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Anti-Revolutionary Party

The Anti-Revolutionary Party (Dutch: Anti-Revolutionaire Partij, ARP) was a Protestant conservative and Christian democratic[5] political party in the Netherlands. The party was founded in 1879 by Abraham Kuyper, a neo-Calvinist theologian and minister. In 1980 the party merged with the Catholic People's Party (KVP) and the Christian Historical Union (CHU) to form the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA).

Anti-Revolutionary Party
Anti-Revolutionaire Partij
AbbreviationARP
FounderAbraham Kuyper
Founded3 April 1879 (1879-04-03)
Dissolved27 September 1980 (1980-09-27)
Merged intoChristian Democratic Appeal
HeadquartersKuyperhuis
Dr. Kuyperstraat 3
The Hague
Youth wingAnti-Revolutionary Youth Study Clubs[1]
Think tankDr. A. Kuyper-stichting
IdeologyChristian democracy[2]
Political positionCentre-right[3][4]
ReligionReformed Churches in the Netherlands
Dutch Reformed Church
European affiliationEuropean Union of Christian Democrats
European Parliament groupChristian Democratic Group
ColoursBlue and purple

History edit

History before 1879 edit

The anti-revolutionary parliamentary caucus had existed since the 1840s. It represented orthodox tendencies within the Dutch Reformed Church. Under the leadership of Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer the anti-revolutionaries became a real political force, which opposed the liberal tendencies within the Dutch Reformed Church and the liberal tendencies within Dutch politics. Their three values were "God, the Netherlands, and the House of Orange".

An important issue was public education, which in the view of the anti-revolutionaries should be Protestant-Christian in nature. The anti-revolutionaries had ties with the April movement [nl], which opposed the official re-establishment of Roman Catholic bishoprics, and a mixed relationship with (liberal-) conservatives in the House of Representatives, who also opposed reforms to the social and political system but often on the basis of a mix of liberal Protestantism and secular humanism. During the 1860s Groen van Prinsterer became more isolated from his conservative allies. He also began to reformulate his Protestant-Christian ideals, and began to plead for souvereiniteit in eigen kring (sphere sovereignty) instead of theocracy. This meant that instead of one Protestant-Christian society, Groen van Prinsterer wanted a Protestant society within a pluralistic society. Orthodox Protestants would have their own churches, schools, papers, political parties and sports clubs. This laid the basis for pillarisation, which was to dominate Dutch society between 1880 and 1960.

 
Abraham Kuyper, founder and party leader until 1920, Prime Minister 1901–1905.

In 1864 Groen van Prinsterer began to correspond with a young Dutch Reformed theologian named Abraham Kuyper. Kuyper was heavily influenced by Groen van Prinsterer's ideas and began to put the latter's ideal of an orthodox Protestant society within Dutch society into practice.

Foundation edit

On 3 April 1879, Abraham Kuyper founded the ARP as part of the larger separate orthodox Protestant society within society. It was the first nationally organised political party in the Netherlands. An 1878 petition for equal payment for religious schools became one of the catalysts for the foundation of the political movement. In 1877 Kuyper had already written "Our Program" in which the political ideals of the ARP were written down (see below). Around the ARP the separate Protestant society began to grow: many Protestant schools were founded, a Protestant university (the Free University was founded in 1880), and a paper (De Standaard). In 1886 Kuyper broke free from the liberal Dutch Reformed Church (in Dutch: Nederlands-Hervormde Kerk) to found the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands in 1892 (in Dutch: Gereformeerde Kerken Nederland).

The ARP had one practical political goal: equalisation of payment between public and religious schools. It had one political strategy: the Antithesis between religious and non-religious parties, which meant that he sought to break the cooperation between liberals and Catholics and to create an alliance between Catholics and Protestants.

1879–1917 edit

 
Æneas Mackay, the first Prime Minister of the Anti-Revolutionary Party 1888–1891.

In 1879 thirteen anti-revolutionaries were among the hundred members of the House of Representatives, although not all were members of the ARP. During the period 1879–1883 their numbers grew slowly, peaking at 19. After the 1884 election they had 21 members of parliament. In 1886 they won their first seat in the Senate.

In the 1888 election the ARP won 31.4% of the vote and 27 seats. A confessional cabinet was formed led by the anti-revolutionary Æneas Baron Mackay: it combined anti-revolutionary and Catholic ministers, joined by two conservative independents. Because the liberals still controlled the Senate, many of the cabinet's proposals met resistance there and the cabinet fell before the end of its four-year term.

In the 1891 election the ARP lost 2% of its votes, but six of its seats. The confessional parties also lost their majority. A liberal cabinet, led by Van Tienhoven was formed. It proposed drastic changes to the census, which would result practically in universal male suffrage, proposed by minister Tak. The ARP was divided on the issue: Kuyper and a majority of the parliamentary party voted in favour of the law, while Alexander de Savornin Lohman vehemently opposed it. Kuyper had tactical reasons to support enlarged franchise – the 'kleine luyden' (middle class) who would be allowed to vote often supported the ARP. De Savorin-Lohman opposed the law because it would imply some form of popular sovereignty instead of divine sovereignty. In 1894 this resulted in a split between the ARP and the group around De Savorin-Lohman. Party discipline also played a role in the conflict between Kuyper and De Savorin-Lohman: Kuyper, the party leader, favoured strong party discipline, while De Savorin Lohman opposed strong parties. The split results in the foundation of the Free Anti Revolutionary Party in 1898, which would become the Christian Historical Union in 1904. With De Savorin-Lohman a group of prominent party politicians left the party, including many of its aristocratic members (who like De Savorin-Lohman have double names). The CHU continued its opposition against universal suffrage and was more anti-papist than the ARP.

In the 1894 election the ARP lost almost half of its vote and six of its twenty-one seats. The Catholics broke their alliance with the ARP and supported a conservative cabinet. In the 1897 election the ARP won back some ground: it was supported by 26% of the electorate and won seventeen seats. The group around De Savorin Lohman, won 11% of the vote and six seats. A liberal cabinet was formed and the ARP was confined to opposition.

