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Latvian political party From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Latvian Social Democratic Workers' Party (Latvian: Latvijas Sociāldemokrātiskā strādnieku partija, LSDSP) is a social-democratic[2] political party in Latvia and the second oldest existing Latvian political party after the Latvian Farmers' Union. It is currently represented with two seats in the parliament of Latvia as a part of the Union of Greens and Farmers alliance after an absence of 20 years. The party tends to hold a less Russophilic view than fellow social-democratic party "Harmony".[citation needed]
This article needs to be updated. (February 2023) |
Latvian Social Democratic Workers' Party Latvijas Sociāldemokrātiskā Strādnieku Partija | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | LSDSP |
Leader | Jānis Dinevičs |
Founder | Pauls Kalniņš (1918) Valdis Šteins (1989) |
Founded | 17 June 1918 2 December 1989 (refoundation) |
Banned | 15 May 1934 |
Split from | Social-Democracy of the Latvian Territory |
Headquarters | Riga, Lāčplēša iela 60, LV-1011 |
Youth wing | Social Democratic Youth Union |
Membership (2017) | 633[1] |
Ideology | Social democracy[2] |
Political position | Centre-left |
National affiliation | Union of Greens and Farmers[3] |
European affiliation | Party of European Socialists (observer)[4] |
International affiliation | Socialist International (1994–2014) |
Colours | Maroon Green |
Slogan | «Give a hand, together we will succeed!» (Latvian: «Sniedz roku, kopā mums izdosies!») |
Saeima | 2 / 100 |
European Parliament | 0 / 8 |
Website | |
lsdsp.lv | |
The Latvian Social Democratic Workers' Party was founded on 17 June 1918, by Menshevik elements who had been expelled from the Social Democracy of the Latvian Territory in 1915. Once Latvia became independent, LSDSP was one of the two most influential political parties (along with the Latvian Farmers' Union). LSDSP held 57 out of 150 seats in the 1920 Constitutional Assembly (Satversmes Sapulce). It won the most seats in each of four parliamentary elections of that period (31 out of 100 in 1922, 33 in 1925, 26 in 1928 and 21 in 1931). The leader of the LSDSP, Pauls Kalniņš, was speaker of the Latvian parliament from 1925 to 1934.
The party itself, however, would often be in opposition because of many smaller right-wing parties forming coalition governments, typically led by the Latvian Farmers' Union.
The party was a member of the Labour and Socialist International between 1923 and 1940,[5] and was admitted into the modern Socialist International in 1994.[6]
The LSDSP was banned after the 1934 coup by Kārlis Ulmanis, together with all other political parties. Around 320 prominent members were briefly interned in the Liepāja Concentration Camp and then released. After the coup, the party loosely merged with the Latvian Communist Party from 1937 to 1940 as the Socialist Workers and Peasants Party of Latvia and went underground, only to re-emerge briefly after the Soviet occupation of 1940, nearly instantly being banned and driven underground by the Soviet and, later, Nazi occupiers. Some Social Democrats briefly collaborated with the Soviets (e.g. Ansis Rudevics ), however, many, including leaders Fricis Menders and Brūno Kalniņš, joined with other democratic politicians and called for the restoration of democratic Latvian statehood. LSDSP members, like Pauls Kalniņš and others, were involved with the Latvian Central Council resistance group.[7] When many Latvians left Latvia during World War II, the LSDSP was restored as an "exile organization", operating in Sweden since 1945, and later in other Western countries.
The Swedish-based section - the LSDSP Foreign Committee (LSDSP ĀK) - managed to secure its observer status at the Socialist International during its existence.
When Latvia became independent again in 1991, the LSDSP returned to Latvia. In the early 1990s, it struggled with internal splits. At one point, Latvia had three social democratic parties, two of them being descendants of the LSDSP, and the third being the reformed faction of the former Communist Party of Latvia (LSDP). Eventually, all three parties merged, under the name of the LSDSP.
