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Civic Democratic Party (Czech Republic)

The Civic Democratic Party (Czech: Občanská demokratická strana, ODS) is a conservative and Eurosceptic political party in the Czech Republic. The party generally sits centre-right to right-wing on the political spectrum, and holds 34 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, and is the second strongest party by number of seats following the 2021 election. It is the only political party in the Czech Republic that has maintained an uninterrupted representation in the Chamber of Deputies.

Civic Democratic Party
Občanská demokratická strana
AbbreviationODS
LeaderPetr Fiala
Deputy LeadersZbyněk Stanjura
Alexandr Vondra
Martin Baxa
Martin Kupka
Chamber of Deputies LeaderMarek Benda
Senate LeaderZdeněk Nytra
MEP LeaderVeronika Vrecionová
FounderVáclav Klaus
Founded21 April 1991; 33 years ago (1991-04-21)
Preceded byCivic Forum
HeadquartersTruhlářská 9, Prague
Think tankCEVRO[1]
Right Riverbank[2]
Youth wingYoung Conservatives
Young Civic Democrats
Membership (2021) 12,500[3][needs update]
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right to right-wing
National affiliationSPOLU
European affiliationEuropean Conservatives and Reformists Party
International affiliationInternational Democracy Union
European Parliament groupEuropean Conservatives and Reformists
Colours  Blue
Chamber of Deputies
34 / 200
Senate
23 / 81
European Parliament
4 / 21
Regional councils
99 / 675
Governors of the regions
3 / 13
Local councils
2,294 / 61,780
Prague City Assembly
9 / 65
Party flag
Website
www.ods.cz

Founded in 1991 as the pro–free market wing of the Civic Forum by Václav Klaus and modeled on the British Conservative Party,[4] the ODS won the 1992 legislative election, and has remained in government for most of the Czech Republic's independence. In every legislative election (except for that of 2013) it emerged as one of the two strongest parties. Václav Klaus served as the first prime minister of the Czech Republic after the partition of Czechoslovakia, from 1993 to 1997. Mirek Topolánek, who succeeded him as leader of the party in December 2002, served as prime minister from 2006 to 2009. In the 2010 election, the party lost 28 seats, finishing second, but as the largest party right of the centre, it formed a centre-right government with Petr Nečas as prime minister. In the 2013 legislative election, the party was marginalized by only securing 16 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, relegating the party to the opposition from July 2013 to December 2021. In the 2017 legislative election, it has partly recovered and secured 25 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, making it the second strongest party in chamber. The party is currently being led by Prime Minister Petr Fiala, who has been leader since the 2014 party convention.

The ODS is a member of the International Democracy Union, and co-founded together with the UK Conservative Party, the soft Eurosceptic European Conservatives and Reformists Party and the European Conservatives and Reformists group in the European Parliament.

History edit

Formation edit

The party was founded in 1991 as one of two successors to the Civic Forum, which was a big tent movement that consisted of two major wings. The strongest wing was the Interparliamentary Club of the Democratic Right which was transformed into the ODS when Civic Forum split.[5] ODS represented followers of Václav Klaus and was pro–free market, as opposed to the centrist Civic Movement. An agreement was reached to split the party in half at the Civic Forum Assembly on 23 February 1991. This was followed on 21 April by a formal declaration of a new party, and Klaus was elected its first President.[6] The party agreed to continue in a coalition government with the Civic Movement, but this collapsed in July 1991.

The Civic Democrats, who represented demands for a tighter Czechoslovak federation, began to organize in Slovakia.[7] Ahead of the 1992 election, the ODS ruled out an electoral alliance with the Liberal Democrats, but agreed to an alliance with Václav Benda's Christian Democratic Party (KDS) to boost its appeal to conservatives.[7] The ODS won the election, winning 66 seats (and the KDS another ten), and formed a centre-right coalition with the Civic Democratic Alliance (ODA) and the KDU-ČSL, with Klaus as prime minister.[8]

Dominant party (1992–1998) edit

It was the dominant party in two coalition governments in the Czech Republic from 1992 to 1997, a majority administration (1992–96) and a short-lived minority government (1996–97).[citation needed]

On 2 June 1995, the ODS and KDS signed a merger agreement, which would come into effect on 18 March 1996, ahead of that year's election. However, at the election, whilst the ODS improved to 68 seats, its allies fell, leading to the government receiving only 99 seats: two short of a majority. Klaus continued with a minority government, relying on its acceptance by the Social Democratic Party (ČSSD).

In December 1997, allegations of the party receiving illegal donations and maintaining a secret slush fund caused the ODA and KDU-ČSL to withdraw from the coalition, and the government collapsed. Josef Tošovský was appointed caretaker, pending new elections in June 1998. Despite the scandal, Klaus was re-elected party chairman. In January 1998, some legislators opposed to Klaus, led by Jan Ruml and Ivan Pilip, left the party in the so-called 'Sarajevo Assassination' and formed the Freedom Union (US).[9]

Opposition agreement edit

At the elections, the ODS fell even further, to 63 seats, while the US won 19. Due to the split, the Freedom Union refused to support the ODS, preventing them from getting a majority; the US's executive also refused to support the ČSSD. As a result, on 9 July 1998, the ODS signed the Opposition Agreement, which pledged the party to provide confidence and maintain a ČSSD government under Miloš Zeman.[10] This agreement was then superseded by the more explicit 'Patent of Tolerance' in January 2000.[11]

Opposition (2002–2006) edit

In the 2002 legislative election, the party went from being the largest seat holder to being the second largest party in the Chamber of Deputies with 58 of 200 seats, and for the first time in its history assumed the role of a true opposition party. Mirek Topolánek took over the party leadership. The former Czech president, Václav Klaus, has been the party's honorary president for his first term in the office. In the European Parliament elections in June 2004 and in Senate and regional assembly elections in November 2004, it received over 30% of the votes.

Return to government (2006–2013) edit

 
Leader of the Civic Democrats from 2002 until 2010, Mirek Topolánek led the party to an election victory in 2006 and became the party's first prime minister since 1997.

In the 2006 legislative election the ODS was the largest seat holder in the Chamber of Deputies with 81 seats. ODS originally aimed to make a deal with Czech Social Democratic Party but talks with the Social democratic leader Jiří Paroubek were unsuccessful. Mirek Topolánek then introduced his first minority cabinet that consisted of Civic Democrats and independents. It was designated on 4 September 2006 but lost a vote of confidence on 3 October 2006.

ODS then formed a government in coalition with the Populars (KDU-ČSL) and the Green Party (SZ). Projects of the cabinet included reform of public finances. Topolánek also discussed possible emplacement of United States Missile defense in the Czech Republic which resulted in public resistance.

The party suffered heavy losses in regional and Senate elections in 2008, losing all 12 regional governorships it had previously held. However, a year later, ODS won the European Parliament election, keeping all 9 seats and gaining more votes than in previous elections.

ODS-led government during Czech Presidency of the Council of the European Union 2009. Czech presidency had to deal with problems such as Gas crisis in Ukraine, conflict in Gaza or economic crisis. There were also controversies like Entropa but some aspects such as resolution of gas crisis were positively evaluated.[12]

The Cabinet had lost a no confidence vote on 24 March 2009. The country was then governed by a newly formed caretaker Cabinet, which was nominated by ODS, ČSSD and SZ. Early elections were set for 9–10 October 2009 but were postponed to May 2010 due to unexpected developments in the Constitutional Court and House of Deputies

Civic Democratic Party won the second place after Czech Social Democratic Party and formed a centre-right Government with TOP 09 and Public Affairs. Public Affairs split from the government on 22 April 2012 but were replaced by LIDEM. The Civic Democratic Party was widely defeated in the regional election that same year, finishing third overall and winning only in the Plzeň region. The party also lost 2010 and 2012 Senate elections.

 
ODS chairman Announces Government Resignation

ODS nominated Přemysl Sobotka for president of the Czech Republic during the 2013 presidential election. Sobotka received only 2.46% of votes and didn't qualify for second round. ODS has held 2012 presidential primaries which Přemysl Sobotka has won. Sobotka's poor showing in the 2013 general election was seen as caused by the government's unpopularity and lack of support from the party.[13] The party's leadership supported Karel Schwarzenberg of TOP 09 in the second round of the presidential election.[14]

Opposition (2013–2017) edit

 
Current party leader Petr Fiala

After resignation and fall of Cabinet of Prime Minister Petr Nečas ODS proposed Miroslava Němcová to the position of the prime minister to President Miloš Zeman saying that she will be able to form a coalition and succeed a vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies. However, President Zeman refused to appoint her and instead appointed Jiří Rusnok's Cabinet. After that, opposition called for a dissolution of Chamber of Deputies and early election (such vote was only recently made possible by a constitutional amendment). The motion of dissolution passed with 147 out of 200 votes (120 required), all parties except ODS, whose deputies left the chamber, voted for dissolution, including their former coalition partners Public Affairs and TOP 09. President Zeman then called on early elections on 25–26 October 2013. ODS suffered heavy losses. It gained only 16 seats and finished 5th. The party also lost elections of the European parliament and of Senate and municipal in 2014.

The 24th Congress of the Civic Democratic Party elected on 18–19 January 2014 a new leadership of ODS. The former rector of Masaryk University and minister Petr Fiala was elected as chairman. Member of the European Parliament Jan Zahradil was elected as first-vice-chairman. In his book Citizens, Democrats and Party Members (Czech: Občané, demokraté a straníci), Fiala said the party needs to be attractive to new, young people and ODS shall have experts on economics, health care, education, etc.

