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Labour Party (Lithuania)

The Labour Party (Lithuanian: Darbo partija, DP) is a populist[2][3][4] political party in Lithuania. The party was founded in 2003 by the Russian-born millionaire businessman and member of Seimas Viktor Uspaskich.[7]

Labour Party
Darbo partija
AbbreviationDP
ChairpersonAndrius Mazuronis
First Vice ChairmanValentinas Bukauskas
Vice ChairpeopleAlvydas Meištas
Raimundas Markauskas
Vaida Pocė
Aidas Gedvilas
Vigilijus Jukna
Vaida Giraitytė-Juškevičienė
Alicija Ščerbaitė
Rolandas Janickas
Antanas Makarevičius
Valentinas Bukauskas
Marijus Velička
Vaidas Kuzmarskis
Ieva Kačinskaitė-Urbonienė
Viktoras Fiodorovas
Executive SecretaryIngrida Karpuškaitė
FounderViktor Uspaskich
Founded18 October 2003
Registered25 November 2003
HeadquartersAnkštoji g. 3, Vilnius
Membership9727 (2022) [1]
IdeologyPopulism[2][3][4]
Political positionCentre[5] to centre-left[3]
European affiliationAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (2004–2021)[6]
European Parliament groupAlliance of Liberals and Democrats (2004–2019)
Renew Europe (2019–2021)
Non-Inscrits (since 2021)
ColoursBlue, White
Seimas
9 / 141
European Parliament
1 / 11
Municipal councils
82 / 1,473
Mayors
1 / 60
Website
www.darbopartija.lt

History edit

Foundation and first government (2003–2006) edit

In its first electoral test, the 2004 European parliamentary elections, it was by far the most successful party, gaining 30.2% of the vote and returning five MEPs. It joined the European Democratic Party and thus the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) Group. At the legislative elections of 2004, the party won 28.4% of the popular vote and 39 out of 141 seats, making it the largest single party in the Parliament of Lithuania. After the election Labour formed a coalition government with the Social Democratic Party of Lithuania, New Union and Lithuanian Peasant Popular Union.

After 2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, sociologist Vladas Gaidys speculated that the Labour Party supporters had previously voted for New Union (Social Liberals) between 2000 and 2004.[8]

The "dark accounting" case edit

On 17 May 2006, a pre-trial investigation of the Labour Party began after information from the State Security Department of Lithuania revealed that the party may be funded from illegal activities. During the period from its foundation to 2006, the party's bookkeeping did not report 7 million Euros of additional income.[9] Allegations were first raised on the party's accounting and secretaries, but on 29 June, it was declared that the party will be tried as a juridical person.

Uspaskich resigned from party leadership and fled to Moscow. After a European Arrest Warrant was given to arrest him, he was arrested on 15 August and extradited to Lithuania on 27 August. While in Moscow, Uspaskich organized press conferences where he declared Lithuania to be a "undemocratic state"[10] and described the case as a politicized attempt to destroy the Labour Party.

The Labour Party was acquitted on 2013, as it reorganized and was no longer the same legal entity. Though the Supreme Court of Lithuania made a ruling that this reorganization should have been ignored and the case should have been continued, it was not renewed due to an expired statute of limitations. Individual party leaders received fines and prison terms - however, they were acquitted in 2016, on the leadup to the 2016 parliamentary election.[10]

Opposition (2006–2012) edit

Because of the ongoing "dark accounting" case, the party was expelled from the ruling coalition and moved to opposition in June 2006, while some of its members (including Speaker of the Seimas Viktoras Muntianas) founded the Civic Democratic Party and joined the new coalition led by Gediminas Kirkilas. At the legislative elections of 2008 the party lost heavily, retaining only 10 seats in the Seimas from its previous 39 and obtaining 9% of the national vote.

