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Czech National Social Party

Czech National Social Party (Czech: Česká strana národně sociální, ČSNS) is a civic nationalist political party in the Czech Republic, that once played an important role in Czechoslovakia during the interwar period. It was established in 1897 by break-away groups from both the national liberal Young Czech Party and the Czech Social Democratic Party, with a stress on achieving independence of the Czech lands from Austria-Hungary (as opposed to the Social Democrats' aim for an international workers' revolution). Its variant of socialism was moderate and reformist rather than a Marxist one. After the National Labour Party dissolved and merged with National Socialists in 1930, the party also became the refuge for Czech liberals.[2] Its best-known member was Edvard Beneš, a co-founder of Czechoslovakia and the country's second President during the 1930s and 1940s.[3]

Czech National Social Party
Česká strana národně sociální
AbbreviationČSNS
LeaderVladislav Svoboda
Founded4 April 1897 (127 years ago) (1897-04-04)
Split fromSocial Democratic Party and Young Czech Party
HeadquartersLegerova 22, Prague
NewspaperČeský deník
Česká demokracie
České slovo
Svobodné slovo
IdeologyCzech nationalism[1]
Social liberalism
Reformism
Historical:
Democratic socialism[1]
Czechoslovakism
Liberal socialism
Reformist socialism
Political positionCentre to centre-left
Historical:
Centre-left
National affiliationStačilo!
International affiliationInternational Entente of Radical and Similar Democratic Parties
(1929–1936)
Colours       
White, Red, Blue, Gold
Chamber of Deputies
0 / 200
Senate
0 / 81
European Parliament
0 / 21
Regional councils
0 / 675
Local councils
9 / 62,300
Party flag
Website
www.csns.cz

Despite the similar name, the Czech "National Socialists" were not affiliated with Nazism or the German Nazi Party. While the early ČSNS made use of antisemitic rhetoric, the party completely abandoned such positions after the First World War, when it renamed to Czechoslovak (National) Socialist Party.[4] Instead, party representatives in the majority supported Zionism and highly supported German Jewish refugees in the 1930s.[5] The party liquidated itself after the Munich Agreement of 1938. During the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, the Nazis persecuted (former) party members, who in turn offered resistance against the occupying forces or worked in exile.

After the Second World War, the party was revived and became the second strongest party, behind the Communists. After the latter took power in the 1948 coup d'état, the ČSS's role was reduced to a bloc party. Anti-communist members were persecuted again, forced to exile, or even executed like Milada Horáková. After the Velvet Revolution of 1989, the party failed to regain its importance. Since the 1990s, several splinter parties claim to continue the ČSNS's tradition.

History edit

The party was founded in 1897 and was led by Václav Klofáč, with support from Jiří Stříbrný and Emil Franke as well. [citation needed] The party platform relied on the social traditions of Hussitism and Taboritism, but it was also a programme of "collectivizing by means of development, surmounting of class struggle by national discipline, moral rebirth and democracy as the conditions of socialism, a powerful popular army, etc."[6]

In 1918 the party changed its name from the Czech National Social Party to the Czech Socialist Party, in 1919 to the Czechoslovak Socialist Party, and in 1926 to the Czechoslovak National Socialist Party. Edvard Beneš took de facto party leadership, although de jure, it was his ally Václav Klofáč. Jiří Stříbrný and his supporters were expelled for disagreements with Václav Klofáč and Edvard Beneš. The expelled Stříbrný faction later cooperated with the fascist movement and National Democratic Party.[7]

In its first years, the party bore some resemblance to National-Social Association in Germany. During the early 1920s, the party was an observer to the Labour and Socialist International, but never became a member due to disputes over internationalism. Its main international affiliation during the 1920s and 1930s was to the Entente of Radical and Democratic Parties, a centre-left international for non-Marxist progressive democratic parties whose chief member was the French Radical-Socialist Party. It also had close links with similar parties such as the Russian Narodniks of Alexander Kerensky and the People's Socialist Party in Yugoslavia. During the World War II, the exiled leadership of the party also cooperated with the British Labour Party.

