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Social-National Party of Ukraine


FieldValue
nameSocial-National Party of Ukraine
native_nameСоціал-національна партія України
logoIN (white background).svg
logo_size160px
captionEmblem of the party
colorcodeblack
founded
registered
successorSvoboda
ideologyNeo-fascism
Ukrainian nationalism
Ethnic nationalism
Anti-communism
positionFar-right
headquartersLviv, Ukraine
countryUkraine
dissolved
membership_year2004
youth_wingPatriot of Ukraine
membership1,000
flagFlag of the Social-National Party of Ukraine.svg

Ukrainian nationalism Ethnic nationalism Anti-communism The Social-National Party of Ukraine (; abbreviated SNPU) was a far-right party in Ukraine that would later become Svoboda. The party combined radical nationalism, neo-fascist and anti-communist positions.

History

The party was registered on October 16, 1995 It was founded by the Student Fraternity of Lviv city, public organization of the Soviet Afghan War veterans, a youth organization "Spadshchyna" (Heritage) and the Rukh Guard. Its ideology was based on OUN politician Yaroslav Stetsko's Two revolutions.

On 21 September 1993 its "people's formations" came to the Verkhovna Rada building dressed all in black to differentiate themselves from woodland camouflaged UNA-UNSO activists.

In the second half of 1990s the party also recruited skinheads and football hooligans. SNPU did not win any seats to the national parliament, but managed to receive some seats in the Lviv Regional Council.

In the 1998 parliamentary elections, the party joined a bloc of parties (together with the All-Ukrainian Political Movement "State Independence of Ukraine") called "Less Words" (), which collected 0.16% of the national vote. Oleh Tyahnybok as a member of the SNPU Board of Commissioners was voted into the Ukrainian Parliament in this election. He became a member of the People's Movement of Ukraine faction.

The party established the paramilitary organization Patriot of Ukraine in 1999 as an "Association of Support" for the Military of Ukraine. In 2000 on invitation of SNPU, Ukraine was visited by Jean-Marie Le Pen (at that time a leader of the National Front). and currently one of the five major parties of the country. Svoboda officially ended association with the group in 2007, but they remain informally linked.

In 2001, the party joined some actions of the "Ukraine without Kuchma" protest campaign and was active in forming the association of Ukraine's rightist parties and in supporting Viktor Yushchenko's candidacy for prime minister, although it did not participate in party lists for the 2002 parliamentary elections, although some of its candidates stood in single constituencies. The SNPU again performed poorly in the elections. However, as a member of Victor Yushchenko’s Our Ukraine bloc, Tyahnybok was reelected to the Ukrainian parliament. The SNPU won two seats in the Lviv oblast council of deputies and won representation in the city and district councils in the Lviv and Volyn oblasts.

In 2004 the party had fewer than 1,000 members. Andriy Parubiy left the party in 2004 and later joined centre-right party Our Ukraine of president Viktor Yushchenko.

The party changed its name to the All-Ukrainian Union "Svoboda" in February 2004 with the arrival of Oleh Tyahnybok as party leader. Tyahnybok made some efforts to moderate the party's extremist image. The party not only replaced its name, but also abandoned the logo that had resemblance to the Wolfsangel symbol distancing itself from its neofascist past while retaining the support of extreme nationalists.

Ideology

According to one scholarly article, "Only a small number of political scientists have classified the SNPU and its ideology. Andreas Umland and Anton Shekhovtsov characterize it as neo-fascist and extreme right... Tadeusz A. Olszanski...describes the ideology as radically nationalist with radical social rhetoric. There is also a study which describes the ideological positioning of the SNPU as national-centric and even liberal, but that also finds that the party leader has opinions that differ from the party program."

Umland and Shekhovtsov wrote that "of these various Ukrainian nationalist parties the SNPU was the least inclined to conceal its neofascist affiliations... the official name of the party’s ideology, “social nationalism,” clearly referred back to “national socialism”—the official name of the ideology of the National-Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP) and of the Hitlerite regime.