In 2011, the New Union (Social Liberals) merged with the party.[11] In May 2012, the Labour Party joined the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) party.[12]

Second government and opposition (since 2012) edit

At the 2012 parliamentary election the party had considerable success, obtaining 19.82% of the votes (+11.83% compared with the 2008 election) in the proportional representation quota and a total tally of 29 seats. Following the results, the Labour Party joined the coalition cabinet led by Algirdas Butkevičius, with 4 portfolio ministers out of 15. In 2013, the Christian Party merged with the party.[13]

At the 2016 parliamentary election the party obtained just 4.88% of the votes in the proportional representation quota (5% of the votes are needed for representation) and won only 2 seats in single member constituencies. In 2017 the party started to lose its members (including long–time members like former chairman Živilė Pinskuvienė) en masse, which formed various movements in local government or joined the Social Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania in 2018.[14]

On 15 April 2018, former chairman Viktor Uspaskich was selected as the new chairman of the party.[15] After this, the party made speedy recovery – in 2019 municipal election the party obtained 5.09% of the votes and in 2019 European Parliament election it won nearly 9% of the votes. At the 2020 parliamentary election the Labour Party won about 10% of the votes. This gain of support was attributed to votes' shedding of Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania – Christian Families Alliance, which by itself failed to reach 5 per cent threshold in nationwide constituency.

In 2021 the party's board decided to withdraw from its affiliation of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party. This came following the expulsion of party leader MEP Viktor Uspaskich from the Renew Europe group at the European Parliament due to his homophobic comments.[6]

Ideology edit

The Labour Party is usually defined as a personalistic populist party without a clear ideological orientation.[16] It describes itself as a "party of the centre open to everyone."[17] During electoral campaigns, it generally advertises itself by promising raw increases to pensions and minimum wages, often beyond the country's ability to accomplish such promises; in the electoral campaign for the 2016 parliamentary elections, the Labour Party manifesto called to double minimum wages immediately after election, setting them at 60 percent of the average wage, a balance higher than in any European country.[18] During the European migrant crisis, the Labour Party embraced anti-migrant rhetoric. The party's leader Valentinas Mazuronis called for Lithuania to block the distribution of refugees among EU member states.[19]

According to studies, the Labour Party garners support from voters with a positive judgment of the Soviet period and voters who see Russia as a potential partner to Lithuania rather than a threat, as well as non-Lithuanian voters.[20] The party is commonly described as pro-Russian, though it has resented such claims, and officially supports membership in EU and NATO. The party's founder, Viktor Uspaskich, has led the party directly or indirectly ever since its foundation in 2003. According to Member of the Seimas and former Labour Party member Antanas Guoga, it is a "cult with a spiritual leader".[21] Professor of the Institute of International Relations and Political Science in Vilnius University Tomas Janeliūnas described the party as "a collection of conformists", unified by Uspaskich. These descriptions came in the aftermath of a scandal in December 2020, in which Viktor Uspaskich used his Facebook account to advertise "ŪPAS" mineral water, which, according to him, provides a person with immunity against COVID-19, without the need of vaccination. Guoga was the only Labour Party MP to condemn the action, and it was either defended or unaddressed by other members of the party.[22]

Electoral results edit

Seimas edit

Election Votes[a] % Seats +/– Government
2004 340,035 28.4 (#1)
39 / 141
  38 Coalition (2004−2006)
Opposition (2006−2008)
2008 111,149 8.9 (#6)
10 / 141
  29 Opposition
2012 271,520 18.8 (#3)
29 / 141
  19 Coalition
2016 59,620 4.8 (#7)
2 / 141
  27 Coalition (2016–2018)
Opposition (2018)
Coalition (2018–2019)
2020 110,780 9.8 (#4)
10 / 141
  8 Opposition
  1. ^ Proportional representation votes.

European Parliament edit

Election Votes % Seats +/–
2004 363,931 30.2 (#1)
5 / 13
2009 48,368 8.6 (#4)
1 / 12
  4
2014 146,607 12.4 (#5)
1 / 11
 
