Английская Википедия:Czech Sovereignty
Шаблон:More citations needed Шаблон:Infobox political party
ČSSD – Czech Sovereignty of Social Democracy (Шаблон:Lang-cs), until 29 June 2023 known as Czech Sovereignty (Шаблон:Lang-cs),[1] formerly also known Free Bloc (Шаблон:Lang-cs) and Sovereignty – Jana Bobošíková Bloc (Шаблон:Lang-cs), is a small nationalist Czech political party.
History
Origins
It was formed after the break-up of the electoral alliance Suverenita – Strana zdravého rozumu between the Party of Common Sense (Strana zdravého rozumu) and Politika 21 (led by Jana Bobošíková, the Eurosceptic former MEP, elected in 2004 for the Independents).
It was formed in 2011 in Prague.[2] Since January 2014 to February 2024, its leader was the former MP of the Czech Social Democratic Party Jana Volfová.
Former Czech PM Jiří Paroubek is a member of the party since February 2024.[3] He became the chairman of the party during the same month.[4]
History of Sovereignity – Party of Common Sense
The Party of Common Sense, led by Petr Hannig, took part in the 2002 election to the Chamber of Deputies three months after its foundation, but won only 0.2% of the vote. This increased to 0.5% of the vote in 2006 election.
In 2009, the Party of Common Sense started its cooperation with Jana Bobošíková and the members of the later formed Sovereignty – Jana Bobošíková Bloc. The alliance ran in the 2009 European election under the name 'Sovereignty' and was led by Bobošíková. The list came fifth, winning 4.3% of the vote: just short of the 5% threshold for representation. The Party of Common sense changed its name to 'Sovereignty – Party of Common Sense' and took part in the 2010 election, and won 3.7% of the vote, falling short of parliamentary representation once again.
Cooperation later broke.[5]
History of the Free Bloc
The party changed its name to Free Bloc after Lubomír Volný, a MP of the Freedom and Direct Democracy party, entered the Czech Sovereignity and became its parliamentary leader. Free Bloc took part in the 2021 election, and won 1.33% of the vote, falling short of parliamentary representation.[6] In January 2022 the party changed its name back to Czech Sovereignty.[7] During this time it was described as far-right.[8][9]
The party later changed its name back to Czech Sovereignity.[10]
Election results
Chamber of Deputies
Year | Leader | Votes | Seats | Position | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | % | No. | ± | Size | |||
2021 | Lubomír Volný | 71,581 | 1.33 | Шаблон:Composition bar | Шаблон:Steady 0 | 9th | No seats |
References
External links
Шаблон:Czech political parties Шаблон:Authority control
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