In the Chamber of Deputies ODS formed an informal coalition relationship with TOP 09 and both have been opposing laws such as Control report of Value-added tax. On 26 May 2015, ODS, TOP 09 and Dawn of Direct Democracy called an unsuccessful vote of no confidence of the Cabinet of Bohuslav Sobotka.

As of December 2015 opinion polls showed ODS with 8.6% nationwide.[15] Some polling agencies and political commentators are of the opinion that ODS was on the path to become main centre-right party again.[16][17][18]

On 16 January 2016, Fiala was re-elected as Leader of the ODS. ODS participated in 2016 regional and Senate election. It received about 10% of votes and its candidate's secured seats in all regions. 6 candidates nominated by ODS qualified for the second round for Senate. 4 of them were eventually elected Fiala then said that ODS returned to the position of the major right wing party.[19][20]

Opposition and formal cooperation with TOP 09 and KDU-ČSL (2017–2021) edit

ODS agreed to participate in the 2017 legislative election together with Freeholder party. Parties will present themselves during the campaign as ODS with the support of Freeholders. This agreement means that Freeholders will take 40 places on ODS candidacy list.[21] In February 2017, ODS started a campaign called "We create program." which was series of tours to Czech regions with party leaders discussing priorities with supporters and potential voters for an upcoming election.[22] On 19 April 2017, ODS introduced its tax program. The Civic Democrats want to lower taxes which they say would increase the income of Czech citizens. ODS also wants to decrease spending in social benefits and subsidies. Chief Whip Zbyněk Stanjura said that many people take advantage of social benefits even though they don't deserve it. These plans resembled those that ODS had in the 2006 legislative election manifesto.[23][24] Tours concluded with Conference "Strong program for Strong Czechia" held on 22 April where ODS presented their election manifesto and candidates.[25][26]

 
Departed chairman of the Senate (in years 2018–2020) Jaroslav Kubera of the ODS

Following the 2017 Czech government crisis, ODS grew in polls, approaching the Czech Social Democratic Party.[27] According to a poll by TNS Kantar, ODS would become the second strongest party, surpassing ČSSD and KSČM.[28] ODS introduced its campaign for 2017 election on 29 May 2017. It is inspired by the British Conservative Party's campaign for 2017 general election.[29] In the 2017 election, ODS sought to get more than 10%.[30] According to poll by STEM/Mark in September. ODS would get 7.5% of votes.[31]

ODS received 11% in 2017 legislative election and became the second largest political party in the Czech Republic.[32] The party then won 2018 Senate election confirming its position as the main right wing party.[33]

Civic Democratic Party, KDU-ČSL and TOP 09 formed bloc of conservative opposition parties in late 2020. The alliance was known as the "Three Coalition", before the parties launched their slogan and program on 9 December 2020, announcing that they would run under the name Spolu ("together") in the 2021 Czech legislative election.[34] The conservative bloc announced that Petr Fiala would be their candidate for the post of prime minister.[35]

The Bloc ran in 2021 Czech legislative election with Fiala as a leader. Opinion polls suggested that ANO 2011 would win the election but in an electoral upset ODS-led Spolu won highest number of votes and opposition parties won majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies.[36] Opposition parties signed memorandum agreeing to nominate ODS leader Fiala for the position of the new prime minister.[37]

Return to power (2021–present) edit

ODS formed a coalition government with STAN, KDU-ČSL, TOP 09 and Piráti after the election. Petr Fiala became the new prime minister. ODS holds 6 seats in Fiala's Cabinet.

Ideology edit

The ODS is described as conservative,[38][39][40][41][42] liberal-conservative,[43][44][45] and conservative-liberal,[46][47][48] supports economic liberalism,[49] and is Eurosceptic.[50][51] There are also multiple ideological factions in the party, including the national conservative faction,[52][53][54][55] the national liberal faction,[56] the social liberal faction[57] the neoconservative faction[58] and the Christian socially conservative faction (former Christian Democratic Party).[59]

 
Pre-election billboard with the inscription "Low taxes – ODS solution" in 2010

The party's ideas are very close to those of the British Conservative Party, Swedish Moderate Party, and other liberal-conservative parties in Europe. The party's program states "low taxes, public finances and future without debts, support for families with children, addressable social system, reducing bureaucracy, better conditions for business, a safe state with the transatlantic links. No tricks and populism."

Many prominent politicians in the party say they are opposed to "political correctness" and call for tougher measures to combat radical Islam which they liken to Nazism.[60][61][62][63]

 
Pre-election meeting in Brno in 2018

Although the party was in power when the Treaty of Lisbon was ratified in the Czech Republic, ODS supports maintaining Czech sovereignty and integrity against the European Union, calls for a fundamental reform of the EU and strongly opposes any federalization of Europe in the form of the EU becoming a quasi-state entity.[64] Following the EU referendum in Britain which resulted in the United Kingdom voting to leave, ODS leader Petr Fiala said the Czech Republic "should reconsider its priorities and strategy in the European Union" and if the Treaties were to be re-opened, negotiate new conditions for the country such as an opt-out from asylum rules as well as from the obligation to adopt the euro.[65] The party is a member of the national-conservative European Conservatives and Reformists group.

The ODS is against immigration. The party supports compulsory measures for immigrants to speak the Czech language, learn about Czech history and adapt to local customs and cultures.[39] ODS is also opposed to compulsory EU migrant quotas by arguing that the Czech Republic should have sovereignty over its own border control and that forcing nations to take in migrants without sufficient vetting or orderly processing and integration poses a threat to national security, social cohesion and native European culture. ODS believes that all individual nations should have the right to determine their own immigration policies.[63]

ODS also supports the right of law abiding citizens to own and carry firearms,[66] being the main reason Czech gun laws are much more liberal than in nearly all other European countries. This makes them different from parties they are based on, as most of them, especially British Conservatives, reject the idea that anyone has a right to own and carry firearms and other weapons, making the ODS much more similar to American Republicans in this matter, although they still support gun control measures (such as background checks, licenses and registration). ODS, especially its defense expert Jana Černochová, was one of the main supporters of embedding the right to keep and bear arms for the purposes of national security into the Czech constitution, although it was Social Democrat Milan Chovanec who originally proposed it. The amendment failed in the Senate. In 2021, a similar bill passed.[67]

Symbols edit

Name edit

Václav Klaus stated that the party's name represents the fact that ODS is based on the idea of civic freedoms. It also shows that ODS is a Civic Party, which differentiates it from other parties that existed prior to 1991. The adjective Democratic represents that ODS should protect parliamentary democracy.[68]

Besides its official name, ODS also received some informal names from media. Party members are sometimes called "the Blues" or the "Blue Birds" and ODS is sometimes called the Blue Party due to the party's association with the color blue.[69][70][71][72]

edit

The first logo was introduced on 4 June 1991, created by Aleš Krejča. It was chosen from over 250 entries to a public competition.[73][74]

A new logo was introduced in 1992, including the silhouette of a bird in blue. The logo was created by Petr Šejdl. In 1994 when the bird's tail was shortened and in 1998 the font was changed as a result of the "Sarajevo betrayal" of autumn 1997, in which ODS colleagues used allegations of bribery to precipitate the resignation of Václav Klaus' government while he was on a trip to Sarajevo.[75][73] The party used this version until 2015 with modifications for individual election campaigns.[76]

The ODS introduced a new party logo in a congress in Prague in 2015. The design of the bird was updated and flies upwards rather than to the left. The logo was designed by Libor Jelínek.[77]

Organisation edit

Party structure edit

The highest body of the ODS is Congress which meets every year and elects leadership every two years. The party is led by the Executive Council and Republic Assembly in time between meetings of Congress. The executive body meets every Month and the party is led by Panel between meetings of the Executive Council. Panel consists of Party's Leader, Deputy Leaders and Chief Whips of the Parliamentary ODS.[78]

ODS is structured similarly to the subdivisions of the Czech Republic. The structure consists of local associations. Group of local associations forms area. Areas are organised as parts of Region.[79][80]

Membership edit

Year Members Ref. Year Members Ref. Year Members Ref.
1991 18,500 2001 18,280 [81] 2011 27,648
1992 23,000 2002 20,412 2012 24,507
1993 2003 21,641 [82] 2013 21,578
1994 2004 23,138 2014 17,944 [83]
1995 21,803 [84] 2005 2015 14,771
1996 2006 2016 14,123
1997 2007 2017 14,005 [85]
1998 16,000 2008 2018 14,095
1999 19,300 2009 34,000 [86] 2019 13,563 [87]
2000 17,000 [88] 2010 31,011

ODS had 18,500 Members in 1991. The number of members grew with the party's influence and soon rose to over 23,000. It decreased during political crisis in 1998 to 16,000. The party stopped the decrease after preliminary election and membership grew once again. It peaked in 2010 when it reached 31,011. The member base started to decline rapidly after 2010. It had only 17,994 members prior the 2013 election.[89] ODS had 14,771 members in May 2015 and the member base was stabilised according to leaders of the party.[90]

 
Blue Team kiosk during an election campaign in Brno

The party runs a membership organisation known as Supporters of ODS. It is a looser form of involvement with the party. It is meant for people who doesn't want to be members of ODS but sympathize with its program.[91] It replaced the organisation known as Blue Team.[92]

Faces of ODS is a project of party's members who share their life's story. It was described as honour for all members of the party who didn't abandon it in hard times.[93]

Young Conservatives edit

Young Conservatives (Czech: Mladí konzervativci, MK) is a youth wing of ODS. Young people from the age of 15 to 35 can apply for a membership in the MK. The founding congress of MK was held on 8 December 1991 as a result of previous preparations through Charter of Young Conservatives by a group of students at the University of Technology in Brno and Law Students' Association "Všehrd" from Faculty of Law at the Charles University. The Young Conservatives organize a wide range of events from meetings with local or national politicians to elections campaigns and international events.

