Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/liberal-party-moldova

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

Liberal Party (Moldova)

Liberal Party (Moldova)

FieldValue
nameLiberal Party
logoFile:Liberal_Party_of_Moldova_logo.png
colorcode
presidentMihai Ghimpu
secretary_generalSergiu Revenco
Lilian Chicu
abbreviationPL
foundation5 September 1993
ideologyLiberalism
Conservative liberalism
Moldovan–Romanian unionism
Pro-Europeanism
headquarters15 Nicolae Iorga Street, Chișinău
nationalUnion Political Movement (2020–2021)
websitepl.md
countryMoldova
native_namePartidul Liberal
membership_year2018
membership18,989
positionCentre-right
europeanAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (observer)
regionalLiberal South East European Network
coloursLight blue, yellow
seats1_titleParliament
seats1
seats2_titleDistrict Presidents
seats2
youth_wingYoung Liberals
womens_wingLiberal Women's Organisation

Lilian Chicu Conservative liberalism Moldovan–Romanian unionism Pro-Europeanism

Liberal Party (, PL) is a conservative-liberal political party in Moldova. The president of the party is the former Acting President of Moldova, Mihai Ghimpu.

History

The party was established under the name Party of Reform () in 1993 by Anatol Șalaru. In 1997, Mihai Ghimpu was elected chairman. Until April 2005, the party had a Christian-democratic electoral platform. Competing in the 1994, 1998, and 2001 parliamentary elections, the Party of Reform failed to enter parliament, as its results of 2.36%, 0.54% and 0.67%, respectively, failed to meet the electoral threshold of 5%.

Electoral success

At the second party congress, held on 24 April 2005, party members adopted the new name Liberal Party (), along with a new logo and programme, which presented a liberal political platform. Mihai Ghimpu was elected president of the party. The party competed in the April 2009 parliamentary election, obtaining 13.13% of the vote and of 15 seats in parliament. At the parliamentary election of 2009 in July, the popular vote rose to 14.68%, again winning 15 seats.

As a consequence of the second parliamentary election of 2009, the party signed a coalition agreement with the Liberal Democratic Party (PLDM), the Democratic Party (PDM), and Our Moldova Alliance (AMN), constituting the Alliance for European Integration. The party was included in the First Filat Cabinet. At the 2010 parliamentary election, the party obtained 9.96% of the vote and 12 seats in parliament. The party remained in the Second Filat Cabinet. The European Action Movement (MAE) merged into the party in March 2011.

Under the leadership of Ghimpu, the party has altered its former Christian democratic orientation. On 25 January 2009, a Conference for the constitution of a Women's wing for the Liberal Party the "Liberal Women's Organisation" was held. The party also formed a youth wing the "Young Liberals". The party has joined the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) as an observer member.

At the 2014 parliamentary election, the Liberal Party received 9.7% of the vote, winning 13 seats. At the 2019 parliamentary election, the PL received 1.25% of the vote, losing its representation in parliament.

Internal split

In February 2013, the party suffered an internal split. On 12 April 2013, the Liberal Party Reform Council was launched, with Ion Hadârcă as leader. The members of this council were called "Liberal Reformers" by the media. The internal split became permanent when a separate Liberal Reformist Party (PLR) joined the Pro-European Coalition, formed after the dissolution of the Alliance for European Integration (AIE), remaining in the Leancă Cabinet after the Liberal Party (PL) left the government.

Creation of the Union Political Movement

In 2020, the Union Political Movement (MPU), a political bloc established for the unification of Moldova and Romania, was founded by five political parties, including the Liberal Party. Furthermore, Chirtoacă, leader of the PL, was designated as the candidate of the MPU for the 2020 Moldovan presidential election. He only received 1.2% of the cast votes and did not qualify for the 2nd round.

2021 parliamentary elections

For the 2021 Moldovan parliamentary election, PL decided to compete along with PPR, USB, and AUR and managed to get 7,216 votes (0.49%), but failed to meet the 5% threshold.

Electoral results

Parliament

Election year# of total votes% of overall vote# of seats+/–Government19941998200120052009 (April)2009 (July)20102014201920212025
41,9802.36
8,8440.54
10,6860.67
did not participate
201,87913.1315
232,10814.68
171,4459.963
154,5079.671
17,7431.2513
with PPR, USB, and AUR
1,5910.10

In the 2007 local elections, the party gained 18.31% in Chișinău municipality and 11 seats on the Chișinău Municipal Council. Its vice-president, Dorin Chirtoacă, became Mayor.

Notable members

[[Mihai Ghimpu]] and [[Dorin Chirtoacă]] in 2008
[[Anatol Șalaru]] in 2009
  • Dorin Chirtoacă
  • Mihai Ghimpu
  • Corina Fusu
  • Gheorghe Brega
  • Boris Vieru
  • Ion Apostol
  • Ion Cebanu
  • Valeriu Munteanu
  • Ion Chicu

References

References

  1. Nordsieck, Wolfram. (2019). "Moldova".
  2. "Moldova". European Forum.
  3. Tom Lansford. (8 April 2014). "Political Handbook of the World 2014". SAGE Publications.
  4. "Partidul Liberal (PL) / partide.md".
  5. (3 March 2014). "New Nation-States and National Minorities". ECPR Press.
  6. "Congresul V extraordinar al Mişcării Acţiunea Europeană / partide.md".
  7. Mihailova, Iulia. (15 January 2020). "S-a constituit mișcarea politică Unirea". Radio Europa Liberă Moldova.
  8. (15 January 2020). "Cinci partide unioniste au constituit mișcarea politică "Unirea"". Agora.
  9. Frunză, Alina. (29 June 2020). "DOC/ Mișcarea Politică UNIREA și-a desemnat candidatul pentru alegerile prezidențiale din toamnă". [[Ziarul de Gardă]].
  10. (30 June 2020). "Mișcarea Politică UNIREA își prezintă candidatul pentru alegerile prezidențiale". IPN.
  11. Barbăroșie, Liliana. (5 October 2020). "Octavian Țîcu și Dorin Chirtoacă au fost înscriși oficial în cursa electorală". Radio Europa Liberă Moldova.
  12. (5 October 2020). "Dorin Chirtoacă și Octavian Țîcu, înregistrați în cursa electorală pentru prezidențiale". [[Unimedia]].
  13. (5 October 2020). "Octavian Țîcu şi Dorin Chirtoacă, înregistrați în cursa prezidențială". [[Adevărul Moldova]].
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 Liberal Party (Moldova) — 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