Another echo was the use of a logo that resembled the Wolfsangel, a symbol popular among neo-Nazi groups: "Its official symbol was the somewhat modified Wolf’s Hook (Wolfsangel), used as a symbol by the German SS division Das Reich and the Dutch SS division Landstorm Nederland during World War II and by a number of European neofascist organizations after 1945. As seen by the SNPU leadership, the Wolf’s Hook became the “idea of the nation.” The Ukrainian political scientist Vitaliy Kulyk, however, claimed that while similar to signs used by Neo-Nazi organizations in Europe the sign "Idea of the Nation" has nothing to do with Wolfsangel and there were no actions that confirmed the party's Nazi image.

Political scientist Tadeusz Olszański wrote that the social-nationalist ideology adhered to has included "openly racist rhetoric" concerning 'white supremacy' since its establishment, and that therefore comparisons with National Socialism are legitimized by its history.

According to Artem Iovenko, "Externally, the SNPU has distanced itself from the classification as pro-fascist." New party leader Oleh Tyahnybok said in 2004: “We were not fascists. We never shared the ideology of German National Socialism."

Electoral results

YearPopular votePercentageOverall seatsChangeOutcome
199449,4830.2%New
199845,1550,16%1

References

References

  1. [http://www.kyivpost.com/news/politics/detail/104178/Luhansk Oblast Council demands Svoboda Party be banned in Ukraine], [[Kyiv Post]] (May 12, 2011)
  2. Andrusechko, Petro [https://web.archive.org/web/20150117214625/http://ukrzurnal.eu/ukr.archive.html/340/ Tyahnybok's path towards Svoboda]. ''[[Ukrayinsky zhurnal]]'' Poznan, May 2009, p.36-39
  3. Wodak, Ruth. (2013-03-05). "Analysing Fascist Discourse".
  4. "About party". Svoboda.
  5. [http://www.nbuv.gov.ua/polit/election/1998.html Elections of folk deputies of Ukraine on March 29, 1998 the Election programmes of political parties and electoral blocs] {{webarchive. link. (March 4, 2012 , [[Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine]] (1998))
  6. {{in lang. uk[http://sd.net.ua/2009/08/30/vseukranske_obdnannja_svoboda.html Всеукраїнське об'єднання «Свобода»], Database ASD
  7. "Central Election Commission of Ukraine".
  8. link. (2012-02-13 , [[Central Election Commission of Ukraine]])
  9. {{in lang
  10. Olszański, Tadeusz A.. (4 July 2011). "Svoboda Party – The New Phenomenon on the Ukrainian Right-Wing Scene". Centre for Eastern Studies.
  11. [http://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/eastweek/2012-11-07/after-parliamentary-elections-ukraine-a-tough-victory-party-regions After the parliamentary elections in Ukraine: a tough victory for the Party of Regions], [[Centre for Eastern Studies]] (7 November 2012)
  12. "Заява Організації "Патріот України" про розрив стосунків з ВО "Свобода"".
  13. (2012-12-26). "The rise of Ukraine's ultra-nationalists". BBC News.
  14. "Archived copy".
  15. Shekhovtsov, Anton. (24 July 2012). "Security threats and the Ukrainian far right". Open Democracy.
  16. (2011). "The Creeping Resurgence of the Ukrainian Radical Right? The Case of the Freedom Party". Europe-Asia Studies.
  17. Umland, Andreas. (2013). "Ultraright Party Politics in Post-Soviet Ukraine and the Puzzle of the Electoral Marginalism of Ukraine Ultranationalists in 1994-2009.". Russian Politics and Law.
  18. Rudling, Per Anders. (2013). "Analyzing Fascist Discourse: European Fascism in Talk and Text". Routledge.
  19. "Resources".
  20. Iovenko, Artem. (2015). "The ideology and development of the Social-National Party of Ukraine, and its transformation into the All-Ukrainian Union "Freedom," in 1990–2004". University of California Press.
  21. (27 January 2014). "The Right Wing's Role in Ukrainian Protests". Der Spiegel.
  22. Umland, Andreas. (September–October 2013). "Ultraright Party Politics in Post-Soviet Ukraine and the Puzzle of the Electoral Marginalism of Ukrainian Ultranationalists in 1994–2009". Russian Politics and Law.
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