2019 112,964 8.5 (#4)
1 / 11
 

References edit

  1. ^ https://tm.lrv.lt/uploads/tm/documents/files/dokumentai/Politinės%20partijos/PP%20sarasas%20su%20archyvu%202022-03-04.pdf. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b Ramonaitė, Ainė (2006), "The Development of the Lithuanian Party System: From Stability to Perturbation", Post-Communist EU Member States: Parties And Party Systems, Ashgate, p. 76
  3. ^ a b c Auers, Daunis; Kasekamp, Andres (2015). The impact of radical right parties in the Baltic states. Routledge. p. 148. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  4. ^ a b Richard Rose; Neil Munro (1 April 2009). Parties and Elections in New European Democracies. ECPR Press. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-9558203-2-8.
  5. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2020). "Lithuania". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  6. ^ a b "Lithuanian Labour Party quits EP's liberal group after leader's homophobic rant". 2 February 2021.
  7. ^ Saulius A. Suziedelis (7 February 2011). Historical Dictionary of Lithuania. Scarecrow Press. pp. 163–. ISBN 978-0-8108-7536-4.
  8. ^ "V.Gaidys: Darbo partijos gerbėjai - buvę NS rinkėjai".
  9. ^ "Politinių partijų bylos: Darbo partijos "juodoji buhalterija", "tvarkiečiai" ir liberalai".
  10. ^ a b "Darbo partijos skandalai: Juodoji buhalterija, pabėgimas į Rusiją ir netylantys meilės romanai".
  11. ^ . atn.lt (in Lithuanian). 9 July 2011. Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
  12. ^ . Delfi (in Lithuanian). 15 May 2012. Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
  13. ^ "Susijungė Krikščionių ir Darbo partijos". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). 9 July 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  14. ^ "Partinei sistemai - skaudūs smūgiai, o kritusius įkvepia V. Matijošaičio reitingai". lrytas.lt (in Lithuanian). 9 December 2017. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  15. ^ "Darbo partijos suvažiavime staigmenų nėra - pirmininku išrinktas Viktoras Uspaskichas". 15 April 2018.
  16. ^ Ainė Ramonaitė (2006). Post-Communist EU Member States: Parties and Party Systems. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9781351909709.
  17. ^ "Apie partiją".
  18. ^ "Lietuvoje, artėjant rinkimams, partijos pradeda žarstytis naujais pažadais - Anglija.lt".
  19. ^ "Valentinas Mazuronis siūlo pabėgėlius apgyvendinti uždarose gyvenvietėse".
  20. ^ "Mažvydas Jastramskis. Darbo partijos sugrįžimas ar didelis šnipštas?".
  21. ^ "Tomas Janeliūnas: Darbo partija – konformistų susibūrimas".
  22. ^ "Lietuvai kovojant su COVID-19 pandemija, Uspaskichas kviečia saugotis specialiu vandeniu: Platintojas sako – tai paprasčiausias mineralinis". 28 December 2020.