In 1901 the ARP won a decisive victory. It won 27.4% of the vote and twenty-three seats. A cabinet was formed out of the ARP, the Catholics and the group around De Savorin-Lohman, now called the Christian Historical Party. The cabinet was led by Kuyper, being the first person to formally lead the cabinet for four years. It was characterised by Kuypers' authoritarian leadership. This can best be seen by the railway strike of 1903, in which Kuyper showed no mercy to the strikers and instead pushed several particularly harsh anti-strike laws through parliament. After the Senate, where there was a liberal majority, rejected Kuypers' law on higher education, which sought to bring equal titles for alumni of the Free University, which Kuyper himself founded, Kuyper called for new elections for the Senate. With a confessional majority in the Senate, the law was pushed through.

In the 1905 election the ARP lost only 3% of vote, but eight seats, although it was able to strengthen its position in the Senate. Kuyper, the party's leader, lost his own seat in Amsterdam to a progressive liberal. Theo Heemskerk led the anti-revolutionary parliamentary party. A minority liberal cabinet was formed. Former anti-revolutionary MP Staalman left ARP and founded the Christian Democratic Party, which later became the Christian Democratic Union, which would play a minor role in the interbellum political landscape.

In a 1908 Kuyper returned to the House of Representatives. After a crisis in the liberal cabinet Theo Heemskerk was given the chance to form a new cabinet. A minority confessional cabinet was formed. In the 1909 election the ARP won 3% of vote and twenty-five seats. The Heemskerk cabinet continues.

In 1912 Kuyper left national politics because of health reasons, and in 1913 he was elected to the Senate. In the 1913 election the ARP lost 6% of the votes, but lost more than half of its seats and was left with 11 seats. Another minority liberal cabinet was formed. The leadership of the ARP lay in the hands of less prominent politicians. Although a relatively small opposition party, the ARP played an important role in Dutch politics. The liberal minority cabinet, led by Cort van der Linden sought to resolve two important issues in Dutch politics: the conflict over the equalisation of payment for religious schools and universal suffrage. In the constitution change of 1917 both items were resolved. The ARP was given equal payment for religious schools, but it had to accept women's suffrage and proportional representation.

1917–1945 edit

 
Hendrikus Colijn, party leader 1920–1940, Prime Minister 1925–1926 and 1933–1939.

After the Pacification of 1917, marked by the introduction of universal suffrage, the party never received more than twenty percent of the vote. The 1918 election provided a decisive test for the party, where the party won two additional seats. The three confessional parties won 50 seats. The confessional parties formed a new cabinet, led by the Catholic Charles Ruijs de Beerenbrouck. The ARP supplied three ministers and former prime minister Theo Heemskerk became Minister of Justice. A group of concerned anti-revolutionaries, led by Gerrit Kersten, founded the Reformed Political Party, which opposed universal suffrage and cooperation with the Catholics. The electorate of the ARP changed in the interbellum – the difference between lower class Protestants who voted ARP and middle class Protestant Protestants who voted CHU began to disappear, with religious differences between the Dutch Reformed Church (CHU) and the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (ARP) becoming more important.

In the 1922 election former minister of war Hendrikus Colijn became the leader of the ARP. He emphasised defence and fiscal conservatism as core issues of the party. With him the ARP got sixteen seats in the House of Representatives and fifteen in the Senate. He became Minister of Finance in the second cabinet of Charles Ruijs de Beerenbrouck. He led the party in the 1925 election and the party lost three seats. The ARP continued in government with Jan Donner as minister of Justice. In the 1929 election the ARP lost another seat. The confessional parties continued to govern.

 
Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy, Prime Minister 1940–1945 during World War II leading the Dutch government in exile.

In the 1930s with the growing international political threats and economic crisis, the ARP began to regain its popularity, under the leadership of Colijn. In 1933, the ARP gained two seats and Colijn formed a broad cabinet comprising the Roman Catholic State Party (RKSP), CHU, ARP, Liberal State Party (LSP) and Free-thinking Democratic League (VDB). Jan Schouten led the party's parliamentary party. Between 1933 and 1939 Colijn led several parliamentary and extra-parliamentary cabinets with changing composition, although the CHU, ARP, and RKSP continued to form the core of the cabinet. Colijn refused to devalue the guilder but was unable to resolve the economic crisis. In 1937 the ARP gained three seats and reached a historic 17 seats. Colijn continued to govern. In 1939 his fifth cabinet fell and Colijn was succeeded by Dirk Jan de Geer. Pieter Gerbrandy joined the cabinet without support of his parliamentary party.

During World War II members of the ARP played a role in both the governments-in-exile, of which many were led by Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy and the resistance movements. The resistance paper Trouw was founded by ARP members. Many future ARP MPs began their political career in the Dutch resistance.

1945–1980 edit

 
Logo of the party from 1952 to 1968

After World War II the ARP returned to Dutch politics. The anti-revolutionary Jo Meynen was minister of War, albeit without support of his parliamentary party.

In the 1946 election Jan Schouten led the party. It lost four seats. During the formation in became clear that the ARP could not govern: it strongly opposed the decolonisation of the Dutch Indies. It saw maintenance of the Dutch colonial empire as necessary for the continued wealth and power of the Netherlands. The Labour Party (PvdA) and the Catholics however favoured decolonisation, under heavy pressure from the United States. For six years the ARP was relatively isolated. In 1944 a theological conflict within the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands led to a break between the Reformed Church and the Reformed Churches (liberated). This also had political repercussions, as in 1948 the Reformed Political League was set up by members of the liberated churches. They were unable to win seats until 1963. The party remained stable in the 1948 election and remained in opposition.

 
Jelle Zijlstra, party leader in 1956 and 1958–1959, Prime Minister 1966–1967.

After the 1952 election the ARP returned to the cabinet, which consisted of the confessional ARP, CHU, KVP and the social democratic PvdA, led by the social democrat Drees. Jelle Zijlstra became minister of economic affairs. In the 1956 election in which Jelle Zijlstra became political leader the ARP kept its 10% of the vote, but due to the enlargement of the House of Representatives it got 15 seats. A conflict between the PvdA and the KVP caused the early downfall of the cabinet. The ARP remained part of the care-taker cabinet led by Louis Beel. In the 1959 election the ARP lost another seat. It continued to be part of the cabinet, now led by Jan de Quay. The three confessional parties were joined by the conservative liberal People's Party for Freedom and Democracy.

 
Barend Biesheuvel, party leader 1963–1973 and last Prime Minister of the ARP 1971–1973.