From 1921, the party was part of most Czechoslovak government coalitions. Its newspaper was the České slovo. After German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938, most of the Czech membership joined left-wing National Labour Party, while a minority joined right-wing Party of National Unity led by Rudolf Beran, and a few of its Slovak members joined the Hlinka's Slovak People's Party led by Jozef Tiso.[8]

Under German occupation, the Czechoslovak National Socialist Party functioned in exile and most of its members were active in the resistance movement. After 1945, the party resurfaced, under the leadership of Petr Zenkl, as one of the parties in the National Front. When Czechoslovakia became a Communist state in 1948, communist militias seized the party headquarters and the puppet leadership expelled most of its members for alleged fascist sympathies.[9] The party was again renamed the Czechoslovak Socialist Party and operated as pro-communist bloc-party. In exile, Petr Zenkl led the Council of Free Czechoslovakia in London.

During the Velvet Revolution in 1989, a significant part of the party participated in the creation of the Civic Forum. After the return to democracy in 1989, the National Front was abolished. The party renamed itself the Liberal National Social Party (Liberální strana národně sociální), but failed to gather any significant support and was reduced to minor party status. It was shut out of the federal parliament in both elections held in 1990 elections. In 1992, the party operated inside the Liberal-Social Union and managed to gain a few seats in parliament.[10] After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia with its support hovering below the five-percent threshold, it merged with the Free Democrats, to form the Free Democrats – Liberal National Social Party.[11] However, in the 1996 elections, its support tumbled to 2.1 percent and it was shut out of the legislature, never to return.[12]

After the 1996 elections, the party split and was renamed again in 1997 to the Czech National Social Party. Having fallen well short of returning to parliament and crippled by financial debts, the party has almost disappeared. In 2017, Karel Schwarzenberg and Mirek Topolánek said that the Civic Democratic Party can be considered a spiritual successor to the pre-war Czechoslovak National Social Party.[13][14]

Party Chairman edit

  • Alois Simonides, Josef Klečák (1897), chairmen of preparatory congress
  • František Kváča (1897–1898), the founding chairman ruling party to I. Congress in April 1898
  • Václav Klofáč (1898–1914, 1918–1938), the first officially recognized party chairman at the First Congress
  • Petr Zenkl (May 17, 1945 - February 24, 1948)

Homeland leaders

  • Emanuel Šlechta (1948–1960)
  • Alois Neuman (1960–1968)
  • Bohuslav Kučera (1968–1989)
  • Jan Škoda (1989–1990)
  • Jiří Vyvadil ( 1990–1991)

Leaders in-exile


  • Ladislav Dvořák (January 13, 1991 - May 30, 1993)
  • Pavel Hirš (May 30, 1993 - May 28, 1995)
  • Vavřinec Bodenlos (May 28, 1995, from December 3, 1995, Co for LSNS - June 22, 1996)
  • Jiří Dienstbier (from December 3, 1995, Co for SD - November 30, 1996)
  • Tomáš Sokol (November 30, 1996 - from July 18, 1997, for inactivity assumes the role of Chairman 1st Deputy Miroslav Tampír, resigned September 1997)
  • Miroslav Tampír (Acting Vice September 20, 1997 - October 25, 1998)
  • Jan Šula (October 25, 1998 - June 22, 2002)
  • Jaroslav Rovný (July 20, 2002 - November 3, 2012)
  • Michal Klusáček (November 3, 2012 - June 15, 2019)
  • Vladislav Svoboda (June 15, 2019–)

Name changes edit

Name Year
Party of Czechoslavonic National Workers (Czech: Strana národního dělnictva českoslovanského) 1897 - 1898
Czech National Social Party (Czech: Česká strana národně sociální) 1898 - 1918
Czech Socialist Party (Czech: Česká strana socialistická) 1918 - 1919
Czechoslovak Socialist Party (Czech: Československá strana socialistická) 1919 - 1926
Czechoslovak National Socialist Party (Czech: Československá strana národně socialistická) 1926 - 1948
Czechoslovak Socialist Party (Czech: Československá strana socialistická) 1948 - 1993
Liberal National Social Party (Czech: Liberální strana národně sociální) 1993 - 1995
Free Democrats – Liberal National Social Party (Czech: Svobodní demokraté – Liberální strana národně sociální) 1995 - 1997
Czech National Social Party (Czech: Česká strana národně sociální) From 1997

Symbols edit

Traditional symbol of the party is a quill and hammer, that symbolize clerks and workers. According to their sign, they are nicknamed quills (Czech: brkouni).

