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・ Union of Orthodox Banner-Bearers
・ Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations
・ Union of Orthodox Rabbis
・ Union of Patriotic Forces and Militaries of the Reserve Defense
・ Union of Patriotic Youth
・ Union of Patriots
・ Union of Patriots for Renewal
・ Union of People's Fedaian of Iran
・ Union of Persecutees of the Nazi Regime
・ Union of Pioneers of Yugoslavia
・ Union of Poles in Belarus
・ Union of Poles in Germany
・ Union of Poles of Romania
・ Union of Polish Patriots
・ Union of Polish Syndicalists
Union of Democratic Forces (Bulgaria)
・ Union of Democratic Forces (Mauritania)
・ Union of Democratic Forces (Republic of the Congo)
・ Union of Democratic Forces for Progress
・ Union of Democratic Forces for Unity
・ Union of Democratic Forces of Guinea
・ Union of Democratic Mineworkers
・ Union of Democratic Peasants/Party of Labour
・ Union of Democrats and Independent Progressives
・ Union of Democrats and Independents
・ Union of Democrats and Independents – UC
・ Union of Democrats for Citizenship and Development
・ Union of Democrats for Development
・ Union of Democrats for Europe
・ Union of Democrats for the Republic


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Union of Democratic Forces (Bulgaria) : ウィキペディア英語版
Union of Democratic Forces (Bulgaria)

The Union of Democratic Forces ((ブルガリア語:Съюз на демократичните сили, ''Sayuz na demokratichnite sili'', СДС, ''SDS'')) is a political party in Bulgaria, founded in 1989 as a union of several political organizations in opposition to the communist government. The Union was transformed into a single unified party with the same name. The SDS is a member of the European People's Party (EPP).
== History ==

Dissident groups formed under the faltering regime of Todor Zhivkov in the late 1980s were the basis for the Union. Once Zhivkov fell, a loose political confederation was envisioned where constituent groups could continue to work for their own cause, while the coordinating council would include three members from each organization. The Longtime dissident philosopher Zhelyu Zhelev, who would later become Bulgaria's President, was elected chairman, and Petar Beron, a well-known environmental scientist, was chosen as secretary.
The SDS was officially founded on 7 December 1989 as a union of eleven political organizations, such as Ekoglasnost, Bulgarian Social Democratic Workers' Party (United) and Bulgarian Agrarian People's Union "Nikola Petkov". The following year, six more parties were incorporated (Radical Democratic Party, Green Party of Bulgaria, Democratic Party, New Social Democratic Party, United Democratic Centre, Democratic Front).〔http://www.omda.bg/bulg/news/party/sds.htm〕
The SDS lost the 1990 elections to the Bulgarian Socialist Party but still participated in the joint cabinet of Dimitar Iliev Popov. On 15 May 1991 39 members left the SDS because of disagreements with the draft of the new constitution and founded the new organizations SDS-Center and SDS-Liberals. Later the remnants of the SDS formed their own cabinet with Prime Minister Filip Dimitrov in November 1991, though the cabinet lasted only a little over a year when the government failed a motion of confidence in September 1992. The socialists, together with the Movement for Rights and Freedoms, formed a coalition government headed by Prof. Lyuben Berov. Following the resignation of Berov's cabinet in October 1994, the BSP went on to win the 1994 elections.
However, following discontent over economic problems, Prime Minister Zhan Videnov resigned at the end of 1996, clearing the way for new elections, this time won by the SDS with a crushing 55% vote. Party leader Ivan Kostov went on to form the new government and successfully passed several economic reforms. He was eventually rewarded in December 1999 with an invitation to begin membership talks with the European Union. But public discontent over the social cost of the reforms, including increased unemployment, as well as allegations of corruption led to the SDS's defeat in the June 2001 elections, which were won by the National Movement for Simeon II. The United Democratic Forces won 18.2% of the popular vote and 51 out of 240 seats.
The SDS was chaired until the May 20, 2007 European elections by Petar Stoyanov, former president of the country. Meanwhile, Kostov, the former Prime Minister and SDS party leader went on to form his own party - Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria. At the 2005 parliamentary election, the United Democratic Forces won 8.4% of the popular vote and 20 out of 240 seats.
It was announced at the inaugural conference of the Movement for European Reform (MER, March 2007) that the SDS would become official partners alongside the British Conservative Party and the Czech Civic Democratic Party.〔http://www.conservatives.com/tile.do?def=news.story.page&obj_id=135350&speeches=1〕 In mid April 2007, the SDS backtracked on its decision, stating that it remains loyal to the EPP and that it will never leave the EPP section of the EPP-ED Group to join another Group.
In the May 20, 2007 European elections the SDS failed to elect even a single MEP, resulting in the resignation of Stoyanov who led the list.
At the start of 2009 the SDS entered in an electoral alliance named the "Blue Coalition" with four other center-right parties: the DSB, the United Agrarians, the Bulgarian Social Democratic Party and the Radical Democratic Party. The alliance fielded candidates for the June 2009 European election winning a seat. When the Lisbon Treaty came into force in December of that year, their representation doubled. Now both the SDS and the DSB had an MEP.
The Blue coalition placed fifth in the legislative election a month later with a combined 6.8% of the vote and 15 seats.
In the May 2013 elections, the SDS lost all of its seats in the Bulgarian National Assembly.

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