After the 1963 election the cabinet continued, now led by Victor Marijnen. The new anti-revolutionary leader Barend Biesheuvel became Minister of Agriculture. In 1965 this cabinet fell over a conflict between the liberals and the confessionals. The PvdA joins the ARP and the KVP in a new cabinet, led by Jo Cals. This cabinet fell after one year, over conflict between the KVP and PvdA over government spending. The ARP joins the PvdA in its plea for more government spending. A caretaker government is formed by the KVP and ARP, led by former ARP-leader Jelle Zijlstra. In the 1967 election campaign the ARP, CHU and KVP declared that they would continue to govern together. This led to considerable conflict with the KVP, which also spilled over into the ARP, as the younger generation wanted to govern with the PvdA. The ARP gained two seats, but the KVP loses eight seats. A new liberal/confessional cabinet is formed. Biesheuvel does not enter government but instead chooses to remain in parliament.

In the 1971 election the ARP lost two seats, and its confessional allies (KVP and CHU) lost seven and three seats respectively. They faced competition from the left-wing Christian Political Party of Radicals (PPR), which was formed by former KVP members and joined by some prominent anti-revolutionaries, including Bas de Gaay Fortman, son of Wilhelm de Gaay Fortman, one of the party's ministers. The liberal/confessional cabinet lost its majority. A new government was formed consisting of liberals and confessionals, now joined by Democratic Socialists '70, a group of moderate social democrats who left the "radicalising" PvdA. This cabinet was led by Barend Biesheuvel. Willem Aantjes became the chair of the party's parliamentary party. Under his leadership the ARP fashioned itself a new left-wing "radical evangelical" image, while the CHU retains its conservative image. The cabinet did not hold together for long: DS '70 were unable to agree with proposed budget cuts, and the cabinet fell. In the subsequent election the ARP gained one seat. After long coalition talks several prominent anti-revolutionaries, including Wilhelm de Gaay Fortman, joined the progressive cabinet led by Joop den Uyl. The cabinet was riddled with conflicts between confessional and progressive politicians.

Dissolution edit

 
Willem Aantjes, the last party leader from 1973 until 1977.

Meanwhile, a process of merger had started between the KVP, ARP and CHU. In 1974 they founded a federation called the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA). In the formation of a common Christian democratic identity anti-revolutionary Aantjes played a decisive role: he orients the party towards the sermon on the Mount where Christ says that Christians should clothe the naked and feed the hungry. In the 1977 election they campaigned together under as the CDA. Some prominent anti-revolutionaries, like Aantjes did not agree the CDA/VVD cabinet that was formed after the election and wanted to continue with the PvdA. However, they supported the cabinet politically. A group of these anti-revolutionaries left the CDA in 1981 to found the left-wing Christian Evangelical People's Party.

While the ARP was one of the dominant forces in the merged party, it was not until 2002 that a CDA member with anti-revolutionary roots became Prime Minister, Jan Peter Balkenende.[6]

Name edit

The Anti-Revolutionary Party derived its name from its opposition to the ideals of the liberal French Revolution (and certainly against those of Marxists). The label conservative was already taken by a parliamentary group of monarchists and colonialists, who fell out of favour in the late 19th century. In its early years the terms anti-revolutionary and Christian historical were used interchangeably. With the split between the ARP and the Christian Historical Union the terms began to gain their own separate meanings.

Ideology and issues edit

The ARP started out as an orthodox Protestant party, heavily opposed to the ideals of the French revolution. Against the revolution, they put the Bible: instead of liberty, it favoured divine providence, instead of equality it favoured hierarchy and instead of brotherhood it favoured sovereignty in its own circle. Its ideals could be summed up in the tripartite motto "God, the Netherlands and the House of Orange". For most of its history it maintained this conservative Protestant image. In the 1960s and 1970s the party began to adopt a more left-wing "radical evangelical" image.[7]

God edit

The ARP was a confessional Protestant party which based its politics on the Bible and opposed the concept of popular sovereignty.

The concept of sphere sovereignty was very important for the party. It wanted to create an independent Protestant society within the Dutch society, with its own schools, papers, hospitals etc. It sought equal government finances for its own institutions. Societies should care for their own, therefore they opposed a large role for the state in social-economic policy.

The ARP saw an important role for the state in upholding the values of the Dutch people. It was socially conservative: it opposed mixed-sex education, mandatory vaccination, divorce, pornography, euthanasia, abortion etc. It also favoured capital punishment.

Netherlands edit

The party can be seen as rather nationalist. It favoured a strong defence to retain Dutch neutrality. It opposed decolonisation. It saw the colonies in Indonesia as vital for the continued wealth and influence of the Dutch people. It also wanted to enlighten the native population with Christian values.

Monarchy edit

The ARP favoured monarchy, and saw the House of Orange as historically and religiously linked to the Dutch people. It opposed changes to Dutch political system, it wanted to retain bicameralism, opposed popular referendums etc. Its commitment to universal suffrage was only tactical as the ARP expected that it would be able to gain more seats this way. Principally it wanted Householder Franchise where the head of the household would vote for his family.[8]

The party was fiscally conservative: the Dutch government should be like a good father: it should not spend more than it got through taxes.

Christian radicalism edit

In the 1960s and 1970s the party became more left-wing on many issues. Social justice became an important ideal of the party, both nationally, where it began to favour a stronger welfare state, and internationally, where development aid became an important issue.[9]

Organisation edit

Leaders edit

Leader Term of office Age as leader Lead candidate
  Dr.
Abraham Kuyper
(1837–1920)
3 April 1879 –
31 March 1920
[10]
41–82 1918
  Hendrikus Colijn
(1869–1944)
31 March 1920 –
18 September 1944
Died in office
[10]
50–75 1922
1925
1929
1933
1937
Vacant
(18 September 1944 – 5 May 1945)
  Jan Schouten
(1883–1963)
5 May 1945 –
23 April 1956
[10]
61–72 1946
1948
1952
  Dr.
Jelle Zijlstra
(1918–2001)
23 April 1956 –
3 October 1956
[10]
37–38 1956
  Dr.
Sieuwert Bruins Slot
(1906–1972)
3 October 1956 –
29 December 1958
[10]
50–52 None
  Dr.
Jelle Zijlstra
(1918–2001)
29 December 1958 –
26 May 1959
[10]
40 1959
  Dr.
Sieuwert Bruins Slot
(1906–1972)
26 May 1959 –
1 July 1963
[10]
53–57 None
  Barend Biesheuvel
(1920–2001)
1 July 1963 –
7 March 1973
[10]
43–52 1963
1967
1971
1972
  Willem Aantjes
(1923–2015)
7 March 1973 –
25 May 1977
[10]
50–54 None
Vacant
(25 May 1977 – 27 September 1980)

Prime Ministers edit

Leadership edit

Municipal and provincial government edit

The party was particularly strong in rural municipal and provincial governments. Especially in Friesland, Overijssel, Zeeland and the Veluwe the party was particularly strong.

