Hungarian Workers' Party

For the political party in the 1920s, see Hungarian Workers' Party (defunct).
Hungarian Workers' Party
Leader Gyula Thürmer
Founded 17 December 1989
Headquarters H-1082 Budapest, VIII. Baross u. 61.
Newspaper A Szabadság
Youth wing Baloldali Front
Ideology Communism
Marxism–Leninism
Euroscepticism
Political position Far-left[1]
European affiliation Initiative of Communist and Workers' Parties
International affiliation International Meeting of Communist and Workers' Parties
European Parliament group None
Colours Red
Website
http://www.munkaspart.hu/

The Hungarian Workers' Party (Hungarian: Magyar Munkáspárt) is a communist party in Hungary led by Gyula Thürmer. Established after the fall of the communist Hungarian People's Republic, the party has yet to win a seat in the Hungarian parliament. Until May 2009 it was a member of the Party of the European Left.

History

The party was established as the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party on 17 December 1989 as a successor party of the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (MSZMP) by a small group of old MSZMP members who opposed its transformation into the Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP). In the 1990 elections it received around 3% of the national vote, the largest share for a party that failed to win a seat.[2][3]

In 1993 the party adopted the name Workers' Party, and in the same year a group of hard-liners broke away to form another Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party. The 1994 elections saw the party win a similar share of the vote, again emerging as the largest party without a seat. Despite increasing its vote share to around 4% in the 1998 elections, the party again remained seatless. The 2002 elections saw the party's vote share fall to around 2%, and for the first time since 1990, not the largest party without parliamentary representation.[2][3]

On 12 November 2005 it became the Hungarian Communist Workers' Party when a split led to the formation of the Workers' Party of Hungary 2006 led by János Fratanolo. In the 2006 elections the party received less than 0.5% of the national vote, whilst the 2010 elections saw its vote share fall to just 0.1%. On 11 May 2013 the party was renamed again, this time becoming the Hungarian Workers' Party due to a law passed the previous year banning the public use of names associated with "authoritarian regimes of the 20th century."[4] In the 2014 parliamentary election, the party received 0.56% of the votes, again the largest party without parliamentary seats.

Ideology

The party opposed Hungary joining NATO. In 1996 the party organised a countrywide collection of signatures for a referendum on NATO membership. This HCWP-led referendum drive failed, although another referendum on NATO membership was held in 1997, which resulted in a vote in favour. The party continues to oppose the country's participation in NATO and other military organisations. It campaigns to have all Hungarian forces returned from abroad and to reduce the military budget. The party opposed Hungary's participation in the "democratisation" program that has previously targeted the governments of Serbia and Belarus and strongly opposed NATO campaigns in Yugoslavia against Slobodan Milošević and the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Other foreign policies are in favour of

Election results

For the Hungarian Parliament:

Elections Number of votes
(1st round)
Percentage of votes
(1st round)
Number of votes
(2nd round)
Percentage of votes
(2nd round)
Number of seats Percentage of seats Role played in Parliament
1990 180,889 3,68% 8 640 0,25% extra-parliamentary
1994 172,117 3,19% 6 268 0,15% extra-parliamentary
1998 183,064 4,08% 10 861 2,25% extra-parliamentary
2002 121,503 2,16% extra-parliamentary
2006 21,955 0,41% extra-parliamentary
2010 5,606 0,11% extra-parliamentary
2014 27,670 0,58% N/A N/A extra-parliamentary

For the European Parliament:

Elections Number of votes Percentage of votes Number of seats Group in the European Parliament Subgroup in the European Parliament
2004 56,221 1,83% 0
2009 27,829 0,96% 0

References

  1. Jeffries, Ian (2002), Eastern Europe at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century: A guide to the economies in transition, Routledge, p. 212
  2. 1 2 Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p924 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  3. 1 2 Nohlen & Stöver, p932
  4. "Hungarian CWP, New name of the Hungarian CWP". Solidnet. 14 May 2013. Retrieved May 18, 2013.

External links

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