Somethings are wrong.
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Originally Posted by Perun
What began as a family spat got out of hand, dividing for many years the country between Conservatives and Liberals.
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As a curiosity, all the heros of the war against the troops of Napoleon, fought with the carlists. And I think is most exactly say that it was a war between Traditionalist and Liberal-Conservatives.
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Originally Posted by Perun
Pretenders to the throne
After coming to power in 1939, Franco united the Carlists with the Falange party. By the 1970s, they were again divided among Carlos-Hugo's extreme right, Tito-style autogestionary Socialists, the pro-democracy Platajunta, and supporters of Juan Carlos of Spain. At Montejurra/Jurramendi, 1977, the rightists fired on the democrats.
After the first democratic elections on June 15, 1977, they remained extra-parliamentary, obtaining only town council seats.
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Today exist 3 different carlists movements:
-The movement of Carlos-Hugo de Borbón-Parma, the Carlist Party. Socialists, marxists, and progressive demo-christians ultra-supporters of the Council Vatican II.
http://www.partidocarlista.com/
-The Carlist Traditionalist Communion. A Catholic conservative party, mostly Demo-christians.
http://www.ctcarlista.org/
-The Traditionalist Communion. The true heirs of carlism, IMO. They support Don Sixto Enrique de Borbón-Parma, brother of Carlos-Hugo, as King. They are Traditional Catholics, anti-liberals, anti-socialists, and support organization of Spain based on the traditional Fueros, and not in Liberal Constitutions.
http://www.carlismo.org/