CEVRO Liberal Conservative Academy edit

CEVRO Liberal Conservative Academy (Czech: CEVRO Liberálně konzervativní akademie) is a think-tank affiliated with ODS. It was established in 1999. Its goal is political education which tries to spread liberal-conservative thinking. In 2005, CEVRO established its own private university known as CEVRO Institute. CEVRO has four newspapers – CEVRO Revue, The Week in European Politics, The Week in Czech Politics and Forthnightly.[94]

International organisations edit

ODS joined the European Democrat Union (EDU) in 1992 as one of the first parties in the former Eastern Bloc. Václav Klaus even became a Vice President of EDU. ODS remained in the EDU until it became part of the European People's Party (EPP) in 2002. ODS refused to join EPP due to its ideological differences and instead became a member of European Democrats.[95]

ODS joined International Democracy Union (IDU) in 2001.[96] Chairmen of Civic Democratic Party served as Vice-presidents of IDU.

In July 2006, the Civic Democratic Party signed an agreement with the British Conservative Party to leave the European People's Party–European Democrats (EPP-ED) Group in the European Parliament and form the Movement for European Reform in 2009. On 22 June 2009, it was announced that ODS would join the newly formed European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) parliamentary group, an anti-federalist and Eurosceptic group, which currently its third largest bloc in the European Parliament. ODS then became one of founding members of the European Conservatives and Reformists Party (ECR Party), a conservative and Eurosceptic European political party, defending broader conservative and economically liberal principles. Other members of ECR Party include Conservative Party, Law and Justice or Freedom and Solidarity.

Leadership edit

Current edit

Position Name Photo Since
Chairman Petr Fiala
 
18 January 2014
1st vice-chairman Zbyněk Stanjura
 
19 January 2020
Vice-chairman Martin Kupka
 
18 January 2014
Vice-chairman Alexandr Vondra
 
18 January 2014
Vice-chairman Zdeněk Zajíček
 
9 April 2022
Vice-chairman Martin Baxa
 
13 January 2018
Chairman of Deputies Caucus Zbyněk Stanjura
 
6 November 2013
Chairman of Senate Caucus Zdeněk Nytra
 
19 October 2020
Chairman of EP Caucus Veronika Vrecionová
 
5 June 2023

Leaders edit

No. Name Photo Since Until
1 Václav Klaus
 
21 April 1991 15 December 2002
2 Mirek Topolánek
 
15 December 2002 13 April 2010
3 Petr Nečas
 
20 June 2010 17 July 2013
4 Petr Fiala
 
18 January 2014 Incumbent

Note: Only properly elected leaders are included.

Election results edit

Chamber of Deputies edit

Year Leader Vote Vote % Seats +/- Place Notes Position
1992 Václav Klaus 1,924,483 29.7
76 / 200

66 / 200
  33 1st   Participated in Coalition with KDS. Coalition
1996 1,794,560 29.6
68 / 200
  2 1st   Minority government supported by oppositional ČSSD. Coalition
1998 1,656,011 27.7
63 / 200
  5 2nd   Opposition agreement with ČSSD. Opposition
with other arrangements
2002 1,166,975 24.5
58 / 200
  5 2nd   Main opposition party. Opposition
2006 Mirek Topolánek 1,892,475 35.3
81 / 200
  23 1st   2006 minority government, 2007–2009 coalition with KDU-ČSL and Greens. Minority (2006–2007)
Coalition (2007–2009)
2010 Petr Nečas 1,057,792 20.2
53 / 200
  28 2nd   Coalition government with TOP 09 and VV/LIDEM. Coalition
2013 Miroslava Němcová 384,174 7.7
16 / 200
  37 5th   Opposition Party. Opposition
2017 Petr Fiala 572,962 11.3
25 / 200
  9 2nd   Joint list with Freeholder Party of the Czech Republic Opposition
2021 1,493,701 27.8
71 / 200

34 / 200
  9 1st   Part of Spolu alliance. Coalition

Senate edit

Election Candidates First round Second round Seats Total Seats Notes
Votes % Runners-up Place* Votes % Place*
1996 81 1,006,036 36.5
76 / 81
1st 1,134,044 49.2 1st
32 / 81
32 / 81
The whole Senate was elected. Only one third of Senate was elected in all subsequent elections.
1998 27 266,377 27.7
22 / 27
1st 210,156 39.1 1st
9 / 27
26 / 81
1999 1 3,844 12.2
0 / 1
2nd  
0 / 1
25 / 81
By-election in Prague 1 district.
2000 27 203,039 23.6
18 / 27
1st 166,133 29.5 1st
8 / 27
22 / 81
2002 27 165,794 24.9
19 / 27
1st 284,537 34.6 1st
9 / 27
26 / 81
2003 2 10,555 29.8
2 / 2
1st 11,136 47.7 2nd
1 / 2
26 / 81
By-elections in Strakonice and Brno-City Districts.
2004 2 11,824 33.4
2 / 2
1st 13,974 53.5 1st
1 / 2
27 / 81
By-elections in Prague 4 and Znojmo districts.
2004 27 241,120 33.3
25 / 27
1st 257,861 53.8 1st
19 / 27
37 / 81
2006 27 354,273 33.3
26 / 27
1st 289,568 50.4 1st
14 / 27
41 / 81
2007 2 5,569 18.7
1 / 2
3rd 4,338 21.5 3rd
0 / 2
41 / 81
By-elections in Přerov and Chomutov districts.
2008 27 252,827 24.1
20 / 27
2nd 266,731 32.4 2nd
3 / 27
35 / 81
2010 27 266,311 23.1
19 / 27
2nd 225,708 33.1 2nd
8 / 27
25 / 81
2011 1 7,422 27.2
1 / 1
2nd 7,227 34.8 2nd
0 / 1
25 / 81
By-election in Kladno district.
2012 27 151,950 17.28
10 / 27
3rd 117,990 22.95 2nd
6 / 27
15 / 81
2014 1 3,792 16.5
1 / 1
2nd 5,925 36.8 2nd
0 / 1
15 / 81
By-election in Zlín district
2014 1 1,564 11.8
0 / 1
5th  
0 / 1
15 / 81
By-election in Prague-10 district
2014 25 118,268 11.52
7 / 27
3rd 53,149 11.21 4th
2 / 27
14 / 81
One of its candidates was elected in coalition with Koruna Česká (party).
2016 24 107,785 12.23
6 / 27
3rd 48,609 11.46 4th
4 / 27
10 / 81
Including Zdeněk Nytra who ran as independent.
2018 1 7,615 33.51
1 / 1
1st 30,331 67.11 1st
1 / 1
10 / 81
By-election in Trutnov district. Jan Sobotka was a STAN candidate supported by ODS.
2018 1 2,786 16.36
0 / 1
3rd  
0 / 1
10 / 81
By-election in Zlín district. Miroslav Adámek was a STAN candidate supported by ODS.
2018 19 163,630 15.02
11 / 27
1st 116,736 27.82 1st
10 / 27
16 / 81
Including Jaroslav Zeman and Jan Tecl.
2019 1 4,651 24.25
1 / 1
1st 4,811 40.49 2nd
0 / 1
16 / 81
By-election in Prague 9 district.
2020 1 4,663 29.73
1 / 1
1st 5,302 57.17 1st
1 / 1
16 / 81
By-election in Teplice district.
2020 17 140,293 14.07
10 / 27
1st 82,377 18.23 2nd
5 / 27
18 / 81
2022 17 151,908 13.7
9 / 27
2nd 111,071 23.2 2nd
8 / 27
24 / 81

* Places are by number of votes gained.

Presidential edit

Indirect Elections

Election Candidate First round result Second round result Third round result
Votes %Votes Result Votes %Votes Result Votes %Votes Result
1993 Václav Havel (independent; ODS government supported)
109 / 172
63.4 Won
1998 Václav Havel (independent; part of ODS supported)
130 / 184
70.7 Runner-up
146 / 281
52.3 Won
2003 Václav Klaus
123 / 270
45.6 Runner-up
109 / 198
55.1 Runner-up
113 / 202
55.9 1st place
121 / 275
44.0 Runner-up
118 / 192
61.5 Runner-up
127 / 192
66.1 1st place
147 / 275
53.5 Runner-up
139 / 268
51.9 Runner-up
142 / 266
53.4 Won
2008 Václav Klaus
139 / 277
50.2 Runner-up
142 / 277
51.3 Runner-up
141 / 252
56.0 1st place
141 / 277
50.9 Runner-up
141 / 267
52.8 Runner-up
141 / 252
56.0 Won

Direct Election

Election Candidate First round result Second round result
Votes %Votes Result Votes %Votes Result
2013 Přemysl Sobotka 126,846 2.46 8th place supported Karel Schwarzenberg
2018 Mirek Topolánek 221,689 4.30 6th place supported Jiří Drahoš
2023[a] Petr Pavel 1,975,056 35.40 Runner-up 3,358,926 58.33 Won
Danuše Nerudová 777,080 13.93 3rd place supported Petr Pavel
Pavel Fischer 376,705 6.75 4th place supported Petr Pavel
  1. ^ The SPOLU coalition supported 3 independent candidates for this election.

