People's Front of Iceland

People's Front
Alþýðufylkingin
Chairperson Þorvaldur Þorvaldsson [1]
Vice-chairperson Vésteinn Valgarðsson
Founded 13 January 2013 (announced)[1]
18 Feb 2013 (founded)[2]
Headquarters Hverfisgata 82, 101 Reykjavik
Ideology Anticapitalism[3]
Environmentalism[4][5]
Euroscepticism[4][6]
Pacifism[7]
Socialism[4]
Political position Far left
Colours Red
Seats in the Althing
0 / 63
Website
www.althydufylkingin.blogspot.com

People's Front of Iceland (Icelandic: Alþýðufylkingin, PFI[4]) is an anticapitalist[3] political party in Iceland founded on 18 February 2013, seeking to "... free the people from the yoke of market capitalism."[8] It is "unconditionally opposed" to Iceland's accession to the European Union[9] or NATO, believing them to be "imperialist" organizations.[4] The party founder, Þorvaldur Þorvaldsson (tl. Thorvaldur), is a self-declared communist.[10]

History

I must admit that I, personally, am somewhat responsible for the crisis. Long before it hit us, I knew as a socialist that capitalism was unsustainable and that it has a crisis built into it. This I knew, but I did not do all I possibly could have done to stage a revolution. This is my responsibility and it follows that I will not be co-dependent with capitalism, but will do my utmost to replace it with a society of equality and social justice.

Vésteinn Valgarðsson[11]

The People's Front of Iceland originated in Reykjavík. Party founder Þorvaldur Þorvaldsson organized poetry readings and other informal meetings which were attended by workers, radicalized in the aftermath of the 2008 Icelandic financial crisis.

They successfully applied for the list letter R to contest the 2013 Icelandic parliamentary election, marking their first foray into electoral politics, and subsequently submitted an official candidate list on 12 April 2013.[12] In the 2013 election they chose to only run candidates in the Reykjavík North and Reykjavík South constituencies.[13][14]

In the spring of 2014, they ran in the Reykjavik city council elections and got 219 votes but did not get a seat on the council.

In the autumn of 2016, they ran for Althing elections again, in five constituencies (out of six) and got 575 votes, or 0.3%.

Electoral results

Alþingi
Election year # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
±
2013 118 0.06
0 / 63
±0
2016 575 0.30
0 / 63
±0
Reykjavík City Council
Election year # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
±
2014 219 0.4
0 / 15
±0

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.