翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Caledonian Railway 956 Class
・ Caledonian Railway branches in North Lanarkshire
・ Caledonian Railway branches in South Lanarkshire
・ Caledonian Railway Bridge
・ Caledonian Railway lines to Edinburgh
・ Caledonian Railway Single
・ Caledonian Road
・ Caledonian Road & Barnsbury railway station
・ Caledonian Road tube station
・ Caledonian Road, London
・ Caledonian Sleeper
・ Caledonian Stadium
・ Caledonian Stadium (South Africa)
・ Caledonian Steam Packet Company
・ Caledonian Thebans RFC
Caledonian Union
・ Caledonians
・ Caledonians (disambiguation)
・ Caledonians F.C.
・ Caledonica
・ Caledoniscincus
・ Caledoniscincus atropunctatus
・ Caledonite
・ Caledonomorpha
・ Caledonomorpha elegans
・ Caledophia
・ Caledothele
・ Caledothele elegans
・ Caledyschirius
・ Calefaction


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Caledonian Union : ウィキペディア英語版
Caledonian Union

The Caledonian Union ((フランス語:Union calédonienne), UC) is a pro-independence political party in New Caledonia. In the latest legislative elections of May 10, 2009, the party won around 11.65% of the popular vote, and 9 out of 54 seats in the Territorial Congress.〔In the legislative elections of May 9, 2004, the party won 11.9 % of the popular vote, and 7 out of 54 seats in the Territorial Congress.〕
==History==
The Caledonian Union was born as a cross-community (multi-ethnic) autonomist party led by Maurice Lenormand, who was the island's sole representative in the French National Assembly. There he sat with the Popular Republican Movement, or MRP, and other Christian democratic parties in France.
The party's first significant success was on February 8, 1953 with the election of 15 members of the Caledonian Union to the 25 seats General Council.〔Pierre Bergès, Maurice Lenormand, Roch Pidjot, Matéo Aripoindi, Raphaël Bouanaoué, Kowi Bouillant, André Caron, Doui Matayo Wetta, Luther Enoka, Louis Eschembrenner, James Haeweng, Michel Kauma, Georges Newland, Elia Thidjine, Marc Tivollier〕〔(Members of "Conseil General" from 1940 to 1957 ), The Congress of New Caledonia (in French), 2004〕
However, the UC opposed to the arrival of Gaullist centralism in France, which undid most of the autonomist reforms of the French Fourth Republic (the Defferre laws). The UC grew more and more radical, and started flirting with independence, which eventually led to an outflow of Caldoches into new loyalist parties, such as the Rally for Caledonia in the Republic. Combined with corruption scandals, this weakened the party considerably.
In 1977 in Bourail, the UC adopted a nationalist platform, supported by Jean-Marie Tjibaou (and the rare European nationalists, such as Maurice Lenormand and Pierre Declercq). In 1979, the UC joined with the Party of Kanak Liberation (FLNKS) and other parties to form the Nationalist Front, which became the Kanak Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS) in 1984.
The UC was the largest faction in the FLNKS, led by Tjibaou. It was largely moderate, as opposed to the more radical Palika. Tjibaou was killed in 1989 by an extremist Kanak nationalist. In 2001, Roch Wamytan, the moderate leader of the UC, lost an election to Pascal Naouna, a radical. The UC has since broken with Palika within the FLNKS, which has no unitary president and is very divided. Charles Pidjot, Roch Pidjot's nephew, replaced Naouna in 2007. He died in 2012 and was then replaced himself by Daniel Goa
In the 2009 provincial elections, the party won 9 seats in the Congress of New Caledonia and around 11.65% of the vote. However, in the South Province, the UC ran on a common slate with Palika and won one of the four seats won by that list.
The UC controls the provincial presidency of the Loyalty Islands.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Caledonian Union」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.