Electorate edit

The electorate of the ARP has seen three decisive shifts, especially in its relation with the CHU, the other Protestant party. Although dates are given here, the changes were gradual.

  • Between 1879 and 1917 the ARP appealed to "kleine luyden" (Dutch for the little people), the middle class, farmers, and workers, as a confessional party that favoured universal suffrage.
  • Between 1917 and 1967 the ARP appealed to members of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands.
  • Between 1967 and 1977, in the time of secularisation and depillarisation the party was able to appeal to younger generations, as the more left-wing confessional party.

Organisation edit

National organisation edit

The party's national secretariat was long housed in the Kuyper House in The Hague. It now houses the national secretariat of the Christian Democratic Appeal.

Linked organisations edit

The party published the magazine Nederlandse Gedachten ("Dutch Thoughts"). Its youth organisation was the Anti-Revolutionaire Jongeren Studieclubs ("Anti-Revolutionary Youth Studyclubs"). Its scientific institute was the Dr. A. Kuyper foundation.

International organisations edit

Internationally the ARP was a relatively isolated party. In the European Parliament its members sat in the Christian Democratic faction.

Pillarised organisations edit

The party had close ties to many Protestant organisations, such as the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands, the Protestant broadcaster NCRV, the employers' organisation NCW, the trade union CNV, and the paper De Standaard and after World War II, the Trouw. Together these organisations formed the Protestant pillar.

Relationships to other parties edit

Because of the philosophy of Antithesis it has strong links with the Catholic parties (General League/Roman Catholic State Party/Catholic People's Party (KVP) and the Christian Historical Union (CHU). In the period 1879 to 1917 it saw the Liberal Union as its main opponent. After 1917 it saw the social democratic Social Democratic Workers' Party as its main opponent, and it formed several governments with liberals.

After World War II, the ARP became more isolated because of its position on the decolonisation of the Dutch East Indies. After Indonesia became independent, it joined the Labour Party (PvdA), KVP and the CHU in the cabinet. Links with the KVP were exceptionally good and it governed with the KVP and either the CHU and the PvdA. After the 1960s, calls to govern with the PvdA became stronger.

International comparison edit

Internationally the ARP was very similar to the Scandinavian Christian Democratic parties (such as the Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and the Finnish Christian Democrats), that are all socially and fiscally conservative, with a social heart. All have their roots in orthodox tendencies within the national church. In its conservative policies the ARP also shared similarities with the UK Conservatives (the paternalistic or moderate conservative wing of that party). Comparing the ARP to an American party is more difficult, but is seemed somewhat close to the moderate wing of the US Republicans (although the ARP was more socially inclined) or the conservative wing of the US Democratic Party.

References edit

  1. ^ "Anti-Revolutionaire Jongerenstudieclubs (ARJOS)". Parlement.com (in Dutch). Retrieved 30 December 2023.
  2. ^ Andeweg, R. and G. Irwin Politics and Governance in the Netherlands, Basingstoke (Palgrave) p.49
  3. ^ Josep M. Colomer (2008). Comparative European Politics. Taylor & Francis. p. 221f. ISBN 978-0-203-94609-1. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
  4. ^ Score 4.0/10 in 2003 Chapel Hill expert survey, see Hooghe et al. (2003) Chapel Hill Survey
  5. ^ Peter Starke; Alexandra Kaasch; Franca Van Hooren (2013). The Welfare State as Crisis Manager: Explaining the Diversity of Policy Responses to Economic Crisis. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-137-31484-0.
  6. ^ "Hoe groeide 'toevalspremier' Balkenende in zijn rol?". NPO Kennis (in Dutch). 2 January 2018. Retrieved 30 December 2023.
  7. ^ "Ruppert maakte conservatieve ARP tot evangelisch radicale partij". Trouw (in Dutch). 28 February 1992. Retrieved 30 December 2023.
  8. ^ "Dr. Abraham Kuyper over het huisgezin 1". Digibron.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 30 December 2023.
  9. ^ Kennedy, James C. "The Problem of Kuyper's Legacy: The Crisis of the Anti-Revolutionary Party in Post-War Holland". Journal of Markets & Morality. 5, No. 1 (Spring 2002): 52. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Politiek leider van een partij". Parlement&Politiek. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  11. ^ "Eerste Kamerfractie Anti-Revolutionaire Partij (ARP)". Parlement & Politiek (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 August 2018.
  12. ^ "Tweede Kamerfractie Anti-Revolutionaire Partij (ARP)". Parlement & Politiek (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 August 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Bosmans, Jac (2004). "The Primacy of Domestic Politics: Christian Democracy in the Netherlands". In Michael Gehler; Wolfram Kaiser (eds.). Christian Democracy in Europe since 1945. Routledge. pp. 47–58. ISBN 0-7146-5662-3.
  • "Changing Procedures and Changing Strategies in Dutch Coalition Building" by Hans Daalder. In: Legislative Studies Quarterly Vol. 11, No. 4 (Nov. 1986), pp. 507–531.
  • "Conservatism in the Netherlands" by Hermann von der Dunk. In: Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 13, No. 4 (Oct. 1978), pp. 741–763.