European Parliament edit

Local election edit

Year Vote Vote % Place Seats
1994 3,787,264 29.56 1st
7,289 / 62,160
1998 1,895,984 24.16 1st
5,697 / 62,920
2002 2,036,021 25.21 1st
5,715 / 62,494
2006 3,935,395 36.2 1st
7,033 / 62,426
2010 1,694,396 18.78 2nd
5,112 / 62,178
2014 893,065 9.01 3rd
2,398 / 62,300
2018 2,465,930 11.1 2nd
2,845 / 61,892
2022 12,977,999 12.1 2nd
2,294 / 61,780

Regional election edit

Year Vote Vote % Seats +/- Place Places in regions Governors Coalitions
2000 559,301 23.8
185 / 675
1st 7x 1st, 3x 2nd, 3x 3rd
8 / 13
8 / 13
2004 769,848   36.4  
291 / 675
  1st 12x 1st, 1x 2nd
12 / 13
12 / 13
2008 687,005   23.6  
180 / 675
  2nd 12x 2nd, 1x 3rd
0 / 13
4 / 13
2012 324,081   12.3  
102 / 675
  3rd 1x 1st, 3x 3rd, 7x 4th, 2x 5th
0 / 13
0 / 13
2016 239,836   9.5  
76 / 675
  4th 3x 3rd, 4x 4th, 4x 5th, 2x 6th, 1x 7th
0 / 13
10 / 13
2020[97] 411,825 14.87 
99 / 675
  2nd 1x 1st, 5x 2nd, 2x 3rd, 4x 4th, 1x 5th
4 / 13
13 / 13

2020 Czech regional election results edit

Region Coalition partner # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
Seats[98] Governance[99]
# ±[100] Position
Central Bohemian 82,695 19.77
16 / 65
  6   2nd STAN–ODS–PiratesTOP 09+Greens-Voice
South Bohemian 34,857 17.52
12 / 55
  4   2nd ODSKDU-ČSL+TOP 09ČSSD–JIH12
Plzeň TOP 09 36,890 21.23
9 / 45
  1   2nd ODS+TOP 09STANPirates
Karlovy Vary KDU-ČSL 5,870 7.35
2 / 45
  2   4th STAN+TOP 09-Pirates-ODS+KDU ČSL-Local movements
Ústí nad Labem 24,739 12.37
8 / 55
  1   2nd ANO–ODS–TOP 09+JsmePRO
Liberec 11,932 8.59
5 / 45
  1   4th SLKPirates–ODS
Hradec Králové STAN and East Bohemians 41,668 23.53
6 / 45
  1   1st ODS+STAN+VČ–KDU-ČSLPiratesTOP 09+HDK
Pardubice TOP 09 23,434 14.10
6 / 45
  1   3rd ČSSD–ODS+TOP 09KDU-ČSLSTAN
Vysočina Mayors for Citizens 21,038 13.19
5 / 45
    3rd ODS+STO–PiratesKDU-ČSLČSSDSTAN
South Moravian Freedomites and SOM 46,342 12.77
9 / 65
  3   4th KDU-ČSLPirates–ODS–STAN
Olomouc 19,421 10.36
7 / 55
  2   4th STAN+PiratesKDU-ČSL+TOP 09–ODS
Zlín 19,302 10.04
5 / 45
  2   5th ANOPirates–ODS–ČSSD
Moravian-Silesian TOP 09 43,637 13.637
9 / 65
  3   2nd ANO–ODS+TOP 09KDU-ČSLČSSD

Prague municipal elections edit

Year Leader Vote Vote % Seats +/− Place Position
1994 Jan Koukal 41.2
23 / 55
1st Coalition
1998 Jan Koukal 36.8
21 / 55
 2 1st Coalition
2002 Pavel Bém 35.5
30 / 70
 8 1st Coalition
2006 Pavel Bém 54.4
42 / 70
 12 1st Coalition
2010 Bohuslav Svoboda 21.1
20 / 65
 22 2nd Coalition
2014 Bohuslav Svoboda 11.0
8 / 65
 12 4th Opposition
2018 Bohuslav Svoboda 17.9
14 / 65
 6 1st Opposition

Federal Assembly of Czechoslovakia edit

House of the People

Year Leader Vote Vote % Seats Place Notes Position
1992 Václav Klaus 2,200,937 23.0
48 / 150
1st Participated in Coalition with KDS. Majority Government

House of Nations

Year Leader Vote Vote % Seats Place Notes Position
1992 Václav Klaus 2,168,421 22.6
37 / 150
1st Participated in Coalition with KDS. Majority Government

Elected representatives edit

Civic Democratic Party has 23 members of the Chamber of Deputies.

Civic Democratic Party has 16 Senators of the Senate of the Czech Republic.

Civic Democratic Party has 4 MEPs.

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Hanley, Sean (2008). The New Right in the New Europe: Czech Transformation and Right-Wing Politics, 1989–2006. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-34135-6.

External links edit

  • Official website   (in English and Czech)