Logos edit

Election results edit

Imperial Council edit

Date Leader Votes Seats Position
# % # ± Size
1900–1901 Václav Klofáč 5,404 0.50
4 / 425
  4 16th Opposition
1907 Václav Klofáč 75,101 1.63
6 / 516
  2 21st Opposition
1911 Václav Klofáč 95,901 2.11
13 / 516
  7 15th Opposition

Czechoslovakia wide elections edit

Legislative elections edit

Date Leader Votes Seats Position
# % # ± Size
1920 Václav Klofáč 500,821 8.1
24 / 281
  24 5th Coalition
1925 Václav Klofáč 609,915 8.6
28 / 300
  4 5th Opposition
1929 Václav Klofáč 767,328 10.4
32 / 300
  4 3rd Coalition
1935 Václav Klofáč 755,872 9.2
28 / 300
  4 5th Coalition
1946 Petr Zenkl 1,298,980 18.3
55 / 300
  27 2nd Coalition
1948 as part of National Front
23 / 300
  22 4th Bloc
1954
20 / 368
  3 3rd Bloc
1960
19 / 300
  1 3rd Bloc
1964
24 / 300
  5 3rd Bloc
1971
20 / 200
  1 3rd Bloc
1976
17 / 200
  3 4th Bloc
1981
18 / 200
  1 3rd Bloc
1986
18 / 200
  0 3rd Bloc
1990 Jiří Vyvadil 201,532 1.9
0 / 150
  18 12th No seats
1992 František Trnka 378,962 4.0
1 / 150
  1 8th Opposition

Since 1990 edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Vejvodová, Petra (2014). Transnational Forms of Contemporary Neo-Nazi Activity in Europe from the Perspective of Czech Neo-Nazis. Vol. 58. Masaryk University. p. 44. ISBN 9788021077959. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
  2. ^ Havránek, Jan (1995). Český liberalismus: texty a osobnosti. Torst. p. 277.
  3. ^ . www.csns.cz (in Czech). 29 March 2010. Archived from the original on 14 October 2017. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  4. ^ Detlef Brandes (1979). Karl Bosl (ed.). Die Tschechoslowakischen National-Sozialisten. pp. 149–150. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Lichtenstein, Tatjana (2016). Zionists in Interwar Czechoslovakia: Minority Nationalism and the Politics of Belonging. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 324. ISBN 978-0-253-01872-4.
  6. ^ T. Mills Kelly (2006). Without Remorse: Czech National Socialism in Late-Habsburg Austria. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-88033-586-7.
  7. ^ Klátil, František (1992). Republika nad stranami - o vzniku a vývoji Československé strany národně socialistické (1897-1948) (in Czech). Prague: Melantrich. p. 370. ISBN 80-7023-117-3.
  8. ^ Gebhart, Jan; Kuklík, Jan (2004). Druhá republika 1938–1939 : svár demokracie a totality v politickém, společenském a kulturním životě (in Czech). Litomyšl: Paseka. p. 315. ISBN 80-7185-626-6.
  9. ^ Kocian, Jiří (2003). Československá strana národně socialistická v letech 1945-1948 (in Czech). Brno: Doplněk. p. 264. ISBN 80-7239-138-0.
  10. ^ Benda, Václav (2009). Lidová strana- problémy a naděje (in Czech). Praha: Agite/Fra. ISBN 978-80-86603-85-8.
  11. ^ Bureš, Jan; Charvát, Jakub; Just, Petr; Štefek, Martin (2012). Česká demokracie po roce 1989: Institucionální základy českého politického systému (in Czech). České Budějovice: Grada Publishing, a.s. p. 473. ISBN 978-80-247-8270-6.
  12. ^ "Historie ČSNS". www.csns.cz (in Czech). 5 April 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  13. ^ "Schwarzenberg: Buďme vděční Madeleine Albrightové za to, že jsme v NATO. Když jsme chlastali s Topolánkem..." Parlamentní Listy. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  14. ^ "Schwarzenberg: Vztahy v koalici nejsou dobré a budou se ještě zhoršovat". MZV.cz. Retrieved 10 December 2017.

Bibliography edit

  1. Karel Hoch: The Political Parties of Czechoslovakia.
  2. Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn: Leftism Revisited, Regnery Gateway, Washington D.C., 1990, pp. 145–146.
  3. Malá encyklopédia Slovenska, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava 1987

