翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Left Liberation Front
・ Left lobe of liver
・ Left Luggage (film)
・ Left margin of heart
・ Left marginal artery
・ Left marginal vein
・ Left May languages
・ Left May – Kwomtari languages
・ Left My Heart in Tokyo
・ Left Neglected
・ Left of center
・ Left of Center (album)
・ Left of Center (Sirius)
・ Left of Center (Suzanne Vega song)
・ Left of Cool
Left of Croatia
・ Left of Self-Centered
・ Left of the Middle
・ Left on Labrador
・ Left Opposition
・ Left Opposition of PCE
・ Left Out
・ Left Outside Alone
・ Left Over Life to Kill
・ Left Party
・ Left Party (France)
・ Left Party (Hungary)
・ Left Party (Sweden)
・ Left Party – Zona Franca
・ Left posterior fascicular block


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

Left of Croatia : ウィキペディア英語版
Left of Croatia

The Left of Croatia ((クロアチア語:Ljevica Hrvatske)) is a marginal leftist Croatian political party with no parliamentary representation.〔(STR: Iskaznica )〕
==Origins==
Left of Croatia was created in 2007 by the merger of several parties:
* Vladimir Bebić – Third Block
* Green Left of Croatia
* Social Democratic Union
* Dalmatian Assembly
* Olive
* Socialist Party of Croatia – Left Alternative
* Ivan Ninić, an SDP dissident
The Social Democratic Union ((クロアチア語:Socijalnodemokratska unija)) was founded in 1992, following Croatian independence, being one of very few political parties to identify itself as left-wing. Most of their members were former Communists or left-wingers displeased embracing Croatian nationalism, the excesses of privatisation and human rights abuses of ethnic minorities. The first leader of the party was Branko Horvat, noted economist and one of the few Croatian intellectuals to oppose dissolution of SFR Yugoslavia. In the early 1990s SDU was one of the few political parties to openly advocate co-operation and integration of Croatia with other republics of former Yugoslavia a view very different from the current Croatian political mainstream. On 1992 parliamentary elections it turned out that SDU nevertheless enjoyed some degree of support, especially among ethnic Serbs living in government-controlled territories. Although it failed to break the 2% vote threshold of entry into the Croatian Parliament, SDU could have hoped to win three seats by fulfilling the constitutional quota of ethnic Serbs in Sabor. Instead, the Croatian Constitutional Court, in one of the most controversial decisions in their history, ruled that the seats should go to Serb People's Party as an "ethnic party", and presumably the only true representative of ethnic Serb minority, despite the fact SNS won fewer votes than SDU.
SDU had some success in the local elections held a few months later, but the biggest boost came to them with parliamentary status gained when Vladimir Bebić, a colourful member of Sabor from Rijeka, decided to join their ranks. Bebić, who enjoyed a great deal of popularity in the Croatian public, gradually became the party's leader. In the 1995 election he managed to increase SDU's vote margin, but with increased vote threshold (5%), SDU failed to enter Sabor. This, the appearance of more mainstream left-wing parties, and the establishment of a rejuvenated SDP as Croatia's main opposition party, led to SDU becoming more marginalised, struck with internal divisions and gradually phased out in late 1990s. After the Socialist Labour Party of Croatia (SRP) was formed, many SDU members joined that organization.
SDU formed joint lists for local elections in 2005 with the SRP, the Green Party and the Green Left of Croatia, but failed to enter any of the regional assemblies.
The Socialist Party of Croatia – Left Alternative ((クロアチア語:Socijalistička partija Hrvatske - lijeva alternativa)) was a leftist party formed in 2004 when several members left the Socialist Labour Party of Croatia. In the local elections in 2005, the party had a joint lists with the Social Democratic Party of Croatia in the town of Glina and with the Independent Democratic Serb Party in Sisak-Moslavina county, where it gained one seat in the assembly.〔()〕
The Green Left of Croatia ((クロアチア語:Zelena ljevica Hrvatske)) was a leftist party formed in 2001 whose political platform was ecological socialism.
On the local elections in 2005, it formed a joint list with Social Democratic Union and two other green parties. Coalition got 0.39% vote in Zagreb. It ceased to exist in 2006 and in 2007 merged into the Left of Croatia.

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「Left of Croatia」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.