civic, democratic, party, czech, republic, civic, democratic, party, czech, občanská, demokratická, strana, conservative, eurosceptic, political, party, czech, republic, party, generally, sits, centre, right, right, wing, political, spectrum, holds, seats, cha. The Civic Democratic Party Czech Obcanska demokraticka strana ODS is a conservative and Eurosceptic political party in the Czech Republic The party generally sits centre right to right wing on the political spectrum and holds 34 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and is the second strongest party by number of seats following the 2021 election It is the only political party in the Czech Republic that has maintained an uninterrupted representation in the Chamber of Deputies Civic Democratic Party Obcanska demokraticka stranaAbbreviationODSLeaderPetr FialaDeputy LeadersZbynek StanjuraAlexandr VondraMartin BaxaMartin KupkaChamber of Deputies LeaderMarek BendaSenate LeaderZdenek NytraMEP LeaderVeronika VrecionovaFounderVaclav KlausFounded21 April 1991 33 years ago 1991 04 21 Preceded byCivic ForumHeadquartersTruhlarska 9 PragueThink tankCEVRO 1 Right Riverbank 2 Youth wingYoung ConservativesYoung Civic DemocratsMembership 2021 12 500 3 needs update IdeologyConservatismSoft EuroscepticismPolitical positionCentre right to right wingNational affiliationSPOLUEuropean affiliationEuropean Conservatives and Reformists PartyInternational affiliationInternational Democracy UnionEuropean Parliament groupEuropean Conservatives and ReformistsColours BlueChamber of Deputies34 200Senate23 81European Parliament4 21Regional councils99 675Governors of the regions3 13Local councils2 294 61 780Prague City Assembly9 65Party flagWebsitewww wbr ods wbr czPolitics of the Czech RepublicPolitical partiesElections Founded in 1991 as the pro free market wing of the Civic Forum by Vaclav Klaus and modeled on the British Conservative Party 4 the ODS won the 1992 legislative election and has remained in government for most of the Czech Republic s independence In every legislative election except for that of 2013 it emerged as one of the two strongest parties Vaclav Klaus served as the first prime minister of the Czech Republic after the partition of Czechoslovakia from 1993 to 1997 Mirek Topolanek who succeeded him as leader of the party in December 2002 served as prime minister from 2006 to 2009 In the 2010 election the party lost 28 seats finishing second but as the largest party right of the centre it formed a centre right government with Petr Necas as prime minister In the 2013 legislative election the party was marginalized by only securing 16 seats in the Chamber of Deputies relegating the party to the opposition from July 2013 to December 2021 In the 2017 legislative election it has partly recovered and secured 25 seats in the Chamber of Deputies making it the second strongest party in chamber The party is currently being led by Prime Minister Petr Fiala who has been leader since the 2014 party convention The ODS is a member of the International Democracy Union and co founded together with the UK Conservative Party the soft Eurosceptic European Conservatives and Reformists Party and the European Conservatives and Reformists group in the European Parliament Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Dominant party 1992 1998 1 3 Opposition agreement 1 4 Opposition 2002 2006 1 5 Return to government 2006 2013 1 6 Opposition 2013 2017 1 7 Opposition and formal cooperation with TOP 09 and KDU CSL 2017 2021 1 8 Return to power 2021 present 2 Ideology 3 Symbols 3 1 Name 3 2 Logo 4 Organisation 4 1 Party structure 4 2 Membership 4 3 Young Conservatives 4 4 CEVRO Liberal Conservative Academy 4 5 International organisations 4 6 Leadership 4 7 Current 4 8 Leaders 5 Election results 5 1 Chamber of Deputies 5 2 Senate 5 3 Presidential 5 4 European Parliament 5 5 Local election 5 6 Regional election 5 7 2020 Czech regional election results 5 8 Prague municipal elections 5 9 Federal Assembly of Czechoslovakia 6 Elected representatives 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory editFormation edit The party was founded in 1991 as one of two successors to the Civic Forum which was a big tent movement that consisted of two major wings The strongest wing was the Interparliamentary Club of the Democratic Right which was transformed into the ODS when Civic Forum split 5 ODS represented followers of Vaclav Klaus and was pro free market as opposed to the centrist Civic Movement An agreement was reached to split the party in half at the Civic Forum Assembly on 23 February 1991 This was followed on 21 April by a formal declaration of a new party and Klaus was elected its first President 6 The party agreed to continue in a coalition government with the Civic Movement but this collapsed in July 1991 The Civic Democrats who represented demands for a tighter Czechoslovak federation began to organize in Slovakia 7 Ahead of the 1992 election the ODS ruled out an electoral alliance with the Liberal Democrats but agreed to an alliance with Vaclav Benda s Christian Democratic Party KDS to boost its appeal to conservatives 7 The ODS won the election winning 66 seats and the KDS another ten and formed a centre right coalition with the Civic Democratic Alliance ODA and the KDU CSL with Klaus as prime minister 8 Dominant party 1992 1998 edit It was the dominant party in two coalition governments in the Czech Republic from 1992 to 1997 a majority administration 1992 96 and a short lived minority government 1996 97 citation needed On 2 June 1995 the ODS and KDS signed a merger agreement which would come into effect on 18 March 1996 ahead of that year s election However at the election whilst the ODS improved to 68 seats its allies fell leading to the government receiving only 99 seats two short of a majority Klaus continued with a minority government relying on its acceptance by the Social Democratic Party CSSD In December 1997 allegations of the party receiving illegal donations and maintaining a secret slush fund caused the ODA and KDU CSL to withdraw from the coalition and the government collapsed Josef Tosovsky was appointed caretaker pending new elections in June 1998 Despite the scandal Klaus was re elected party chairman In January 1998 some legislators opposed to Klaus led by Jan Ruml and Ivan Pilip left the party in the so called Sarajevo Assassination and formed the Freedom Union US 9 Opposition agreement edit At the elections the ODS fell even further to 63 seats while the US won 19 Due to the split the Freedom Union refused to support the ODS preventing them from getting a majority the US s executive also refused to support the CSSD As a result on 9 July 1998 the ODS signed the Opposition Agreement which pledged the party to provide confidence and maintain a CSSD government under Milos Zeman 10 This agreement was then superseded by the more explicit Patent of Tolerance in January 2000 11 Opposition 2002 2006 edit In the 2002 legislative election the party went from being the largest seat holder to being the second largest party in the Chamber of Deputies with 58 of 200 seats and for the first time in its history assumed the role of a true opposition party Mirek Topolanek took over the party leadership The former Czech president Vaclav Klaus has been the party s honorary president for his first term in the office In the European Parliament elections in June 2004 and in Senate and regional assembly elections in November 2004 it received over 30 of the votes Return to government 2006 2013 edit nbsp Leader of the Civic Democrats from 2002 until 2010 Mirek Topolanek led the party to an election victory in 2006 and became the party s first prime minister since 1997 In the 2006 legislative election the ODS was the largest seat holder in the Chamber of Deputies with 81 seats ODS originally aimed to make a deal with Czech Social Democratic Party but talks with the Social democratic leader Jiri Paroubek were unsuccessful Mirek Topolanek then introduced his first minority cabinet that consisted of Civic Democrats and independents It was designated on 4 September 2006 but lost a vote of confidence on 3 October 2006 ODS then formed a government in coalition with the Populars KDU CSL and the Green Party SZ Projects of the cabinet included reform of public finances Topolanek also discussed possible emplacement of United States Missile defense in the Czech Republic which resulted in public resistance The party suffered heavy losses in regional and Senate elections in 2008 losing all 12 regional governorships it had previously held However a year later ODS won the European Parliament election keeping all 9 seats and gaining more votes than in previous elections ODS led government during Czech Presidency of the Council of the European Union 2009 Czech presidency had to deal with problems such as Gas crisis in Ukraine conflict in Gaza or economic crisis There were also controversies like Entropa but some aspects such as resolution of gas crisis were positively evaluated 12 The Cabinet had lost a no confidence vote on 24 March 2009 The country was then governed by a newly formed caretaker Cabinet which was nominated by ODS CSSD and SZ Early elections were set for 9 10 October 2009 but were postponed to May 2010 due to unexpected developments in the Constitutional Court and House of DeputiesCivic Democratic Party won the second place after Czech Social Democratic Party and formed a centre right Government with TOP 09 and Public Affairs Public Affairs split from the government on 22 April 2012 but were replaced by LIDEM The Civic Democratic Party was widely defeated in the regional election that same year finishing third overall and winning only in the Plzen region The party also lost 2010 and 2012 Senate elections nbsp ODS chairman Announces Government Resignation ODS nominated Premysl Sobotka for president of the Czech Republic during the 2013 presidential election Sobotka received only 2 46 of votes and didn t qualify for second round ODS has held 2012 presidential primaries which Premysl Sobotka has won Sobotka s poor showing in the 2013 general election was seen as caused by the government s unpopularity and lack of support from the party 13 The party s leadership supported Karel Schwarzenberg of TOP 09 in