External links edit

  • Czech National Social Party Official website

czech, national, social, party, confused, with, czech, national, socialist, party, czech, Česká, strana, národně, sociální, Čsns, civic, nationalist, political, party, czech, republic, that, once, played, important, role, czechoslovakia, during, interwar, peri. Not to be confused with Czech National Socialist Party Czech National Social Party Czech Ceska strana narodne socialni CSNS is a civic nationalist political party in the Czech Republic that once played an important role in Czechoslovakia during the interwar period It was established in 1897 by break away groups from both the national liberal Young Czech Party and the Czech Social Democratic Party with a stress on achieving independence of the Czech lands from Austria Hungary as opposed to the Social Democrats aim for an international workers revolution Its variant of socialism was moderate and reformist rather than a Marxist one After the National Labour Party dissolved and merged with National Socialists in 1930 the party also became the refuge for Czech liberals 2 Its best known member was Edvard Benes a co founder of Czechoslovakia and the country s second President during the 1930s and 1940s 3 Czech National Social Party Ceska strana narodne socialniAbbreviationCSNSLeaderVladislav SvobodaFounded4 April 1897 127 years ago 1897 04 04 Split fromSocial Democratic Party and Young Czech PartyHeadquartersLegerova 22 PragueNewspaperCesky denikCeska demokracieCeske slovoSvobodne slovoIdeologyCzech nationalism 1 Social liberalismReformismHistorical Democratic socialism 1 CzechoslovakismLiberal socialismReformist socialismPolitical positionCentre to centre leftHistorical Centre leftNational affiliationStacilo International affiliationInternational Entente of Radical and Similar Democratic Parties 1929 1936 Colours White Red Blue GoldChamber of Deputies0 200Senate0 81European Parliament0 21Regional councils0 675Local councils9 62 300Party flagWebsitewww csns czPolitics of the Czech RepublicPolitical partiesElections Despite the similar name the Czech National Socialists were not affiliated with Nazism or the German Nazi Party While the early CSNS made use of antisemitic rhetoric the party completely abandoned such positions after the First World War when it renamed to Czechoslovak National Socialist Party 4 Instead party representatives in the majority supported Zionism and highly supported German Jewish refugees in the 1930s 5 The party liquidated itself after the Munich Agreement of 1938 During the German occupation of Czechoslovakia the Nazis persecuted former party members who in turn offered resistance against the occupying forces or worked in exile After the Second World War the party was revived and became the second strongest party behind the Communists After the latter took power in the 1948 coup d etat the CSS s role was reduced to a bloc party Anti communist members were persecuted again forced to exile or even executed like Milada Horakova After the Velvet Revolution of 1989 the party failed to regain its importance Since the 1990s several splinter parties claim to continue the CSNS s tradition Contents 1 History 2 Party Chairman 3 Name changes 4 Symbols 4 1 Logos 5 Election results 5 1 Imperial Council 5 2 Czechoslovakia wide elections 5 2 1 Legislative elections 5 3 Since 1990 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory editThe party was founded in 1897 and was led by Vaclav Klofac with support from Jiri Stribrny and Emil Franke as well citation needed The party platform relied on the social traditions of Hussitism and Taboritism but it was also a programme of collectivizing by means of development surmounting of class struggle by national discipline moral rebirth and democracy as the conditions of socialism a powerful popular army etc 6 In 1918 the party changed its name from the Czech National Social Party to the Czech Socialist Party in 1919 to the Czechoslovak Socialist Party and in 1926 to the Czechoslovak National Socialist Party Edvard Benes took de facto party leadership although de jure it was his ally Vaclav Klofac Jiri Stribrny and his supporters were expelled for disagreements with Vaclav Klofac and Edvard Benes The expelled Stribrny faction later cooperated with the fascist movement and National Democratic Party 7 In its first years the party bore some resemblance to National Social Association in Germany During the early 1920s the party was an observer to the Labour and Socialist International but never became a member due to disputes over