The merged party enjoyed some success in the parliamentary election of 1998, winning 14 seats out of 100; and in local elections in 2001, when one of its members, Gundars Bojārs, became the mayor of Riga. It was less successful in the next legislative election, held on 5 October 2002, where it got only 4% of the vote, and did not make the 5% minimum to get seats. The decline of the LSDSP's popularity continued as the party lost the mayor's seat in Riga in the 2005 municipal election (keeping 7 seats in the Riga City Council but forced into the opposition). The parliamentary election of 2006 brought even more dissatisfying results for the LSDSP, as the party got 3.5% of votes and thus got no representation in the parliament once again.
For the 2010 parliamentary election, the LSDSP formed the Responsibility Alliance with smaller parties, but their performance was poor, receiving less than 1% of the vote. In January 2011, Aivars Timofejevs , who was supported by the outgoing leader Jānis Dinevičs , was elected as party chairman. He defeated Ansis Dobelis, who was more aligned with youth activist circles and later formed The Progressives.[8][9] His tenure did not improve the party's performance, with the LSDSP not running in the 2014 parliamentary election. By 2017, Dinēvičs had returned to lead the party.[10] At the 2018 election, the party received just 0,21% of the vote.
2022 brought a historic turn for the party, when on June 1 it joined the Union of Greens and Farmers (ZZS) after the Latvian Green Party had left the alliance, as the second member of ZZS is the Farmer's Union, LSDSP's main rival in the 1920s and 1930s.[11] In the 2022 elections, the party managed to get two of its members elected on the ZZS list, marking a return to the Saeima after an absence of 20 years.
In 2012, the Socialist International demoted LSDSP to observer member for not paying membership fees. The party was officially delisted from the Socialist International in December 2014. It currently maintains the status of observer member in the Party of European Socialists.
Election | Party leader | Performance | Rank | Government | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | ± pp | Seats | +/– | ||||
1920 | Andrejs Petrevics | 274,877 | 38.67 | New | 57 / 150 |
New | 1st | Opposition |
1922 | Jānis Pliekšāns | 241,947 | 30.56 | 8.11 | 30 / 100 |
27 | 1st | Coalition |
1925 | Pauls Kalniņš | 260,987 | 31.37 | 0.81 | 32 / 100 |
2 | 1st | Opposition |
1928 | 226,340 | 24.34 | 7.03 | 25 / 100 |
7 | 1st | Opposition | |
1931 | 186,000 | 19.23 | 5.11 | 21 / 100 |
4 | 1st | Opposition | |
Banned 1934-1990 under the Ulmanis regime and the Latvian SSR | ||||||||
1993 | Egils Baldzēns | 7,416 | 0.66 | New | 0 / 100 |
New | 17th | Extra-parliamentary |
1995[a] | Jānis Dinevičs | 43,599 | 4.58 | 3.92 | 0 / 100 |
0 | 10th | Extra-parliamentary |
1998[b] | Jānis Ādamsons | 123,056 | 12.88 (#5) | 8.30 | 14 / 100 |
14 | 5th | Coalition |
2002 | Juris Bojārs | 39,837 | 4.02 | 8.86 | 0 / 100 |
14 | 8th | Extra-parliamentary |
2006 | Jānis Dinevičs | 31,728 | 3.52 | 0.50 | 0 / 100 |
0 | 8th | Extra-parliamentary |
2010[c] | 6,139 | 0.65 | 2.87 | 0 / 100 |
0 | 10th | Extra-parliamentary | |
2011 | 2,531 | 0.28 | 0.37 | 0 / 100 |
0 | 11th | Extra-parliamentary | |
2014 | Aivars Timofejevs | did not contest | Extra-parliamentary | |||||
2018[d] | Jānis Dinevičs | 1,735 | 0.21 | 0.07 | 0 / 100 |
0 | 14th | Extra-parliamentary |
2022[e] | 113,676 | 12.58 | 12.37 | 2 / 100 |
2 | 2nd | Opposition (2022–2023) | |
Coalition (2023–) | ||||||||
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