External links edit

  • Official website

labour, party, lithuania, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, lithuanian, february, 2020, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, . You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Lithuanian February 2020 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 283 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Lithuanian Wikipedia article at lt Darbo partija see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated lt Darbo partija to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Labour Party Lithuanian Darbo partija DP is a populist 2 3 4 political party in Lithuania The party was founded in 2003 by the Russian born millionaire businessman and member of Seimas Viktor Uspaskich 7 Labour Party Darbo partijaAbbreviationDPChairpersonAndrius MazuronisFirst Vice ChairmanValentinas BukauskasVice ChairpeopleAlvydas MeistasRaimundas MarkauskasVaida PoceAidas GedvilasVigilijus JuknaVaida Giraityte JuskevicieneAlicija ScerbaiteRolandas JanickasAntanas MakareviciusValentinas BukauskasMarijus VelickaVaidas KuzmarskisIeva Kacinskaite UrbonieneViktoras FiodorovasExecutive SecretaryIngrida KarpuskaiteFounderViktor UspaskichFounded18 October 2003Registered25 November 2003HeadquartersAnkstoji g 3 VilniusMembership9727 2022 1 IdeologyPopulism 2 3 4 Political positionCentre 5 to centre left 3 European affiliationAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe 2004 2021 6 European Parliament groupAlliance of Liberals and Democrats 2004 2019 Renew Europe 2019 2021 Non Inscrits since 2021 ColoursBlue WhiteSeimas9 141European Parliament1 11Municipal councils82 1 473Mayors1 60Websitewww wbr darbopartija wbr ltPolitics of LithuaniaPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation and first government 2003 2006 1 2 The dark accounting case 1 3 Opposition 2006 2012 1 4 Second government and opposition since 2012 2 Ideology 3 Electoral results 3 1 Seimas 3 2 European Parliament 4 References 5 External linksHistory editFoundation and first government 2003 2006 edit In its first electoral test the 2004 European parliamentary elections it was by far the most successful party gaining 30 2 of the vote and returning five MEPs It joined the European Democratic Party and thus the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe ALDE Group At the legislative elections of 2004 the party won 28 4 of the popular vote and 39 out of 141 seats making it the largest single party in the Parliament of Lithuania After the election Labour formed a coalition government with the Social Democratic Party of Lithuania New Union and Lithuanian Peasant Popular Union After 2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election sociologist Vladas Gaidys speculated that the Labour Party supporters had previously voted for New Union Social Liberals between 2000 and 2004 8 The dark accounting case edit On 17 May 2006 a pre trial investigation of the Labour Party began after information from the State Security Department of Lithuania revealed that the party may be funded from illegal activities During the period from its foundation to 2006 the party s bookkeeping did not report 7 million Euros of additional income 9 Allegations were first raised on the party s accounting and secretaries but on 29 June it was declared that the party will be tried as a juridical person Uspaskich resigned from party leadership and fled to Moscow After a European Arrest Warrant was given to arrest him he was arrested on 15 August and extradited to Lithuania on 27 August While in Moscow Uspaskich organized press conferences where he declared Lithuania to be a undemocratic state 10 and described the case as a politicized attempt to destroy the Labour Party The Labour Party was acquitted on 2013 as it reorganized and was no longer the same legal entity Though the Supreme Court of Lithuania made a ruling that this reorganization should have been ignored and the case should have been continued it was not renewed due to an expired statute of limitations Individual party leaders received fines and prison terms however they were acquitted in 2016 on the leadup to the 2016 parliamentary election 10 Opposition 2006 2012 edit Because of the ongoing dark accounting case the party was expelled from the ruling coalition and moved to opposition in June 2006 while some of its members including Speaker of the Seimas Viktoras Muntianas founded the Civic Democratic Party and joined the new coalition led by Gediminas Kirkilas At the legislative elections of 2008 the party lost heavily retaining only 10 seats in the Seimas from its previous 39 and obtaining 9 of the national vote In 2011 the New Union Social Liberals merged with the party 11 In May 2012 the Labour Party joined the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe ALDE party 12 Second government and opposition since 2012 edit At the 2012 parliamentary election the party had considerable success obtaining 19 82 of the votes 11 83 compared with the 2008 election in the proportional representation quota and a total tally of 29 seats Following the results the Labour Party joined the coalition cabinet led by Algirdas Butkevicius with 4 portfolio ministers out of 15 In 2013 the Christian Party merged with the party 13 At the 2016 parliamentary election the party obtained just 4 88 of the votes in the proportional representation quota 5 of the votes are needed for representation and won only 2 seats in single member constituencies In 2017 the party started to lose its members including long time members like former chairman Zivile Pinskuviene en masse which formed various movements in local government or joined the Social Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania in 2018 14 On 15 April 2018 former chairman Viktor Uspaskich was selected as the new chairman of the party 15 After this the party made speedy recovery