internationalism Its main international affiliation during the 1920s and 1930s was to the Entente of Radical and Democratic Parties a centre left international for non Marxist progressive democratic parties whose chief member was the French Radical Socialist Party It also had close links with similar parties such as the Russian Narodniks of Alexander Kerensky and the People s Socialist Party in Yugoslavia During the World War II the exiled leadership of the party also cooperated with the British Labour Party From 1921 the party was part of most Czechoslovak government coalitions Its newspaper was the Ceske slovo After German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938 most of the Czech membership joined left wing National Labour Party while a minority joined right wing Party of National Unity led by Rudolf Beran and a few of its Slovak members joined the Hlinka s Slovak People s Party led by Jozef Tiso 8 Under German occupation the Czechoslovak National Socialist Party functioned in exile and most of its members were active in the resistance movement After 1945 the party resurfaced under the leadership of Petr Zenkl as one of the parties in the National Front When Czechoslovakia became a Communist state in 1948 communist militias seized the party headquarters and the puppet leadership expelled most of its members for alleged fascist sympathies 9 The party was again renamed the Czechoslovak Socialist Party and operated as pro communist bloc party In exile Petr Zenkl led the Council of Free Czechoslovakia in London During the Velvet Revolution in 1989 a significant part of the party participated in the creation of the Civic Forum After the return to democracy in 1989 the National Front was abolished The party renamed itself the Liberal National Social Party Liberalni strana narodne socialni but failed to gather any significant support and was reduced to minor party status It was shut out of the federal parliament in both elections held in 1990 elections In 1992 the party operated inside the Liberal Social Union and managed to gain a few seats in parliament 10 After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia with its support hovering below the five percent threshold it merged with the Free Democrats to form the Free Democrats Liberal National Social Party 11 However in the 1996 elections its support tumbled to 2 1 percent and it was shut out of the legislature never to return 12 After the 1996 elections the party split and was renamed again in 1997 to the Czech National Social Party Having fallen well short of returning to parliament and crippled by financial debts the party has almost disappeared In 2017 Karel Schwarzenberg and Mirek Topolanek said that the Civic Democratic Party can be considered a spiritual successor to the pre war Czechoslovak National Social Party 13 14 Party Chairman editAlois Simonides Josef Klecak 1897 chairmen of preparatory congress Frantisek Kvaca 1897 1898 the founding chairman ruling party to I Congress in April 1898 Vaclav Klofac 1898 1914 1918 1938 the first officially recognized party chairman at the First Congress Petr Zenkl May 17 1945 February 24 1948 Homeland leaders Emanuel Slechta 1948 1960 Alois Neuman 1960 1968 Bohuslav Kucera 1968 1989 Jan Skoda 1989 1990 Jiri Vyvadil 1990 1991 Leaders in exile Petr Zenkl 1948 1975 Mojmir Povolny 1975 1991 Ladislav Dvorak January 13 1991 May 30 1993 Pavel Hirs May 30 1993 May 28 1995 Vavrinec Bodenlos May 28 1995 from December 3 1995 Co for LSNS June 22 1996 Jiri Dienstbier from December 3 1995 Co for SD November 30 1996 Tomas Sokol November 30 1996 from July 18 1997 for inactivity assumes the role of Chairman 1st Deputy Miroslav Tampir resigned September 1997 Miroslav Tampir Acting Vice September 20 1997 October 25 1998 Jan Sula October 25 1998 June 22 2002 Jaroslav Rovny July 20 2002 November 3 2012 Michal Klusacek November 3 2012 June 15 2019 Vladislav Svoboda June 15 2019 Name changes editName Year Party of Czechoslavonic National Workers Czech Strana narodniho delnictva ceskoslovanskeho 1897 1898 Czech National Social Party Czech Ceska strana narodne socialni 1898 1918 Czech Socialist Party Czech Ceska strana socialisticka 1918 1919 Czechoslovak Socialist Party Czech Ceskoslovenska strana socialisticka 1919 1926 Czechoslovak National Socialist Party Czech Ceskoslovenska strana narodne socialisticka 1926 1948 Czechoslovak Socialist Party Czech Ceskoslovenska strana socialisticka 1948 1993 Liberal National Social Party Czech Liberalni strana narodne socialni 1993 1995 Free Democrats Liberal National Social Party