anti, revolutionary, party, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Anti Revolutionary Party news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Anti Revolutionary Party Dutch Anti Revolutionaire Partij ARP was a Protestant conservative and Christian democratic 5 political party in the Netherlands The party was founded in 1879 by Abraham Kuyper a neo Calvinist theologian and minister In 1980 the party merged with the Catholic People s Party KVP and the Christian Historical Union CHU to form the Christian Democratic Appeal CDA Anti Revolutionary Party Anti Revolutionaire PartijAbbreviationARPFounderAbraham KuyperFounded3 April 1879 1879 04 03 Dissolved27 September 1980 1980 09 27 Merged intoChristian Democratic AppealHeadquartersKuyperhuis Dr Kuyperstraat 3 The HagueYouth wingAnti Revolutionary Youth Study Clubs 1 Think tankDr A Kuyper stichtingIdeologyChristian democracy 2 Political positionCentre right 3 4 ReligionReformed Churches in the Netherlands Dutch Reformed ChurchEuropean affiliationEuropean Union of Christian DemocratsEuropean Parliament groupChristian Democratic GroupColoursBlue and purplePolitics of NetherlandsPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 1 1 History before 1879 1 2 Foundation 1 3 1879 1917 1 4 1917 1945 1 5 1945 1980 1 6 Dissolution 1 7 Name 2 Ideology and issues 2 1 God 2 2 Netherlands 2 3 Monarchy 2 4 Christian radicalism 3 Organisation 3 1 Leaders 3 2 Prime Ministers 3 3 Leadership 3 4 Municipal and provincial government 4 Electorate 5 Organisation 5 1 National organisation 5 2 Linked organisations 5 3 International organisations 5 4 Pillarised organisations 5 5 Relationships to other parties 6 International comparison 7 References 8 Further readingHistory editHistory before 1879 edit The anti revolutionary parliamentary caucus had existed since the 1840s It represented orthodox tendencies within the Dutch Reformed Church Under the leadership of Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer the anti revolutionaries became a real political force which opposed the liberal tendencies within the Dutch Reformed Church and the liberal tendencies within Dutch politics Their three values were God the Netherlands and the House of Orange An important issue was public education which in the view of the anti revolutionaries should be Protestant Christian in nature The anti revolutionaries had ties with the April movement nl which opposed the official re establishment of Roman Catholic bishoprics and a mixed relationship with liberal conservatives in the House of Representatives who also opposed reforms to the social and political system but often on the basis of a mix of liberal Protestantism and secular humanism During the 1860s Groen van Prinsterer became more isolated from his conservative allies He also began to reformulate his Protestant Christian ideals and began to plead for souvereiniteit in eigen kring sphere sovereignty instead of theocracy This meant that instead of one Protestant Christian society Groen van Prinsterer wanted a Protestant society within a pluralistic society Orthodox Protestants would have their own churches schools papers political parties and sports clubs This laid the basis for pillarisation which was to dominate Dutch society between 1880 and 1960 nbsp Abraham Kuyper founder and party leader until 1920 Prime Minister 1901 1905 In 1864 Groen van Prinsterer began to correspond with a young Dutch Reformed theologian named Abraham Kuyper Kuyper was heavily influenced by Groen van Prinsterer s ideas and began to put the latter s ideal of an orthodox Protestant society within Dutch society into practice Foundation edit On 3 April 1879 Abraham Kuyper founded the ARP as part of the larger separate orthodox Protestant society within society It was the first nationally organised political party in the Netherlands An 1878 petition for equal payment for religious schools became one of the catalysts for the foundation of the political movement In 1877 Kuyper had already written Our Program in which the political ideals of the ARP were written down see below Around the ARP the separate Protestant society began to grow many Protestant schools were founded a Protestant university the Free University was founded in 1880 and a paper De Standaard In 1886 Kuyper broke free from the liberal Dutch Reformed Church in Dutch Nederlands Hervormde Kerk to found the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands in 1892 in Dutch Gereformeerde Kerken Nederland The ARP had one practical political goal equalisation of payment between public and religious schools It had one political strategy the Antithesis between religious and non religious parties which meant that he sought to break the cooperation between liberals and Catholics and to create an alliance between Catholics and Protestants 1879 1917 edit nbsp AEneas Mackay the first Prime Minister of the Anti Revolutionary Party 1888 1891 In 1879 thirteen anti revolutionaries were among the hundred members of the House of Representatives although not all were members of the ARP During the period 1879 1883 their numbers grew slowly peaking at 19 After the 1884 election they had 21 members of parliament In 1886 they won their first seat in the Senate In the 1888 election the ARP won 31 4 of the vote and 27 seats A confessional cabinet was formed led by the anti revolutionary AEneas Baron Mackay it combined anti revolutionary and Catholic ministers joined by two conservative independents Because the liberals still controlled the Senate many of the cabinet s proposals met resistance there and the cabinet fell before the end of its four year term In the 1891 election the ARP lost 2 of its votes but six of its seats The confessional parties also lost their majority A liberal cabinet led by Van Tienhoven was formed It proposed drastic changes to the census which would result practically in universal male suffrage proposed by minister Tak The ARP was divided on the issue Kuyper and a majority of the parliamentary party voted in favour of the law while Alexander de Savornin Lohman vehemently opposed it Kuyper had tactical reasons to support enlarged franchise the kleine luyden middle class who would be allowed to vote often supported the ARP De Savorin Lohman opposed the law because it would imply some form of popular sovereignty instead of divine sovereignty In 1894 this resulted in a split between the ARP and the group around De Savorin Lohman Party discipline also played a role in the conflict between Kuyper and De Savorin Lohman Kuyper the party leader favoured strong party discipline while De Savorin Lohman opposed strong parties The split results in the foundation of the Free Anti Revolutionary Party in 1898 which would become the Christian Historical Union in 1904 With De Savorin Lohman a group of prominent party politicians left the party including many of its aristocratic members who like De Savorin Lohman have double names The CHU continued its opposition against universal suffrage and was more anti papist than the ARP In the 1894 election the ARP lost almost half of its vote and six of its twenty one seats The Catholics broke their alliance with the ARP and supported a conservative cabinet In the 1897 election the ARP won back some ground it was supported by 26 of the electorate