in 2019 municipal election the party obtained 5 09 of the votes and in 2019 European Parliament election it won nearly 9 of the votes At the 2020 parliamentary election the Labour Party won about 10 of the votes This gain of support was attributed to votes shedding of Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania Christian Families Alliance which by itself failed to reach 5 per cent threshold in nationwide constituency In 2021 the party s board decided to withdraw from its affiliation of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party This came following the expulsion of party leader MEP Viktor Uspaskich from the Renew Europe group at the European Parliament due to his homophobic comments 6 Ideology editThe Labour Party is usually defined as a personalistic populist party without a clear ideological orientation 16 It describes itself as a party of the centre open to everyone 17 During electoral campaigns it generally advertises itself by promising raw increases to pensions and minimum wages often beyond the country s ability to accomplish such promises in the electoral campaign for the 2016 parliamentary elections the Labour Party manifesto called to double minimum wages immediately after election setting them at 60 percent of the average wage a balance higher than in any European country 18 During the European migrant crisis the Labour Party embraced anti migrant rhetoric The party s leader Valentinas Mazuronis called for Lithuania to block the distribution of refugees among EU member states 19 According to studies the Labour Party garners support from voters with a positive judgment of the Soviet period and voters who see Russia as a potential partner to Lithuania rather than a threat as well as non Lithuanian voters 20 The party is commonly described as pro Russian though it has resented such claims and officially supports membership in EU and NATO The party s founder Viktor Uspaskich has led the party directly or indirectly ever since its foundation in 2003 According to Member of the Seimas and former Labour Party member Antanas Guoga it is a cult with a spiritual leader 21 Professor of the Institute of International Relations and Political Science in Vilnius University Tomas Janeliunas described the party as a collection of conformists unified by Uspaskich These descriptions came in the aftermath of a scandal in December 2020 in which Viktor Uspaskich used his Facebook account to advertise uPAS mineral water which according to him provides a person with immunity against COVID 19 without the need of vaccination Guoga was the only Labour Party MP to condemn the action and it was either defended or unaddressed by other members of the party 22 Electoral results editSeimas edit Election Votes a Seats Government 2004 340 035 28 4 1 39 141 nbsp 38 Coalition 2004 2006 Opposition 2006 2008 2008 111 149 8 9 6 10 141 nbsp 29 Opposition 2012 271 520 18 8 3 29 141 nbsp 19 Coalition 2016 59 620 4 8 7 2 141 nbsp 27 Coalition 2016 2018 Opposition 2018 Coalition 2018 2019 2020 110 780 9 8 4 10 141 nbsp 8 Opposition Proportional representation votes European Parliament edit Election Votes Seats 2004 363 931 30 2 1 5 13 2009 48 368 8 6 4 1 12 nbsp 4 2014 146 607 12 4 5 1 11 nbsp 2019 112 964 8 5 4 1 11 nbsp References edit https tm lrv lt uploads tm documents files dokumentai Politines 20partijos PP 20sarasas 20su 20archyvu 202022 03 04 pdf a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help permanent dead link a b Ramonaite Aine 2006 The Development of the Lithuanian Party System From Stability to Perturbation Post Communist EU Member States Parties And Party Systems Ashgate p 76 a b c Auers Daunis Kasekamp Andres 2015 The impact of radical right parties in the Baltic states Routledge p 148 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Richard Rose Neil Munro 1 April 2009 Parties and Elections in New European Democracies ECPR Press p 178 ISBN 978 0 9558203 2 8 Nordsieck Wolfram 2020 Lithuania Parties and Elections in Europe Retrieved 26 October 2020 a b Lithuanian Labour Party quits EP s liberal group after leader s homophobic rant 2 February 2021 Saulius A Suziedelis 7 February 2011 Historical Dictionary of Lithuania Scarecrow Press pp 163 ISBN 978 0 8108 7536 4 V Gaidys Darbo partijos gerbejai buve NS rinkejai Politiniu partiju bylos Darbo partijos juodoji buhalterija tvarkieciai ir liberalai a b Darbo partijos skandalai Juodoji buhalterija pabegimas į Rusija ir netylantys meiles romanai Naujoji sajunga prisijunge prie Darbo partijos atn lt in Lithuanian 9 July 2011 Archived from the original on 8 October 2011 Retrieved 2 August 2011 Darbo partija tapo Europos liberalu demokratu ir reformu partijos nare Delfi in Lithuanian 15 May 2012 Archived from the original on 8 October 2011 Retrieved 2 August 2011 Susijunge Krikscioniu ir Darbo partijos 15min lt in Lithuanian 9 July 2011 Retrieved 30 December 2017 Partinei sistemai skaudus smugiai o kritusius įkvepia V Matijosaicio reitingai lrytas lt in Lithuanian 9 December 2017 Retrieved 30 December 2017 Darbo partijos suvaziavime staigmenu nera pirmininku isrinktas Viktoras Uspaskichas 15 April 2018 Aine Ramonaite 2006 Post Communist EU Member States Parties and Party Systems Scarecrow Press ISBN 9781351909709 Apie partija Lietuvoje artejant rinkimams partijos pradeda zarstytis naujais pazadais Anglija lt Valentinas Mazuronis siulo pabegelius apgyvendinti uzdarose gyvenvietese Mazvydas Jastramskis Darbo partijos sugrįzimas ar didelis snipstas Tomas Janeliunas Darbo partija konformistu susiburimas Lietuvai kovojant su COVID 19 pandemija Uspaskichas kviecia saugotis specialiu vandeniu Platintojas sako tai paprasciausias mineralinis 28 December 2020 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Labour Party Lithuania amp oldid 1218665960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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