Czech Svobodni demokrate Liberalni strana narodne socialni 1995 1997 Czech National Social Party Czech Ceska strana narodne socialni From 1997Symbols editTraditional symbol of the party is a quill and hammer that symbolize clerks and workers According to their sign they are nicknamed quills Czech brkouni Logos edit nbsp Party logo 1948 1990 nbsp Party logo 1995 1997 nbsp Party symbol 1997 2012 nbsp Party logo before 1948 Current logoElection results editImperial Council edit Date Leader Votes Seats Position Size 1900 1901 Vaclav Klofac 5 404 0 50 4 425 nbsp 4 16th Opposition 1907 Vaclav Klofac 75 101 1 63 6 516 nbsp 2 21st Opposition 1911 Vaclav Klofac 95 901 2 11 13 516 nbsp 7 15th Opposition Czechoslovakia wide elections edit Legislative elections edit Date Leader Votes Seats Position Size 1920 Vaclav Klofac 500 821 8 1 24 281 nbsp 24 5th Coalition 1925 Vaclav Klofac 609 915 8 6 28 300 nbsp 4 5th Opposition 1929 Vaclav Klofac 767 328 10 4 32 300 nbsp 4 3rd Coalition 1935 Vaclav Klofac 755 872 9 2 28 300 nbsp 4 5th Coalition 1946 Petr Zenkl 1 298 980 18 3 55 300 nbsp 27 2nd Coalition 1948 as part of National Front 23 300 nbsp 22 4th Bloc 1954 20 368 nbsp 3 3rd Bloc 1960 19 300 nbsp 1 3rd Bloc 1964 24 300 nbsp 5 3rd Bloc 1971 20 200 nbsp 1 3rd Bloc 1976 17 200 nbsp 3 4th Bloc 1981 18 200 nbsp 1 3rd Bloc 1986 18 200 nbsp 0 3rd Bloc 1990 Jiri Vyvadil 201 532 1 9 0 150 nbsp 18 12th No seats 1992 Frantisek Trnka 378 962 4 0 1 150 nbsp 1 8th Opposition Since 1990 edit 1990 Czech National Council 2 7 no seat 1992 Czech National Council as a part of Liberal Social Union 6 5 16 seats 1996 Chamber of Deputies with Free Democrats 2 1 no seat 1996 Senate no seat 1998 Chamber of Deputies 0 3 no seat 1998 Senate no seat 2000 Senate no seat 2002 Chamber of Deputies 0 8 no seat 2002 Senate no seat 2006 Chamber of Deputies 1 3 no seat 2006 Senate no seatSee also editTimeline of liberal parties in the Czech lands Barak Workers Association Czech National Socialist Party National Socialists Left of the 21st century Brno Noppeisen a bilingual German and Czech socialist newspaper in the 1870sReferences edit a b Vejvodova Petra 2014 Transnational Forms of Contemporary Neo Nazi Activity in Europe from the Perspective of Czech Neo Nazis Vol 58 Masaryk University p 44 ISBN 9788021077959 Retrieved 11 July 2020 Havranek Jan 1995 Cesky liberalismus texty a osobnosti Torst p 277 Osobnost CSNS Edvard Benes www csns cz in Czech 29 March 2010 Archived from the original on 14 October 2017 Retrieved 16 April 2017 Detlef Brandes 1979 Karl Bosl ed Die Tschechoslowakischen National Sozialisten pp 149 150 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Lichtenstein Tatjana 2016 Zionists in Interwar Czechoslovakia Minority Nationalism and the Politics of Belonging Bloomington Indiana University Press p 324 ISBN 978 0 253 01872 4 T Mills Kelly 2006 Without Remorse Czech National Socialism in Late Habsburg Austria New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 88033 586 7 Klatil Frantisek 1992 Republika nad stranami o vzniku a vyvoji Ceskoslovenske strany narodne socialisticke 1897 1948 in Czech Prague Melantrich p 370 ISBN 80 7023 117 3 Gebhart Jan Kuklik Jan 2004 Druha republika 1938 1939 svar demokracie a totality v politickem spolecenskem a kulturnim zivote in Czech Litomysl Paseka p 315 ISBN 80 7185 626 6 Kocian Jiri 2003 Ceskoslovenska strana narodne socialisticka v letech 1945 1948 in Czech Brno Doplnek p 264 ISBN 80 7239 138 0 Benda Vaclav 2009 Lidova strana problemy a nadeje in Czech Praha Agite Fra ISBN 978 80 86603 85 8 Bures Jan Charvat Jakub Just Petr Stefek Martin 2012 Ceska demokracie po roce 1989 Institucionalni zaklady ceskeho politickeho systemu in Czech Ceske Budejovice Grada Publishing a s p 473 ISBN 978 80 247 8270 6 Historie CSNS www csns cz in Czech 5 April 2010 Retrieved 16 April 2017 Schwarzenberg Budme vdecni Madeleine Albrightove za to ze jsme v NATO Kdyz jsme chlastali s Topolankem Parlamentni Listy Retrieved 10 December 2017 Schwarzenberg Vztahy v koalici nejsou dobre a budou se jeste zhorsovat MZV cz Retrieved 10 December 2017 Bibliography editKarel Hoch The Political Parties of Czechoslovakia Erik von Kuehnelt Leddihn Leftism Revisited Regnery Gateway Washington D C 1990 pp 145 146 Mala encyklopedia Slovenska Slovak Academy of Sciences Bratislava 1987External links editCzech National Social Party Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Czech National Social Party amp oldid 1222165518, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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