Alliance of Green Democrats

Alliance of Green Democrats
Zöld Demokraták Szövetsége
President György Droppa
Founded 3 June 2000
Dissolved 28 February 2009
Merger of ZA and SD2000
Succeeded by Green Left
Newspaper Zöld Alternatíva
Ideology Green politics
Environmentalism
Political position Centre
European affiliation European Green Party
International affiliation Global Greens
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The Alliance of Green Democrats (Hungarian: Zöld Demokraták Szövetsége; ZDSZ), was a green political party in Hungary between 2000 and 2009.

History

It was established by the merger of Green Alternative (ZA), Social Democracy 2000 Foundation (SD2000) and the Social Democrat Youth Movement (SZIM) on 3 June 2000. György Droppa (ZA) and István Podkoniczky (SD2000) were elected co-presidents, several leaving members of the Hungarian Social Democratic Party (MSZDP) had joined the newly established organization.[1] In autumn 2001, the entrepreneur faction of the party led by Károly Garabits were entirely expelled from the party by a court decision after internal party conflicts. ZDSZ joined the Centre Party for the 2002 parliamentary election, but did not gain any seats.[2] In the 2002 local elections, Droppa was the Centre's candidate for the position of Mayor of Budapest, but received only 0.59 percent of the votes and came to the fifth place.[1]

On 16 November 2003, the Green Democrats transformed itself into a party alliance by merging the Social Democratic Party of Environmentalists (KSZDP), the Party of Hungarian Women (MNP), the Hungarian Social Green Party (MSZZP), the Alliance of Greens (ZSZ) and the New Left Party (ÚBP). The Védegylet, the Clean Air Action Group and several other environmentalist NGOs rejected the integration efforts of ZDSZ. On 31 December 2004, the ZDSZ left the Centre Party. Just before the 2006 parliamentary election, several rural organizations of the party left ZDSZ to establish the Party of Greens. As a result, only one candidate run under ZDSZ banner. On 28 March 2009, ZDSZ, along with European Feminist Initiative for a Different Europe and Workers' Party of Hungary 2006, merged into the Green Left, in a reaction to the foundation of the Politics Can Be Different (LMP). Before that the ZDSZ rejected the cooperation with the LMP civilian initiative.[3]

Election results

National Assembly

Election year National Assembly Government
# of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–
2002
Centre Party
0 / 386
extra-parliamentary
2006
95
0.0 %
0 / 386
Steady 0 extra-parliamentary

References

  1. 1 2 Vida 2011, p. 469.
  2. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p. 899. ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  3. Vida 2011, p. 470.

Sources

External links

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