and won seventeen seats The group around De Savorin Lohman won 11 of the vote and six seats A liberal cabinet was formed and the ARP was confined to opposition In 1901 the ARP won a decisive victory It won 27 4 of the vote and twenty three seats A cabinet was formed out of the ARP the Catholics and the group around De Savorin Lohman now called the Christian Historical Party The cabinet was led by Kuyper being the first person to formally lead the cabinet for four years It was characterised by Kuypers authoritarian leadership This can best be seen by the railway strike of 1903 in which Kuyper showed no mercy to the strikers and instead pushed several particularly harsh anti strike laws through parliament After the Senate where there was a liberal majority rejected Kuypers law on higher education which sought to bring equal titles for alumni of the Free University which Kuyper himself founded Kuyper called for new elections for the Senate With a confessional majority in the Senate the law was pushed through In the 1905 election the ARP lost only 3 of vote but eight seats although it was able to strengthen its position in the Senate Kuyper the party s leader lost his own seat in Amsterdam to a progressive liberal Theo Heemskerk led the anti revolutionary parliamentary party A minority liberal cabinet was formed Former anti revolutionary MP Staalman left ARP and founded the Christian Democratic Party which later became the Christian Democratic Union which would play a minor role in the interbellum political landscape In a 1908 Kuyper returned to the House of Representatives After a crisis in the liberal cabinet Theo Heemskerk was given the chance to form a new cabinet A minority confessional cabinet was formed In the 1909 election the ARP won 3 of vote and twenty five seats The Heemskerk cabinet continues In 1912 Kuyper left national politics because of health reasons and in 1913 he was elected to the Senate In the 1913 election the ARP lost 6 of the votes but lost more than half of its seats and was left with 11 seats Another minority liberal cabinet was formed The leadership of the ARP lay in the hands of less prominent politicians Although a relatively small opposition party the ARP played an important role in Dutch politics The liberal minority cabinet led by Cort van der Linden sought to resolve two important issues in Dutch politics the conflict over the equalisation of payment for religious schools and universal suffrage In the constitution change of 1917 both items were resolved The ARP was given equal payment for religious schools but it had to accept women s suffrage and proportional representation 1917 1945 edit nbsp Hendrikus Colijn party leader 1920 1940 Prime Minister 1925 1926 and 1933 1939 After the Pacification of 1917 marked by the introduction of universal suffrage the party never received more than twenty percent of the vote The 1918 election provided a decisive test for the party where the party won two additional seats The three confessional parties won 50 seats The confessional parties formed a new cabinet led by the Catholic Charles Ruijs de Beerenbrouck The ARP supplied three ministers and former prime minister Theo Heemskerk became Minister of Justice A group of concerned anti revolutionaries led by Gerrit Kersten founded the Reformed Political Party which opposed universal suffrage and cooperation with the Catholics The electorate of the ARP changed in the interbellum the difference between lower class Protestants who voted ARP and middle class Protestant Protestants who voted CHU began to disappear with religious differences between the Dutch Reformed Church CHU and the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands ARP becoming more important In the 1922 election former minister of war Hendrikus Colijn became the leader of the ARP He emphasised defence and fiscal conservatism as core issues of the party With him the ARP got sixteen seats in the House of Representatives and fifteen in the Senate He became Minister of Finance in the second cabinet of Charles Ruijs de Beerenbrouck He led the party in the 1925 election and the party lost three seats The ARP continued in government with Jan Donner as minister of Justice In the 1929 election the ARP lost another seat The confessional parties continued to govern nbsp Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy Prime Minister 1940 1945 during World War II leading the Dutch government in exile In the 1930s with the growing international political threats and economic crisis the ARP began to regain its popularity under the leadership of Colijn In 1933 the ARP gained two seats and Colijn formed a broad cabinet comprising the Roman Catholic State Party RKSP CHU ARP Liberal State Party LSP and Free thinking Democratic League VDB Jan Schouten led the party s parliamentary party Between 1933 and 1939 Colijn led several parliamentary and extra parliamentary cabinets with changing composition although the CHU ARP and RKSP continued to form the core of the cabinet Colijn refused to devalue the guilder but was unable to resolve the economic crisis In 1937 the ARP gained three seats and reached a historic 17 seats Colijn continued to govern In 1939 his fifth cabinet fell and Colijn was succeeded by Dirk Jan de Geer Pieter Gerbrandy joined the cabinet without support of his parliamentary party During World War II members of the ARP played a role in both the governments in exile of which many were led by Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy and the resistance movements The resistance paper Trouw was founded by ARP members Many future ARP MPs began their political career in the Dutch resistance 1945 1980 edit nbsp Logo of the party from 1952 to 1968After World War II the ARP returned to Dutch politics The anti revolutionary Jo Meynen was minister of War albeit without support of his parliamentary party In the 1946 election Jan Schouten led the party It lost four seats During the formation in became clear that the ARP could not govern it strongly opposed the decolonisation of the Dutch Indies It saw maintenance of the Dutch colonial empire as necessary for the continued wealth and power of the Netherlands The Labour Party PvdA and the Catholics however favoured decolonisation under heavy pressure from the United States For six years the ARP was relatively isolated In 1944 a theological conflict within the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands led to a break between the Reformed Church and the Reformed Churches liberated This also had political repercussions as in 1948 the Reformed Political League was set up by members of the liberated churches They were unable to win seats until 1963 The party remained stable in the 1948 election and remained in opposition nbsp Jelle Zijlstra party leader in 1956 and 1958 1959 Prime Minister 1966 1967 After the 1952 election the ARP returned to the cabinet which consisted of the confessional ARP CHU KVP and the social democratic PvdA led by the social democrat Drees Jelle Zijlstra became minister of economic affairs In the 1956 election in which Jelle Zijlstra became political leader the ARP kept its 10 of the vote but due to the enlargement of the House of Representatives it got 15 seats A conflict between the PvdA and the KVP caused the early downfall of the