the second round of the presidential election 14 Opposition 2013 2017 edit See also 2013 Czech political corruption scandal nbsp Current party leader Petr Fiala After resignation and fall of Cabinet of Prime Minister Petr Necas ODS proposed Miroslava Nemcova to the position of the prime minister to President Milos Zeman saying that she will be able to form a coalition and succeed a vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies However President Zeman refused to appoint her and instead appointed Jiri Rusnok s Cabinet After that opposition called for a dissolution of Chamber of Deputies and early election such vote was only recently made possible by a constitutional amendment The motion of dissolution passed with 147 out of 200 votes 120 required all parties except ODS whose deputies left the chamber voted for dissolution including their former coalition partners Public Affairs and TOP 09 President Zeman then called on early elections on 25 26 October 2013 ODS suffered heavy losses It gained only 16 seats and finished 5th The party also lost elections of the European parliament and of Senate and municipal in 2014 The 24th Congress of the Civic Democratic Party elected on 18 19 January 2014 a new leadership of ODS The former rector of Masaryk University and minister Petr Fiala was elected as chairman Member of the European Parliament Jan Zahradil was elected as first vice chairman In his book Citizens Democrats and Party Members Czech Obcane demokrate a stranici Fiala said the party needs to be attractive to new young people and ODS shall have experts on economics health care education etc In the Chamber of Deputies ODS formed an informal coalition relationship with TOP 09 and both have been opposing laws such as Control report of Value added tax On 26 May 2015 ODS TOP 09 and Dawn of Direct Democracy called an unsuccessful vote of no confidence of the Cabinet of Bohuslav Sobotka As of December 2015 opinion polls showed ODS with 8 6 nationwide 15 Some polling agencies and political commentators are of the opinion that ODS was on the path to become main centre right party again 16 17 18 On 16 January 2016 Fiala was re elected as Leader of the ODS ODS participated in 2016 regional and Senate election It received about 10 of votes and its candidate s secured seats in all regions 6 candidates nominated by ODS qualified for the second round for Senate 4 of them were eventually elected Fiala then said that ODS returned to the position of the major right wing party 19 20 Opposition and formal cooperation with TOP 09 and KDU CSL 2017 2021 edit ODS agreed to participate in the 2017 legislative election together with Freeholder party Parties will present themselves during the campaign as ODS with the support of Freeholders This agreement means that Freeholders will take 40 places on ODS candidacy list 21 In February 2017 ODS started a campaign called We create program which was series of tours to Czech regions with party leaders discussing priorities with supporters and potential voters for an upcoming election 22 On 19 April 2017 ODS introduced its tax program The Civic Democrats want to lower taxes which they say would increase the income of Czech citizens ODS also wants to decrease spending in social benefits and subsidies Chief Whip Zbynek Stanjura said that many people take advantage of social benefits even though they don t deserve it These plans resembled those that ODS had in the 2006 legislative election manifesto 23 24 Tours concluded with Conference Strong program for Strong Czechia held on 22 April where ODS presented their election manifesto and candidates 25 26 nbsp Departed chairman of the Senate in years 2018 2020 Jaroslav Kubera of the ODS Following the 2017 Czech government crisis ODS grew in polls approaching the Czech Social Democratic Party 27 According to a poll by TNS Kantar ODS would become the second strongest party surpassing CSSD and KSCM 28 ODS introduced its campaign for 2017 election on 29 May 2017 It is inspired by the British Conservative Party s campaign for 2017 general election 29 In the 2017 election ODS sought to get more than 10 30 According to poll by STEM Mark in September ODS would get 7 5 of votes 31 ODS received 11 in 2017 legislative election and became the second largest political party in the Czech Republic 32 The party then won 2018 Senate election confirming its position as the main right wing party 33 Civic Democratic Party KDU CSL and TOP 09 formed bloc of conservative opposition parties in late 2020 The alliance was known as the Three Coalition before the parties launched their slogan and program on 9 December 2020 announcing that they would run under the name Spolu together in the 2021 Czech legislative election 34 The conservative bloc announced that Petr Fiala would be their candidate for the post of prime minister 35 The Bloc ran in 2021 Czech legislative election with Fiala as a leader Opinion polls suggested that ANO 2011 would win the election but in an electoral upset ODS led Spolu won highest number of votes and opposition parties won majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies 36 Opposition parties signed memorandum agreeing to nominate ODS leader Fiala for the position of the new prime minister 37 Return to power 2021 present edit ODS formed a coalition government with STAN KDU CSL TOP 09 and Pirati after the election Petr Fiala became the new prime minister ODS holds 6 seats in Fiala s Cabinet Ideology editThe ODS is described as conservative 38 39 40 41 42 liberal conservative 43 44 45 and conservative liberal 46 47 48 supports economic liberalism 49 and is Eurosceptic 50 51 There are also multiple ideological factions in the party including the national conservative faction 52 53 54 55 the national liberal faction 56 the social liberal faction 57 the neoconservative faction 58 and the Christian socially conservative faction former Christian Democratic Party 59 nbsp Pre election billboard with the inscription Low taxes ODS solution in 2010 The party s ideas are very close to those of the British Conservative Party Swedish Moderate Party and other liberal conservative parties in Europe The party s program states low taxes public finances and future without debts support for families with children addressable social system reducing bureaucracy better conditions for business a safe state with the transatlantic links No tricks and populism Many prominent politicians in the party say they are opposed to political correctness and call for tougher measures to combat radical Islam which they liken to Nazism 60 61 62 63 nbsp Pre election meeting in Brno in 2018 Although the party was in power when the Treaty of Lisbon was ratified in the Czech Republic ODS supports maintaining Czech sovereignty and integrity against the European Union calls for a fundamental reform of the EU and strongly opposes any federalization of Europe in the form of the EU becoming a quasi state entity 64 Following the EU referendum in Britain which resulted in the United Kingdom voting to leave ODS leader Petr Fiala said the Czech Republic should reconsider its priorities and strategy in the European Union and if the Treaties were to be re opened negotiate new conditions for the country such as an opt out from asylum rules as well as from the obligation to adopt the euro 65 The party is a member of the national conservative European Conservatives and Reformists group The ODS is against immigration The party supports compulsory measures for immigrants to speak the Czech language learn about Czech history and adapt to local customs and cultures 39 ODS is also opposed to compulsory EU migrant quotas by arguing that the Czech Republic should have sovereignty over its own border control and that forcing nations to take in migrants without sufficient vetting or orderly processing and integration poses a threat to national security social cohesion and native European culture ODS believes that all individual nations should have the right to determine their own immigration policies 63 ODS also supports the right of law abiding citizens to own and carry firearms 66 being the main reason Czech gun laws are much more liberal than in nearly all other European countries This makes them different from parties they are based on as most of them especially British Conservatives reject the idea that anyone has a right to own and carry firearms and other weapons making the ODS much more similar to American Republicans in this matter although they still support gun control measures such as background checks licenses and registration ODS especially its defense expert Jana Cernochova was one of the main supporters of embedding the right to keep and bear arms for the purposes of national security into the Czech constitution although it was Social Democrat Milan Chovanec who originally proposed it The amendment failed in the Senate In 2021 a similar bill passed 67 Symbols editName edit Vaclav Klaus stated that the party s name represents the fact that ODS is based on the idea of civic freedoms It also shows that ODS is a Civic Party which differentiates it from other parties that existed prior to 1991 The adjective Democratic represents that ODS should protect parliamentary democracy 68 Besides its official name ODS also received some informal names from media Party members are sometimes called the Blues or the Blue Birds and ODS is sometimes called the Blue Party due to the party s association with the color blue 69 70 71 72 Logo edit The first logo was introduced on 4 June 1991 created by Ales Krejca It was chosen from over 250 entries to a public competition 73 74 A new logo was introduced in 1992 including the silhouette of a bird in blue The logo was created by Petr Sejdl In 1994 when the bird s tail was shortened and in 1998 the font was changed as a result of the Sarajevo betrayal of autumn 1997 in which ODS colleagues used allegations of bribery to precipitate the resignation of Vaclav Klaus government while he was on a trip to Sarajevo 75 73 The party used this version until 2015 with modifications for individual election campaigns 76 The ODS introduced a new party logo in a congress in Prague in 2015 The design of the bird was updated and flies upwards rather than to the left The logo was designed by Libor