Liberalism and centrism in Finland

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This article gives an overview of liberalism and centrism in

centrist parties
with substantial support, mainly proved by having had a representation in parliament. The sign ⇒ means a reference to another party in that scheme. For inclusion in this scheme it is not necessary so that parties labeled themselves as a liberal party.

Liberalism was a major force in Finland since 1894. After independence the current gradually decreased. A major other force, agrarianism, choose in 1965 to develop itself into a more centrist current. The liberal character of the

Swedish People's Party (Svenska Folkpartiet i Finland) is also a member of LI, ELDR. The original liberal current is now organized in the Liberals (Liberaalit), a very small extra-parliamentary party. At the autonomous island of Åland the Liberals for Åland
(Liberalerna på Åland) are a dominant force.

The timeline

Liberal Club / Liberal Party

From Young Finnish Party to Liberals

Swedish People's Party

  • 1906: Liberal
    Swedish People's Party in Finland
    (Svenska Folkpartiet i Finland)
  • 1919: Republicans formed the Liberal Swedish Party (Svensk Vänster)
  • 1951: Liberal Swedish Party merged with SFP

People's Party

  • 1917: Progressive liberals formed the People's Party (Kansanpuolue)
  • 1918: The People's Party merged into the ⇒ National Progressive Party

Free-minded League

  • 1951: The ⇒ National Progressive Party fell apart and the
    Free-minded League
    (Vapaamielisten Liitto) is formed
  • 1965: The League merged with the ⇒ Finnish People's Party into the ⇒ Liberal People's Party

Centre Party / Finnish Centre

Centrists

Åland

Liberals for Åland

Centre Party

  • 1967: The Rural and Archipelago Electoral Union (Landsbygdens och Skargardens Valforbund) was founded
  • 1975: The LoS–Liberals (LoS–Liberalerna) seceded from the Rural and Archipelago Electoral Union
  • 1976: The Rural and Archipelago Electoral Union is renamed Åland Centre (Åländska Centern)
  • 1978: VLS and ⇒ LoS–Liberals merged into the ⇒ Liberals for Åland

Liberal and centrist leaders

Liberal thinkers

In the

Contributions to liberal theory
the following Finnish thinker is included:

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mylly, Juhani. Maalaisliitto-Keskustan historia II".
  2. ^ "Pohtiva - Liberaalisen puolueen ohjelma". www.fsd.uta.fi.