cabinet The ARP remained part of the care taker cabinet led by Louis Beel In the 1959 election the ARP lost another seat It continued to be part of the cabinet now led by Jan de Quay The three confessional parties were joined by the conservative liberal People s Party for Freedom and Democracy nbsp Barend Biesheuvel party leader 1963 1973 and last Prime Minister of the ARP 1971 1973 After the 1963 election the cabinet continued now led by Victor Marijnen The new anti revolutionary leader Barend Biesheuvel became Minister of Agriculture In 1965 this cabinet fell over a conflict between the liberals and the confessionals The PvdA joins the ARP and the KVP in a new cabinet led by Jo Cals This cabinet fell after one year over conflict between the KVP and PvdA over government spending The ARP joins the PvdA in its plea for more government spending A caretaker government is formed by the KVP and ARP led by former ARP leader Jelle Zijlstra In the 1967 election campaign the ARP CHU and KVP declared that they would continue to govern together This led to considerable conflict with the KVP which also spilled over into the ARP as the younger generation wanted to govern with the PvdA The ARP gained two seats but the KVP loses eight seats A new liberal confessional cabinet is formed Biesheuvel does not enter government but instead chooses to remain in parliament In the 1971 election the ARP lost two seats and its confessional allies KVP and CHU lost seven and three seats respectively They faced competition from the left wing Christian Political Party of Radicals PPR which was formed by former KVP members and joined by some prominent anti revolutionaries including Bas de Gaay Fortman son of Wilhelm de Gaay Fortman one of the party s ministers The liberal confessional cabinet lost its majority A new government was formed consisting of liberals and confessionals now joined by Democratic Socialists 70 a group of moderate social democrats who left the radicalising PvdA This cabinet was led by Barend Biesheuvel Willem Aantjes became the chair of the party s parliamentary party Under his leadership the ARP fashioned itself a new left wing radical evangelical image while the CHU retains its conservative image The cabinet did not hold together for long DS 70 were unable to agree with proposed budget cuts and the cabinet fell In the subsequent election the ARP gained one seat After long coalition talks several prominent anti revolutionaries including Wilhelm de Gaay Fortman joined the progressive cabinet led by Joop den Uyl The cabinet was riddled with conflicts between confessional and progressive politicians Dissolution edit nbsp Willem Aantjes the last party leader from 1973 until 1977 Meanwhile a process of merger had started between the KVP ARP and CHU In 1974 they founded a federation called the Christian Democratic Appeal CDA In the formation of a common Christian democratic identity anti revolutionary Aantjes played a decisive role he orients the party towards the sermon on the Mount where Christ says that Christians should clothe the naked and feed the hungry In the 1977 election they campaigned together under as the CDA Some prominent anti revolutionaries like Aantjes did not agree the CDA VVD cabinet that was formed after the election and wanted to continue with the PvdA However they supported the cabinet politically A group of these anti revolutionaries left the CDA in 1981 to found the left wing Christian Evangelical People s Party While the ARP was one of the dominant forces in the merged party it was not until 2002 that a CDA member with anti revolutionary roots became Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende 6 Name edit The Anti Revolutionary Party derived its name from its opposition to the ideals of the liberal French Revolution and certainly against those of Marxists The label conservative was already taken by a parliamentary group of monarchists and colonialists who fell out of favour in the late 19th century In its early years the terms anti revolutionary and Christian historical were used interchangeably With the split between the ARP and the Christian Historical Union the terms began to gain their own separate meanings Ideology and issues editThe ARP started out as an orthodox Protestant party heavily opposed to the ideals of the French revolution Against the revolution they put the Bible instead of liberty it favoured divine providence instead of equality it favoured hierarchy and instead of brotherhood it favoured sovereignty in its own circle Its ideals could be summed up in the tripartite motto God the Netherlands and the House of Orange For most of its history it maintained this conservative Protestant image In the 1960s and 1970s the party began to adopt a more left wing radical evangelical image 7 God edit The ARP was a confessional Protestant party which based its politics on the Bible and opposed the concept of popular sovereignty The concept of sphere sovereignty was very important for the party It wanted to create an independent Protestant society within the Dutch society with its own schools papers hospitals etc It sought equal government finances for its own institutions Societies should care for their own therefore they opposed a large role for the state in social economic policy The ARP saw an important role for the state in upholding the values of the Dutch people It was socially conservative it opposed mixed sex education mandatory vaccination divorce pornography euthanasia abortion etc It also favoured capital punishment Netherlands edit The party can be seen as rather nationalist It favoured a strong defence to retain Dutch neutrality It opposed decolonisation It saw the colonies in Indonesia as vital for the continued wealth and influence of the Dutch people It also wanted to enlighten the native population with Christian values Monarchy edit The ARP favoured monarchy and saw the House of Orange as historically and religiously linked to the Dutch people It opposed changes to Dutch political system it wanted to retain bicameralism opposed popular referendums etc Its commitment to universal suffrage was only tactical as the ARP expected that it would be able to gain more seats this way Principally it wanted Householder Franchise where the head of the household would vote for his family 8 The party was fiscally conservative the Dutch government should be like a good father it should not spend more than it got through taxes Christian radicalism edit In the 1960s and 1970s the party became more left wing on many issues Social justice became an important ideal of the party both nationally where it began to favour a stronger welfare state and internationally where development aid became an important issue 9 Organisation editLeaders edit Leader Term of office Age as leader Lead candidate nbsp Dr Abraham Kuyper 1837 1920 3 April 1879 31 March 1920 10 41 82 1918 nbsp Hendrikus Colijn 1869 1944 31 March 1920 18 September 1944 Died in office 10 50 75 1922 1925 1929 1933 1937Vacant 18 September 1944 5 May 1945 nbsp Jan Schouten 1883 1963 5 May 1945 23 April 1956 10 61 72 1946 1948 1952 nbsp Dr Jelle Zijlstra 1918 2001 23 April 1956 3 October 1956 10 37 38 1956 nbsp Dr Sieuwert Bruins Slot 1906 1972 3 October 1956 29 December 1958 10 50 52 None nbsp Dr Jelle Zijlstra 1918 2001 