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Socialist Party of Latvia

Political party in Latvia


Summary

Political party in Latvia

FieldValue
nameSocialist Party of Latvia
native_nameLatvijas Sociālistiskā partija
Социалистическая партия Латвии
abbreviationLSP
logoSocialist Party of Latvia logo.png
colorcode
leaderVladimirs Frolovs
founderFilips Stroganovs
founded
registered
predecessorCommunist Party of Latvia
ideologyCommunism
headquartersCitadeles iela 2, Riga
internationalIMCWP
countryLatvia
newspaperLatvijas Socialists
positionFar-left
europeanINITIATIVE
regionalCPSU (2001)
nationalForHRUL (2002–2005),
Harmony Centre (2005–2010),
Social Democratic Party "Harmony" (since 2010)
europarlNon-Inscrits
coloursRed
seats1_titleSaeima
seats1
seats2_titleEuropean Parliament
seats2
seats3_titleRiga City Council
seats3
website

Социалистическая партия Латвии Harmony Centre (2005–2010), Social Democratic Party "Harmony" (since 2010)

The Socialist Party of Latvia (, abbr. LSP; ) is a communist party in Latvia. It is positioned on the far-left on the political spectrum.

It was formed in 1994 as a successor party to the Communist Party of Latvia, which was banned in 1991. According to the "programme of the party", the LSP was founded as an organization upholding socialist ideas after the 1991 events that the party describes as a "counter-revolutionary bourgeois-nationalist coup".

Overview

The current CEOs of the party are Bokišs Fridijs, Burlaks Ingars and Frolovs Vladimirs. Between 1999 and 2015, the position was held by Alfrēds Rubiks, once mayor of Riga and later, leader of the unionist movement and head of the Latvian Communist Party (CPSU platform). He was imprisoned for six years in 1991, on charges of participating in a coup d'état against the Latvian authorities in August 1991. He is not one of the party's members in the Saeima (Latvian Parliament) since he is not allowed to contest elections. However, his sons Artūrs Rubiks and Raimonds Rubiks are members of the Saeima representing the Socialist Party, elected on a joint list with Harmony.

The LSP is more popular among the Russian-speaking population of Latvia. It places a high priority on issues important to ethnic Russians, such as language and citizenship laws. The party also believes that Latvian citizenship should be granted to all citizens of the former USSR living in Latvia in 1990. This would entail a major change in the current law, which only gives automatic citizenship to descendants of people who were citizens of the Republic of Latvia before it was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, and requires the Soviet citizens who moved to Latvia between 1940 and 1990 (mainly Russians), to go through a naturalization process.

In the election held on 5 October 2002, the party was part of the For Human Rights in United Latvia () coalition that won 19.0% of the popular vote and 25 out of 100 seats, 5 of those seats went to Socialist Party. The party was a member of this alliance of predominantly Russian-speaking parties from 1998 to 2003.

Today, the party's platform is centered on anti-corruption and promoting an independent Latvia that is outside the European Union. In 2005, the LSP entered the Harmony Centre coalition, which won 17 seats in the 2006 election. Four of these 17 parliament members were representatives of the Socialist Party. In 2011, HC won 31 seats, with the Socialists receiving three seats (Artūrs Rubiks, Raimonds Rubiks and Igors Zujevs). The party did not contest the 2014 parliamentary election, however, all three of its outgoing MPs were placed on the SDPS list and were members of the "12th Saeima" (2014–2018). The same strategy was used in the 2018 election, but only Artūrs Rubiks was elected. The party gained a seat within the Harmony list for the 2020 Riga City Council election, with Artūrs Rubiks' older brother Raimonds Rubiks being elected.

Election results

Legislative elections

ElectionParty leaderPerformanceRankGovernmentVotes%± ppSeats+/–199519982002200620102011201420182022
Filips Stroganovs53,3255.61NewNew9th
135,70014.20
(ForHRUL-TSP)8.5914th
Alfrēds Rubiks189,08819.09
(ForHRUL)4.8912nd
130,88714.52
(Harmony Centre)4.5714th
251,40026.61
(Harmony Centre)12.0902nd
259,93028.62
(Harmony Centre)2.0111st
209,88723.15
(Saskaņa)5.4711st
Vladimirs Frolovs167,11719.92
(Saskaņa)3.2311st
43,9434.86
(Saskaņa)15.0619th

European Parliament elections

ElectionParty leaderPerformanceRankEP GroupVotes%± ppSeats+/–20042009201420192024
Alfrēds Rubiks9,4801.66NewNew12th
154,89419.93
(Harmony Centre)18.2712ndGUE-NGL
57,86313.14
(Saskaņa)6.7913rd
Vladimirs Frolovs57,86317.56
(Saskaņa)4.422nd
37,0967.21
(Saskaņa)10.356th

References

References

  1. "История партии".
  2. Nordsieck, Wolfram. (2011). "Latvia".
  3. March, Luke. (2008). "Contemporary Far Left Parties in Europe". Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung.
  4. http://www.latsocpartija.lv/userfiles/LSP%20programma%202005%20RU%281%29.pdf {{Dead link. (February 2022)
  5. "Latvijas Sociālistiskā partija".
  6. [http://socparty.lv/lv/deputies/saeima/ Sociālisti 11.Saeimā] {{Webarchive. link. (2018-10-07 {{in lang). lv
  7. "Jāpārskata izglītības sistēmas reformas!". Latvijas Sociālistiskā partija.
  8. "13TH SAEIMA ELECTIONS – Elected member alphabetical list".
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