Jelinek 77 nbsp Party logo 1991 1992 nbsp Party symbol 1994 2015 nbsp Current logo since 2015Organisation editParty structure edit The highest body of the ODS is Congress which meets every year and elects leadership every two years The party is led by the Executive Council and Republic Assembly in time between meetings of Congress The executive body meets every Month and the party is led by Panel between meetings of the Executive Council Panel consists of Party s Leader Deputy Leaders and Chief Whips of the Parliamentary ODS 78 ODS is structured similarly to the subdivisions of the Czech Republic The structure consists of local associations Group of local associations forms area Areas are organised as parts of Region 79 80 Membership edit Year Members Ref Year Members Ref Year Members Ref 1991 18 500 2001 18 280 81 2011 27 648 1992 23 000 2002 20 412 2012 24 507 1993 2003 21 641 82 2013 21 578 1994 2004 23 138 2014 17 944 83 1995 21 803 84 2005 2015 14 771 1996 2006 2016 14 123 1997 2007 2017 14 005 85 1998 16 000 2008 2018 14 095 1999 19 300 2009 34 000 86 2019 13 563 87 2000 17 000 88 2010 31 011 ODS had 18 500 Members in 1991 The number of members grew with the party s influence and soon rose to over 23 000 It decreased during political crisis in 1998 to 16 000 The party stopped the decrease after preliminary election and membership grew once again It peaked in 2010 when it reached 31 011 The member base started to decline rapidly after 2010 It had only 17 994 members prior the 2013 election 89 ODS had 14 771 members in May 2015 and the member base was stabilised according to leaders of the party 90 nbsp Blue Team kiosk during an election campaign in Brno The party runs a membership organisation known as Supporters of ODS It is a looser form of involvement with the party It is meant for people who doesn t want to be members of ODS but sympathize with its program 91 It replaced the organisation known as Blue Team 92 Faces of ODS is a project of party s members who share their life s story It was described as honour for all members of the party who didn t abandon it in hard times 93 Young Conservatives edit Main article Young Conservatives Czech Republic Young Conservatives Czech Mladi konzervativci MK is a youth wing of ODS Young people from the age of 15 to 35 can apply for a membership in the MK The founding congress of MK was held on 8 December 1991 as a result of previous preparations through Charter of Young Conservatives by a group of students at the University of Technology in Brno and Law Students Association Vsehrd from Faculty of Law at the Charles University The Young Conservatives organize a wide range of events from meetings with local or national politicians to elections campaigns and international events CEVRO Liberal Conservative Academy edit Main article CEVRO Liberal Conservative Academy CEVRO Liberal Conservative Academy Czech CEVRO Liberalne konzervativni akademie is a think tank affiliated with ODS It was established in 1999 Its goal is political education which tries to spread liberal conservative thinking In 2005 CEVRO established its own private university known as CEVRO Institute CEVRO has four newspapers CEVRO Revue The Week in European Politics The Week in Czech Politics and Forthnightly 94 International organisations edit ODS joined the European Democrat Union EDU in 1992 as one of the first parties in the former Eastern Bloc Vaclav Klaus even became a Vice President of EDU ODS remained in the EDU until it became part of the European People s Party EPP in 2002 ODS refused to join EPP due to its ideological differences and instead became a member of European Democrats 95 ODS joined International Democracy Union IDU in 2001 96 Chairmen of Civic Democratic Party served as Vice presidents of IDU In July 2006 the Civic Democratic Party signed an agreement with the British Conservative Party to leave the European People s Party European Democrats EPP ED Group in the European Parliament and form the Movement for European Reform in 2009 On 22 June 2009 it was announced that ODS would join the newly formed European Conservatives and Reformists ECR parliamentary group an anti federalist and Eurosceptic group which currently its third largest bloc in the European Parliament ODS then became one of founding members of the European Conservatives and Reformists Party ECR Party a conservative and Eurosceptic European political party defending broader conservative and economically liberal principles Other members of ECR Party include Conservative Party Law and Justice or Freedom and Solidarity Leadership edit Current edit Position Name Photo Since Chairman Petr Fiala nbsp 18 January 2014 1st vice chairman Zbynek Stanjura nbsp 19 January 2020 Vice chairman Martin Kupka nbsp 18 January 2014 Vice chairman Alexandr Vondra nbsp 18 January 2014 Vice chairman Zdenek Zajicek nbsp 9 April 2022 Vice chairman Martin Baxa nbsp 13 January 2018 Chairman of Deputies Caucus Zbynek Stanjura nbsp 6 November 2013 Chairman of Senate Caucus Zdenek Nytra nbsp 19 October 2020 Chairman of EP Caucus Veronika Vrecionova nbsp 5 June 2023 Leaders edit No Name Photo Since Until 1 Vaclav Klaus nbsp 21 April 1991 15 December 2002 2 Mirek Topolanek nbsp 15 December 2002 13 April 2010 3 Petr Necas nbsp 20 June 2010 17 July 2013 4 Petr Fiala nbsp 18 January 2014 Incumbent Note Only properly elected leaders are included Election results editChamber of Deputies edit Year Leader Vote Vote Seats Place Notes Position 1992 Vaclav Klaus 1 924 483 29 7 76 20066 200 nbsp 33 1st nbsp Participated in Coalition with KDS Coalition 1996 1 794 560 29 6 68 200 nbsp 2 1st nbsp Minority government supported by oppositional CSSD Coalition 1998 1 656 011 27 7 63 200 nbsp 5 2nd nbsp Opposition agreement with CSSD Oppositionwith other arrangements 2002 1 166 975 24 5 58 200 nbsp 5 2nd nbsp Main opposition party Opposition 2006 Mirek Topolanek 1 892 475 35 3 81 200 nbsp 23 1st nbsp 2006 minority government 2007 2009 coalition with KDU CSL and Greens Minority 2006 2007 Coalition 2007 2009 2010 Petr Necas 1 057 792 20 2 53 200 nbsp 28 2nd nbsp Coalition government with TOP 09 and VV LIDEM Coalition 2013 Miroslava Nemcova 384 174 7 7 16 200 nbsp 37 5th nbsp Opposition Party Opposition 2017 Petr Fiala 572 962 11 3 25 200 nbsp 9 2nd nbsp Joint list with Freeholder Party of the Czech Republic Opposition 2021 1 493 701 27 8 71 20034 200 nbsp 9 1st nbsp Part of Spolu alliance Coalition Senate edit Election Candidates First round Second round Seats Total Seats Notes Votes Runners up Place Votes Place 1996 81 1 006 036 36 5 76 81 1st 1 134 044 49 2 1st 32 81 32 81 The whole Senate was elected Only one third of Senate was elected in all subsequent elections 1998 27 266 377 27 7 22 27 1st 210 156 39 1 1st 9 27 26 81 1999 1 3 844 12 2 0 1 2nd 0 1 25 81 By election in Prague 1 district 2000 27 203 039 23 6 18 27 1st 166 133 29 5 1st 8 27 22 81 2002 27 165 794 24 9 19 27 1st 284 537 34 6 1st 9 27 26 81 2003 2 10 555 29 8 2 2 1st 11 136 47 7 2nd 1 2 26 81 By elections in Strakonice and Brno City Districts 2004 2 11 824 33 4 2 2 1st 13 974 53 5 1st 1 2 27 81 By elections in Prague 4 and Znojmo districts 2004 27 241 120 33 3 25 27 1st 257 861 53 8 1st 19 27 37 81 2006 27 354 273 33 3 26 27 1st 289 568 50 4 1st 14 27 41 81 2007 2 5 569 18 7 1 2 3rd 4 338 21 5 3rd 0 2 41 81 By elections in Prerov and Chomutov districts 2008 27 252 827 24 1 20 27 2nd 266 731 32 4 2nd 3 27 35 81 2010 27 266 311 23 1 19 27 2nd 225 708 33 1 2nd 8 27 25 81 2011 1 7 422 27 2 1 1 2nd 7 227 34 8 2nd 0 1 25 81 By election in Kladno district 2012 27 151 950 17 28 10 27 3rd 117 990 22 95 2nd 6 27 15 81 2014 1 3 792 16 5 1 1 2nd 5 925 36 8 2nd 0 1 15 81 By election in Zlin district 2014 1 1 564 11 8 0 1 5th 0 1 15 81 By election in Prague 10 district 2014 25 118 268 11 52 7 27 3rd 53 149 11 21 4th 2 27 14 81 One of its candidates was elected in coalition with Koruna Ceska party 2016 24 107 785 12 23 6 27 3rd 48 609 11 46 4th 4 27 10 81 Including Zdenek Nytra who ran as independent 2018 1 7 615 33 51 1 1 1st 30 331 67 11 1st 1 1 10 81 By election in Trutnov district Jan Sobotka was a STAN candidate supported by ODS 2018 1 2 786 16 36 0 1 3rd 0 1 10 81 By election in Zlin district Miroslav Adamek was a STAN candidate supported by ODS 2018 19 163 630 15 02 11 27 1st 116 736 27 82 1st 10 27 16 81 Including Jaroslav Zeman and Jan Tecl 2019 1 4 651 24 25 1 1 1st 4 811 40 49 2nd 0 1 16 81 By election in Prague 9 district 2020 1 4 663 29 73 1 1 1st 5 302 57 17 1st 1 1 16 81 By election in Teplice district 2020 17 140 293 14 07 10 27 1st 82 377 18 23 2nd 5 27 18 81 2022 17 151 908 13 7 9 27 2nd 111 071 23 2 2nd 8 27 24 81 Places are by number of votes gained Presidential edit Indirect Elections Election Candidate First round result Second round result Third round result Votes Votes Result Votes Votes Result Votes Votes Result 1993 Vaclav Havel independent ODS government supported 109 172 63 4 Won 1998 Vaclav Havel independent part of ODS supported 130 184 70 7 Runner up 146 281 52 3 Won 2003 Vaclav Klaus 123 270 45 6 Runner up 109 198 55 1 Runner up 113 202 55 9 1st place 121 275 44 0 Runner up 118 192 61 5 Runner up 127 192 66 1 1st place 147 275 53 5 Runner up 139 268 51 9 Runner up 142 266 53 4 Won 2008 Vaclav Klaus 139 277 50 2 Runner up 142 277 51 3 Runner up 141 252 56 0 1st place 141 277 50 9 Runner up 141 267 52 8 Runner up 141 252 56 0 Won Direct Election Election Candidate First round result Second round result Votes Votes Result Votes Votes Result 2013 Premysl Sobotka 126 846 2 46 8th place supported Karel Schwarzenberg 2018 Mirek Topolanek 221 689 4 30 6th place supported Jiri Drahos 2023 a Petr Pavel 1 975 056 35 40 Runner up 3 358 926 58 33 Won Danuse Nerudova 777 080 13 93 3rd place supported Petr Pavel Pavel Fischer 376 705 6 75 4th place supported Petr Pavel The SPOLU coalition supported 3 independent candidates for this election European Parliament edit Year Main Candidate European party Vote Vote Seats Place 2004 Jan Zahradil ED 700 942 30 0 9 24 1st 2009 Jan Zahradil AECR 741 946 31 5 9 22 nbsp 1st 2014 Jan Zahradil AECR 116 389 7 7 2 21 nbsp 6th 2019 Jan Zahradil ACRE 344 885 14 5 4 21 nbsp 2nd Local election edit Year Vote Vote Place Seats 1994 3 787 264 29 56 1st 7 289 62 160 1998 1 895 984 24 16 1st 5 697 