29 December 1958 26 May 1959 10 40 1959 nbsp Dr Sieuwert Bruins Slot 1906 1972 26 May 1959 1 July 1963 10 53 57 None nbsp Barend Biesheuvel 1920 2001 1 July 1963 7 March 1973 10 43 52 1963 1967 1971 1972 nbsp Willem Aantjes 1923 2015 7 March 1973 25 May 1977 10 50 54 NoneVacant 25 May 1977 27 September 1980 Prime Ministers edit Barend Biesheuvel 1971 1973 Jelle Zijlstra 1966 1967 Pieter Sjoerds Gerbrandy 1940 1945 Hendrikus Colijn 1925 1926 1933 1939 Theo Heemskerk 1908 1913 Abraham Kuyper 1901 1905 AEneas Mackay 1888 1891 Leadership edit Party chair 1975 1980 Hans de Boer 1973 1975 Jan de Koning 1968 1973 Antoon Veerman 1968 Anton Roosjen 1956 1968 Wiert Berghuis 1955 1956 Anton Roosjen 1941 1955 Jan Schouten 1939 1941 Hendrikus Colijn 1933 1939 Jan Schouten 1920 1933 Hendrikus Colijn 1907 1920 Abraham Kuyper 1905 1907 Herman Bavinck 1879 1905 Abraham KuyperParliamentary leaders in the Senate 11 Alexander Idenburg 1922 1924 Anne Anema 1925 1926 Hendrikus Colijn 1926 1929 Anne Anema 1929 1960 Wiert Berghuis 1960 1971 Gaius de Gaay Fortman 1971 1973 Wil Albeda 1973 1977 Parliamentary leaders in the House of Representatives 12 Abraham Kuyper 1894 Jan van Alphen 1894 1896 Abraham Kuyper 1896 1901 Jan van Alphen 1901 1903 Theo Heemskerk 1903 1908 Jan Hendrik de Waal Malefijt 1908 Abraham Kuyper 1908 1912 Gerrit Middelberg 1912 1913 Coenraad van der Voort van Zijp 1913 1919 Victor Henri Rutgers 1919 1922 Hendrikus Colijn 1922 1923 Victor Henri Rutgers 1923 1925 Theo Heemskerk 1925 1929 Hendrikus Colijn 1929 1933 Jan Schouten 1933 1956 Jelle Zijlstra 1956 Sieuwert Bruins Slot 1956 1963 Henk van Eijsden 1963 Barend Biesheuvel 1963 Jan Smallenbroek 1963 1965 Bauke Roolvink 1965 1967 Barend Biesheuvel 1967 1971 Willem Aantjes 1971 1972 Barend Biesheuvel 1972 1973 Willem Aantjes 1973 1977 Municipal and provincial government edit The party was particularly strong in rural municipal and provincial governments Especially in Friesland Overijssel Zeeland and the Veluwe the party was particularly strong Electorate editThe electorate of the ARP has seen three decisive shifts especially in its relation with the CHU the other Protestant party Although dates are given here the changes were gradual Between 1879 and 1917 the ARP appealed to kleine luyden Dutch for the little people the middle class farmers and workers as a confessional party that favoured universal suffrage Between 1917 and 1967 the ARP appealed to members of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands Between 1967 and 1977 in the time of secularisation and depillarisation the party was able to appeal to younger generations as the more left wing confessional party Organisation editNational organisation edit The party s national secretariat was long housed in the Kuyper House in The Hague It now houses the national secretariat of the Christian Democratic Appeal Linked organisations edit The party published the magazine Nederlandse Gedachten Dutch Thoughts Its youth organisation was the Anti Revolutionaire Jongeren Studieclubs Anti Revolutionary Youth Studyclubs Its scientific institute was the Dr A Kuyper foundation International organisations edit Internationally the ARP was a relatively isolated party In the European Parliament its members sat in the Christian Democratic faction Pillarised organisations edit The party had close ties to many Protestant organisations such as the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands the Protestant broadcaster NCRV the employers organisation NCW the trade union CNV and the paper De Standaard and after World War II the Trouw Together these organisations formed the Protestant pillar Relationships to other parties edit Because of the philosophy of Antithesis it has strong links with the Catholic parties General League Roman Catholic State Party Catholic People s Party KVP and the Christian Historical Union CHU In the period 1879 to 1917 it saw the Liberal Union as its main opponent After 1917 it saw the social democratic Social Democratic Workers Party as its main opponent and it formed several governments with liberals After World War II the ARP became more isolated because of its position on the decolonisation of the Dutch East Indies After Indonesia became independent it joined the Labour Party PvdA KVP and the CHU in the cabinet Links with the KVP were exceptionally good and it governed with the KVP and either the CHU and the PvdA After the 1960s calls to govern with the PvdA became stronger International comparison editInternationally the ARP was very similar to the Scandinavian Christian Democratic parties such as the Swedish Norwegian Danish and the Finnish Christian Democrats that are all socially and fiscally conservative with a social heart All have their roots in orthodox tendencies within the national church In its conservative policies the ARP also shared similarities with the UK Conservatives the paternalistic or moderate conservative wing of that party Comparing the ARP to an American party is more difficult but is seemed somewhat close to the moderate wing of the US Republicans although the ARP was more socially inclined or the conservative wing of the US Democratic Party References edit Anti Revolutionaire Jongerenstudieclubs ARJOS Parlement com in Dutch Retrieved 30 December 2023 Andeweg R and G Irwin Politics and Governance in the Netherlands Basingstoke Palgrave p 49 Josep M Colomer 2008 Comparative European Politics Taylor amp Francis p 221f ISBN 978 0 203 94609 1 Retrieved 13 July 2013 Score 4 0 10 in 2003 Chapel Hill expert survey see Hooghe et al 2003 Chapel Hill Survey Peter Starke Alexandra Kaasch Franca Van Hooren 2013 The Welfare State as Crisis Manager Explaining the Diversity of Policy Responses to Economic Crisis Palgrave Macmillan p 193 ISBN 978 1 137 31484 0 Hoe groeide toevalspremier Balkenende in zijn rol NPO Kennis in Dutch 2 January 2018 Retrieved 30 December 2023 Ruppert maakte conservatieve ARP tot evangelisch radicale partij Trouw in Dutch 28 February 1992 Retrieved 30 December 2023 Dr Abraham Kuyper over het huisgezin 1 Digibron nl in Dutch Retrieved 30 December 2023 Kennedy James C The Problem of Kuyper s Legacy The Crisis of the Anti Revolutionary Party in Post War Holland Journal of Markets amp Morality 5 No 1 Spring 2002 52 Retrieved 28 August 2020 a b c d e f g h i Politiek leider van een partij Parlement amp Politiek Retrieved 3 November 2012 Eerste Kamerfractie Anti Revolutionaire Partij ARP Parlement amp Politiek in Dutch Retrieved 24 August 2018 Tweede Kamerfractie Anti Revolutionaire Partij ARP Parlement amp Politiek in Dutch Retrieved 24 August 2018 Further reading editBosmans Jac 2004 The Primacy of Domestic Politics Christian Democracy in the Netherlands In Michael Gehler Wolfram Kaiser eds Christian Democracy in Europe since 1945 Routledge pp 47 58 ISBN 0 7146 5662 3 Changing Procedures and Changing Strategies in Dutch Coalition Building by Hans Daalder In Legislative Studies Quarterly Vol 11 No 4 Nov 1986 pp 507 531 Conservatism in the Netherlands by Hermann von der Dunk In Journal of Contemporary History Vol 13 No 4 Oct 1978 pp 741 763 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anti Revolutionary Party amp oldid 1210223958, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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