Liberal Party (Greece)

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The Liberal Party (Template:Langx Script error: No such module "IPA"., literally "Party of Liberals") was a major political party in Greece during the early-to-mid 20th century. It was founded in August 1910 by Eleftherios Venizelos, winning a landslide victory in the November 1910 legislative elections. This began an era of Liberal-dominated politics, with the party winning 9 of the 12 elections between 1910 and 1933 and Venizelos serving as Prime Minister for a total of 12 years.

The party's platform was broadly modernising, liberal, social, and nationalist; a set of policies referred to as Venizelism in Greek politics. Though the party contained a social-democratic wing,[1] it became increasingly anti-communist in the 1920s. Originally ambiguous on the issue of the Greek monarchy, the party became decidedly republican following the National Schism and went on to dominate the Second Hellenic Republic. Among its most well-known members, apart from Venizelos, were Alexandros Papanastasiou, Nikolaos Plastiras, Georgios Papandreou and Konstantinos Mitsotakis.

The party struggled to gain support following the 4th of August Regime and the Second World War, before merging into the Centre Union led by Georgios Papandreou and other former Liberal Party members. Since its founding, the party used the anchor as an electoral symbol, similar to the one Venizelos had brought with him from Crete.[2]

History

Founded as the "Party of the Barefeet" (Script error: No such module "Lang".) in Crete (then an autonomous region of the Ottoman Empire), its early leaders were Kostis Mitsotakis (grandfather of Konstantinos Mitsotakis) and Eleftherios Venizelos. After the annexation of Crete by Greece, Venizelos moved to Athens and turned the party into a national one, under the Fileleftheron (liberal) name in 1910. For the following 25 years, the fate of the party would be tied to that of Venizelos. The party was legally disbanded after the failed coup attempt led by Nikolaos Plastiras of 1935, although the organization remained active.

File:Eleftherios Venizelos sketch (Anninos).jpg
Caricature of Venizelos with the anchor, symbol of the party

During World War II, a Greek government in exile was formed in Cairo, Egypt, with the assistance of the British. The government was formed almost entirely of prominent Liberals, including Georgios Papandreou and Sophoklis Venizelos, even as King George remained the official head of state.

File:Candidates for the Athens and Piraeus constituencies for the National Liberal Club, c. 1920.png
A man posing with a list of National Liberal Club parliamentary candidates for the Athens and Piraeus constituencies, c. 1920.

The party was reformed after the war. By the 1950s, the Liberal Party had lost much of its support and it was eventually merged into the Centre Union, which went on to win the 1963 and 1964 elections. Throughout its existence, the Liberal Party sought to hinder the rise of the Communist Party of Greece which was the only real opposition to the Liberals on their most important electoral basis (the refugees of the New Lands, i.e., lands acquired by Greece following the Balkan Wars and World War I), sometimes with the use of anti-communist legislation.[3][4]

The Liberal Party merged into Center Union (Enosi Kentrou) in 1961, under the leadership of Georgios Papandreou.

In 1980, Eleftherios Venizelos' grandson Nikitas founded a new party under the same name that claims to be the continuation of the original party, see Liberal Party (Greece, modern).

Ideology

Representing the centrist elements of Greek society, and supported by the middle class and the populations of the New Lands, its main competitor was the People's Party. Increasingly the Liberal Party became associated with anti-monarchism and during the 1920s the Liberals established a republic which they led for most of its short-lived existence. The party carried the ideological legacy of Venizelism.

Electoral results

Results, 1910–1958[5][6]
(year links to election page)
Year Type of Election Votes % Mandates Status
1910 Parliamentary No data Template:Composition bar Government
1912 No data Template:Composition bar Government
May 1915 No data Template:Composition bar Government
Dec 1915 Boycotted Template:Composition bar Extra-parliamentary
1920 375,803 ? Template:Composition bar Opposition
1923 No data Template:Composition bar Government
1926 303,140 31.6 Template:Composition bar Coalition
1928 477,502 46.9 Template:Composition bar Government
1929 Senatorial 450,624 54.6 Template:Composition bar Majority
1932 Parliamentary 391,521 33.4 Template:Composition bar Opposition (to Jan 1933)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Coalition (from Jan 1933)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
1932 Senatorial 142,575 39.5 Template:Composition bar Majority
1933 Parliamentary 379,968 33.3 Template:Composition bar Opposition
1935 Boycotted Template:Composition bar Extra-parliamentary
1936 474,651 37.3 Template:Composition bar Opposition
1946 159,525 14.4 Template:Composition bar Opposition
1950 291,083 17.2 Template:Composition bar Coalition
1951 325,390 19.0 Template:Composition bar Opposition
1956 No data Template:Composition bar Opposition
1958 795,445 20.7 Template:Composition bar Opposition

Prominent members

(Name, highest office as a party member, year)

Leaders

Splits of the Liberal Party

Leader: Alexandros Papanastasiou
In 1929 the party was renamed the Agricultural and Labour Party[7]
Leader: Georgios Kafantaris

See also

References

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Template:Liberalism in Greece

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  7. Εισηγείται στο δεύτερο συνέδριο του κόμματος στη Θεσσαλονίκη την οριστική αντικατάσταση του τίτλου «Δημοκρατική Ένωσις» από τον τίτλο «Αγροτικόν και Εργατικόν Κόμμα» (Proposes to the second party congress in Thessalonikithe definitive replacement of the title "Democratic Union" by the "Agricultural and Labour Party".) Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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