, an independent syndicalist organization CESE joined the Carlist Obra Nacional Corporative scheme and in some regions Acción Popular and Renovación sections fused with the Carlists.
- After a brief speech by the Minister of State Augusto Barcia lamenting the death of Calvo Sotelo, the leader of the CEDA José María Gil-Robles took the floor, whose speech, according to Gabriele Ranzato, "was, for its efficiency and eloquence, his last great service to the cause of the uprising".
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