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Democratic Party (Cyprus)


FieldValue
countryCyprus
nameDemocratic Party
native_nameΔημοκρατικό Κόμμα
coloursBlue, Orange
logoLogo of the Democratic Party (Cyprus).svg
abbreviationDIKO
leaderNikolas Papadopoulos
founderSpyros Kyprianou
logo_size175
colorcode
foundation12 May 1976
splitEniaion
headquartersNicosia, Cyprus
student_wingANAGENNISI
youth_wingNE DIK (Democratic Party Youth)
womens_wingGODIK
ideology{{ublclass=nowrap
positionCentre
internationalProgressive Alliance
europarlProgressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
footnotes
seats1_titleHouse of Representatives
seats1
seats2_titleEuropean Parliament
seats2
seats3_titleMunicipal Councils
seats3
website

|Greek Cypriot nationalism |Pro-Europeanism}} The Democratic Party (, Dimokratikó Kómma (DIKO)) is a Greek-Cypriot nationalist, centrist political party in Cyprus founded in 1976 by Spyros Kyprianou.

DIKO is variously described as centrist, centre-left or centre-right; internationally, it is a member of the Progressive Alliance, which groups together mainly centre-left parties. Among all Cypriot political parties, DIKO claims to be the most loyal follower of the policies of Archbishop Makarios, the founding father of the Republic of Cyprus.

Overview

As stated in its founding declaration, the Democratic Party proposes the political philosophy of "social centrism", which constitutes "a total of attributes and values that offer in the state social cohesion, political prospect, improvement of terms of life and development of human culture, that should be shared between the entire population and not only between the privileged teams of the population". In June 2003, under the leadership of Tassos Papadopoulos, DIKO announced it was moving away from its traditional centre-right political positioning, and declared its intention of moving towards social democracy.

The party has developed a strict and hardline stance on the Cyprus problem and strongly opposed the Annan plan in 2004. DIKO also supports European integration and a non-aligned foreign policy, even though it showed support for Cyprus joining NATO's Partnership for Peace. The Movement for Social Democracy (EDEK), together with DIKO, constitute the so-called "space in-between" (ενδιάμεσος χώρος) in Cypriot politics, in that they strongly differentiate themselves from both the right-wing Democratic Rally and the left-wing AKEL.

From 2000 to 2006, the party was led by Tassos Papadopoulos, who was President of Cyprus from 2003 to 2008. Papadopoulos was succeeded as DIKO leader by Marios Garoyian, who was President of the House of Representatives from 2008 to 2011. The party leadership was taken over by Nicolas Papadopoulos, son of Tassos, following an internal ballot in December 2013.

The Democratic Party's traditional third place in legislative elections has allowed to it to assume the balance of power in parliament, where it has alternated between support for the communist Progressive Party of Working People (AKEL) and the conservative Democratic Rally (DISY). In the 2011 legislative election, the party won 15.8 percent of the vote and 9 out of 56 seats. The party's decision not to field a candidate in the 2013 presidential election and to back conservative leader Nicos Anastasiades instead was controversial amongst members, and contributed to Marios Garoyian's loss of the leadership to Nicolas Papadopoulos later in the year.

During the Seventh European Parliament, the sole DIKO MEP was attached to the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats group.

Party leaders

No.LeaderPortraitTerm of officePresidentDemocratic Party (Cyprus)}}; color:white;"1Democratic Party (Cyprus)}}; color:white;"2Democratic Party (Cyprus)}}; color:white;"3Democratic Party (Cyprus)}}; color:white;"4
Spyros Kyprianou[[File:Spyros_Kyprianou_UN_(cropped).jpg60px]]197620001977–1988
Tassos Papadopoulos[[File:Tassos Papadopoulos.jpg60px]]200020062003–2008
Marios Garoyian[[File:Marios Garoyian (cropped).jpg60px]]20062013
Nikolas Papadopoulos[[File:Nikolas papadopoulos 2020.jpg60px]]2013Incumbent

Election results

Parliament

ElectionVotesSeats#%Rank#±1976198119851991199620012006201120162021
With AKEL and EDEKnew
56,74919.503rd13
88,32227.652nd8
66,86719.553rd5
60,72616.433rd1
60,97714.843rd1
75,42917.923rd2
63,76315.763rd2
50,92214.493rd0
40,39511.293rd0

European Parliament

ElectionVotesSeats#%Rank#±20042009201420192024
57.12117.093rdnew
37,62512.283rd0
28,04410.833rd0
38,75613.803rd0
35,8159.725th0

References

References

  1. Oliver P. Richmond. (1998). "Mediating in Cyprus: The Cypriot Communities and the United Nations". Frank Cass.
  2. link. Democratic Party. (24 September 2013)
  3. "Parties & Organisations: Political Parties and Associated Partners of the Progressive Alliance". [[Progressive Alliance]].
  4. Nordsieck, Wolfram. (2021). "Cyprus".
  5. Farid Mirbagheri. (1 October 2009). "Historical Dictionary of Cyprus". Scarecrow Press.
  6. Peter Loizos. (15 June 2008). "Iron in the Soul: Displacement, Livelihood and Health in Cyprus". Berghahn Books.
  7. "Cyprus – Political parties". [[Norwegian Centre for Research Data]].
  8. (2018). "Appendix A3: Political Parties". [[European Social Survey]].
  9. Athanasiadis, Konstantinos. (30 May 2014). "The European Parliament Elections of 2014". CISE.
  10. Ker-Lindsay, James. (2005). "Doing Business with the Republic of Cyprus". [[GMB Publishing]].
  11. Neofytos Loizides. (2012). "Transformations of the Greek-Cypriot and Turkish-Cypriot Right: Right-wing Peace-makers?". Palgrave Macmillan.
  12. Nathalie Tocci. (2007). "Greece, Turkey and Cyprus". Oxford University Press.
  13. (2023-04-17). "The Palgrave Handbook of Radical Left Parties in Europe". [[Springer Nature]].
  14. [http://countrystudies.us/cyprus/64.htm Eric Solsten, ed. Cyprus: A Country Study, US Congress]
  15. Philip Dew. (2005). "Doing Business with the Republic of Cyprus". GMB Publishing Ltd.
  16. Christophoros Christophorou (2009). The Evolution of Greek Cypriot Party Politics. The Government and Politics of Cyprus. Peter Lang. p. 90.
  17. (2 December 2013). "Nicolas Papadopoulos elected as leader of DIKO on Cyprus". [[Kathimerini]].
  18. Brüssel Centre for European Studies. (2013). "From Reform to Growth. Managing the Economic Crisis in Europe". Eburon Uitgeverij B.V..
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