Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Free Democratic Party of Switzerland

Free Democratic Party of Switzerland

FieldValue
colorcode
nameFree Democratic Party/Radical Democratic Party
native_name
logoFree Democratic Party of Switzerland logo French.png
logo_size200px
foundation
dissolution
mergedFDP. The Liberals
headquartersNeuengasse 20
Postfach 6136
CH-3001 Bern
ideologyLiberalism (Switzerland)
Classical liberalism
Conservative liberalism
positionCentre-right
internationalRadical International
(before 1938)
Liberal International
(after 1947)
europeanEuropean Liberal Democrat and Reform Party
coloursAzure
countrySwitzerland

Postfach 6136 CH-3001 Bern Classical liberalism Conservative liberalism (before 1938) Liberal International (after 1947) The Free Democratic Party (, FDP; , PLD), also called Radical Democratic Party (, PRD; , PLR) was a liberal political party in Switzerland. Formerly one of the major parties in Switzerland, on 1 January 2009 it merged with the Liberal Party of Switzerland to form FDP. The Liberals.

The FDP was formed in 1894 from the Radicals, who had dominated Swiss politics since the 1830s, standing in opposition to the Catholic conservatives, and who from the creation of the federal state in 1848 until 1891 formed the federal government.

The FDP remained dominant until the introduction of proportional representation in 1919. From 1945 to 1987, it alternated with the Social Democratic Party to be the largest party. In 1959, the party took two seats in the magic formula. The party declined in the 1990s and 2000s (decade), as it was put under pressure by the Swiss People's Party. In response, the party formed closer relations with the smaller Liberal Party, leading to their formal merger in 2009.

History

The elements 'liberal', 'radical' and freisinnig (an obsolete German word for 'liberal', or literally "free thinking") in the party's name originate from the conflicts during the period of Swiss Restoration between the Catholic-conservative cantons and the liberal cantons. This conflict led to the foundation of the Swiss federal state in 1848 after the victory of the predominantly Protestant and liberal cantons over the conservative and Catholic ones in the Sonderbund war.

German-language logo

From 1848 until 1891, the Federal Council was composed entirely of Radicals. The radical movement of the restoration was anti-clerical, and stood in opposition to the Catholic Conservative Party, the ancestor of the modern Christian Democratic People's Party. They were otherwise heterogeneous, including and classical liberal 'Liberals', federalist 'Radicals', and social liberal 'Democrats': placing the radical movement on the 'left' of the political spectrum. It was not until the rise of the Social Democratic Party in the early 20th century that the FDP found itself on the centre-right.

The FDP was the dominant party until the 1919 election, when the introduction of proportional representation led to a leap in the representation of the Social Democrats. In 1959, the Free Democrats joined the other major parties in agreeing the 'magic formula' to divide up the seats of the Federal Council, with the FDP permanently receiving two of the seven seats.

After the 2003 elections, lawmakers of FDP and Liberal Party formed a common parliamentary group in the Federal Assembly. In June 2005, they strengthened their cooperation by founding the Radical and Liberal Union. They merged on 1 January 2009 to form FDP. The Liberals.

Election results

In 2003, it held 36 mandates (out of 200) in the Swiss National Council (first chamber of the Swiss parliament); 14 (out of 46) in the second chamber and two out of seven mandates in the Swiss Federal Council (executive body). By 2005, it held 27.2% of the seats in the Swiss Cantonal governments and 19.7% in the Swiss Cantonal parliaments (index "BADAC", weighted with the population and number of seats). At the last legislative elections, 22 October 2007, the party won 15.6% of the popular vote and 31 out of 200 seats.

National Council

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–Rank18961899190219051908191119141917191919221925192819311935193919431947195119551959196319671971197519791983198719911995199920032007
181,02847.8 (#1)121st
183,21649.7 (#1)21st
205,23550.4 (#1)161st
202,60549.2 (#1)41st
202,73250.9 (#1)11st
198,30049.5 (#1)101st
191,05456.1 (#1)31st
210,32340.8 (#1)91st
215,56628.8 (#1)431st
208,14428.3 (#1)1st
206,48527.8 (#1)1st
220,13527.4 (#2)21st
232,56226.9 (#2)61st
216,66423.7 (#2)42nd
128,16320.7 (#2)11st
197,74622.5 (#2)22nd
220,48623.0 (#2)51st
230,68724.0 (#2)11st
227,37023.3 (#2)12nd
232,55723.7 (#2)11st
230,20023.9 (#2)2nd
230,09523.2 (#2)22nd
432,25921.7 (#2)1st
428,91922.2 (#2)22nd
440,09924.0 (#2)41st
457,28323.3 (#1)31st
457,28322.9 (#1)31st
429,07221.0 (#1)71st
384,51520.2 (#2)12nd
388,78019.9 (#3)23rd
364,49317.3 (#3)73rd
364,73615.8 (#3)53rd

List of party Presidents

NameCantonYears
1stBasel-Stadt
2ndBasel-Stadt
3rdZurich
4thBern
5thBasel-Stadt
6thZurich
7thVaud
8thVaud
9thBern
10thSolothurn
11thZurich
12thBern
13thNeuchâtel
14thLuzern
15thTicino
16thBasel-Stadt
17thTicino
18thFribourg
19thGeneva
20thZurich
21stNeuchâtel
22ndAargau
23rdUri
24thSchaffhausen
25thVaud
26thZug
27thAppenzell Innerrhoden
28thTicino

Footnotes

References

  1. (1999). "Politics and Society in Western Europe". SAGE Publications.
  2. Hans Slomp. (2011). "Europe, a Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics". ABC-CLIO.
  3. Damir Skenderovic. (2009). "The Radical Right in Switzerland: Continuity and Change, 1945-2000". Berghahn Books.
  4. (2011). "The Context of the Campaigns". Palgrave Macmillan.
  5. Lublin, David. (2014). "Minority Rules: Electoral Systems, Decentralization, and Ethnoregional Party Success". Oxford University Press.
  6. (2014). "Western Europe 2014". Rowman & Littlefield.
  7. (2014). "FDP. The Liberals".
  8. (1997). "European Politics Today". Manchester University Press.
  9. (2013). "Political Handbook of the World 2013". CQ Press/SAGE.
  10. Erik Lundsgaarde. (2012). "The Domestic Politics of Foreign Aid". Routledge.
  11. Hanspeter Kriesi. (31 July 2012). "Political Conflict in Western Europe". Cambridge University Press.
  12. Bale, Tim. (2021). "Riding the populist wave: Europe's mainstream right in crisis". Cambridge University Press.
  13. (2014). "PONS Online Dictionary German-English".
  14. "New alliance counters left-right polarisation - swissinfo".
  15. "Nationalrat 2007".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Free Democratic Party of Switzerland — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report