62 920 2002 2 036 021 25 21 1st 5 715 62 494 2006 3 935 395 36 2 1st 7 033 62 426 2010 1 694 396 18 78 2nd 5 112 62 178 2014 893 065 9 01 3rd 2 398 62 300 2018 2 465 930 11 1 2nd 2 845 61 892 2022 12 977 999 12 1 2nd 2 294 61 780 Regional election edit Year Vote Vote Seats Place Places in regions Governors Coalitions 2000 559 301 23 8 185 675 1st 7x 1st 3x 2nd 3x 3rd 8 13 8 13 2004 769 848 nbsp 36 4 nbsp 291 675 nbsp 1st 12x 1st 1x 2nd 12 13 12 13 2008 687 005 nbsp 23 6 nbsp 180 675 nbsp 2nd 12x 2nd 1x 3rd 0 13 4 13 2012 324 081 nbsp 12 3 nbsp 102 675 nbsp 3rd 1x 1st 3x 3rd 7x 4th 2x 5th 0 13 0 13 2016 239 836 nbsp 9 5 nbsp 76 675 nbsp 4th 3x 3rd 4x 4th 4x 5th 2x 6th 1x 7th 0 13 10 13 2020 97 411 825 14 87 nbsp 99 675 nbsp 2nd 1x 1st 5x 2nd 2x 3rd 4x 4th 1x 5th 4 13 13 13 2020 Czech regional election results edit Region Coalition partner ofoverall votes ofoverall vote Seats 98 Governance 99 100 Position Central Bohemian 82 695 19 77 16 65 nbsp 6 nbsp 2nd STAN ODS Pirates TOP 09 Greens Voice South Bohemian 34 857 17 52 12 55 nbsp 4 nbsp 2nd ODS KDU CSL TOP 09 CSSD JIH12 Plzen TOP 09 36 890 21 23 9 45 nbsp 1 nbsp 2nd ODS TOP 09 STAN Pirates Karlovy Vary KDU CSL 5 870 7 35 2 45 nbsp 2 nbsp 4th STAN TOP 09 Pirates ODS KDU CSL Local movements Usti nad Labem 24 739 12 37 8 55 nbsp 1 nbsp 2nd ANO ODS TOP 09 JsmePRO Liberec 11 932 8 59 5 45 nbsp 1 nbsp 4th SLK Pirates ODS Hradec Kralove STAN and East Bohemians 41 668 23 53 6 45 nbsp 1 nbsp 1st ODS STAN VC KDU CSL Pirates TOP 09 HDK Pardubice TOP 09 23 434 14 10 6 45 nbsp 1 nbsp 3rd CSSD ODS TOP 09 KDU CSL STAN Vysocina Mayors for Citizens 21 038 13 19 5 45 nbsp nbsp 3rd ODS STO Pirates KDU CSL CSSD STAN South Moravian Freedomites and SOM 46 342 12 77 9 65 nbsp 3 nbsp 4th KDU CSL Pirates ODS STAN Olomouc 19 421 10 36 7 55 nbsp 2 nbsp 4th STAN Pirates KDU CSL TOP 09 ODS Zlin 19 302 10 04 5 45 nbsp 2 nbsp 5th ANO Pirates ODS CSSD Moravian Silesian TOP 09 43 637 13 637 9 65 nbsp 3 nbsp 2nd ANO ODS TOP 09 KDU CSL CSSD Prague municipal elections edit Year Leader Vote Vote Seats Place Position 1994 Jan Koukal 41 2 23 55 1st Coalition 1998 Jan Koukal 36 8 21 55 nbsp 2 1st Coalition 2002 Pavel Bem 35 5 30 70 nbsp 8 1st Coalition 2006 Pavel Bem 54 4 42 70 nbsp 12 1st Coalition 2010 Bohuslav Svoboda 21 1 20 65 nbsp 22 2nd Coalition 2014 Bohuslav Svoboda 11 0 8 65 nbsp 12 4th Opposition 2018 Bohuslav Svoboda 17 9 14 65 nbsp 6 1st Opposition Federal Assembly of Czechoslovakia edit House of the People Year Leader Vote Vote Seats Place Notes Position 1992 Vaclav Klaus 2 200 937 23 0 48 150 1st Participated in Coalition with KDS Majority Government House of Nations Year Leader Vote Vote Seats Place Notes Position 1992 Vaclav Klaus 2 168 421 22 6 37 150 1st Participated in Coalition with KDS Majority GovernmentElected representatives editCivic Democratic Party has 23 members of the Chamber of Deputies Ivan Adamec Jan Bauer Martin Baxa Petr Beitl Marek Benda Petr Bendl Stanislav Blaha Pavel Blazek Jana Cernochova Petr Fiala Jakub Janda Martin Kupka Karel Krejza Jaroslav Martinu Ilona Mauritzova Vojtech Munzar Miroslava Nemcova Jan Skopecek Zbynek Stanjura Bohuslav Svoboda Jiri Ventruba Jan Zahradnik Pavel Zacek Civic Democratic Party has 16 Senators of the Senate of the Czech Republic Lumir Aschenbrenner Jiri Burian Martin Cervicek Ladislav Chlupac Hynek Hanza Tomas Jirsa Pavel Karpisek Michal Kortys Rostislav Kostial Raduan Nwelati Zdenek Nytra Jiri Oberfalzer Jan Tecl Vladislav Vilimec Milos Vystrcil Jaroslav Zeman Civic Democratic Party has 4 MEPs Evzen Tosenovsky Veronika Vrecionova Alexandr Vondra Jan ZahradilReferences edit Nemecek Tomas 26 June 2008 Mit diplom od Langera Hospodarske Noviny Retrieved 2 June 2015 O nas Pravy breh Institut Petra Fialy Pravy breh Retrieved 11 March 2023 Clenska zakladna ODS je vetsi nez CSSD z mladych uskupeni nejvice roste SPD CT24 in Czech Ceska televize Retrieved 30 November 2021 Hanley 2008 p xi Ceske parlamentni strany 2007 krizovatky a cesty Obcanska demokraticka strana Cevro in Czech Retrieved 24 November 2017 Hanley 2008 p 89 a b Hanley 2008 p 96 Central and South Eastern Europe 2004 4 ed London Routledge 2004 p 216 ISBN 978 1 85743 186 5 Rutland Peter 1998 The challenge of integration M E Sharpe p 84 ISBN 978 0 7656 0359 3 Hanley 1998 p 140 Hanley 1998 p 143 Predsednictvi CR v EU 2009 Euroskop in Czech Archived from the original on 21 April 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2017 To byl prusvih pane kandidate ODS Sobotko Ptali jsme se u Vas doma Parlamentni Listy Retrieved 30 June 2016 Lidri ODS podporili Schwarzenberga I pres Zahradilovo varovani iDNES cz 15 January 2013 Retrieved 30 June 2016 Vedouci ANO dale ztraci ukazuje pruzkum Novinky cz 21 December 2015 Retrieved 24 December 2015 Koukal Josef 4 May 2015 Vstava ODS z popela Novinky cz Retrieved 16 January 2016 Velky navrat ODS Podle aktualniho pruzkumu volebnich preferenci to tak vypada Parlamentni Listy Retrieved 16 January 2016 Novy Tomas TOPka pomalu konci oteze pravice trima ODS ukazal pruzkum Parlamentni Listy Retrieved 16 January 2016 ODS vstava z popela potaceli jsme se na hranici preziti vracime se jako lidr pravice rika Fiala Aktualne cz 8 October 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 ODS vraci uder Stava se nejsilnejsi pravicovou stranou v Cesku Lidovky cz 9 October 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2016 ODS pujde do snemovnich voleb s podporou Strany soukromniku Echo24 in Czech 21 February 2017 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Nova doba ODS vyrazi tvorit program mezi obcany Euro cz in Czech 26 February 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2017 Dane podle ODS S prumernym platem si polepsite o 1220 korun mesicne Seznam Zpravy 19 April 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2017 ODS chce volice oslovit snizenim dani a rustem mezd Echo24 in Czech 19 April 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2017 ODS predstavi program a lidry kandidatek pro rijnove volby Parlamentni Listy Retrieved 22 April 2017 Cesku hrozi pad na dno burcoval Fiala na konferenci ODS Novinky cz in Czech 22 April 2017 Retrieved 22 April 2017 Vilimova Tereza 29 May 2017 Pravice na vzestupu Fiala se dotahuje na CSSD Kalousek k 10 procentum Echo24 in Czech Retrieved 29 May 2017 Drsny vzkaz Lidovemu domu CSSD skoncila v pruzkumu az ctvrta Novinky cz in Czech 4 June 2017 Retrieved 4 June 2017 Chaos cirkus ostuda Kampan ODS proti Babisovi Zemanovi i Sobotkovi iDNES cz 29 May 2017 Retrieved 29 May 2017 Dvouciferny vysledek jinak budou v ODS po volbach padat hlavy iDNES cz 14 August 2017 Retrieved 6 October 2017 Pruzkum MF DNES Z Okamurovy SPD a Piratu se stavaji cerni kone voleb iDNES cz 6 October 2017 Retrieved 6 October 2017 Jsme nejsilnejsi tradicni strana holedbal se Fiala Novinky cz in Czech 21 October 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2017 ANALYZA Facka pro obe vladni strany a ODS je na ceste vzhuru iDNES cz 13 October 2018 Retrieved 13 October 2018 ODS KDU CSL a TOP 09 jdou do voleb jako koalice SPOLU Daly 17 slibu Seznam Zpravy 9 December 2020 Retrieved 9 December 2020 ODS TOP 09 a KDU CSL pujdou do voleb spolecne Chteji je vyhrat Ceska Televize 27 October 2020 Retrieved 8 March 2021 Spolu vyhralo volby Petr Fiala muze byt novy cesky premier E15 cz in Czech Retrieved 10 October 2021 Czech opposition parties form majority alliance sign memorandum for new government Expats cz 10 October 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 Nordsieck Wolfram 2017 Czechia Parties and Elections in Europe a b Civic Democratic Party Obcanska demokraticka strana ODS Archived from the original on 3 February 2018 Retrieved 30 October 2017 POLITICAL SYSTEM Embassy of the Czech Republic in Warsaw ParlGov parties elections cabinets Archived from the original on 2 June 2021 Retrieved 30 October 2017 Former Czech PM Topolanek announces presidential candidacy The Associated Press Prague 5 November 2017 Retrieved 21 April 2020 The Tories new EU allies BBC News 22 June 2009 Retrieved 14 August 2011 Richter Jan 13 April 2010 Number 3 for Jesus Czech parties get numbers to run with in May s elections Radio Prague Traynor Ian 19 May 2009 European election Brussels braces for big protest vote The Guardian Rudolf Andorka 1999 A Society Transformed Hungary in Time space Perspective Central European University Press p 163 ISBN 978 963 9116 49 8 Krisztina Arato Petr Kaniok 2009 Euroscepticism and European Integration CPI PSRC p 191 ISBN 978 953 7022 20 4 Vit Hlousek Lubomir Kopecek 2013 Origin Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties East Central and Western Europe Compared Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 177 ISBN 978 1 4094 9977 0 Paul G Lewis 2000 Political Parties in Post Communist Eastern Europe Routledge p 164 ISBN 978 0 415 20182 7 Retrieved 6 February 2013 Geoffrey Pridham 2008 European Party Co operation and Post Communist Politics Euroscepticism in Transnational Perspective In Aleks Szczerbiak Paul Taggart eds Opposing Europe The Comparative Party Politics of Euroscepticism Volume 2 Comparative and Theoretical Perspectives OUP Oxford p 89 ISBN 978 0 19 925835 2 Hanley Sean 2002 Party Institutionalisation and Centre Right Euroscepticism in East Central Europe the Case of the Civic Democratic Party in the Czech Republic PDF 29th ECPR Joint Sessions of Workshops Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 John Nagle Alison Mahr 1999 Democracy and Democratization Post Communist Europe in Comparative Perspective SAGE Publications p 188 ISBN 978 0 7619 5679 2 Ma liberalismus v Ceske republice sanci Jiri Pehe 9 July 2006 Retrieved 10 January 2017 Peakovci a liberalni stred Jiri Pehe 2 May 2012 Retrieved 10 January 2017 POLITIKA Volby Klaus Paroubek a tak Lidovky cz Retrieved 10 January 2017 Liberalismus a zdravy rozum Centrum pro studium demokracie a kultury 10 December 2015 Retrieved 12 March 2017 Rozpolcene strany Snatky homosexualu maji priznivce v peti klubech stacit to nemusi Aktualne cz 8 June 2022 Retrieved 17 June 2023 Zaba Jakub 9 October 2015 Zdi a bubliny Tomase Pojara Denik Referendum in Czech Retrieved 11 March 2017 Marek Benda z ODS Registrovane partnerstvi bych zrusil in Czech 5 June 2016 Retrieved 11 March 2017 Dela problem Klausovi i Topolankovi Politicka korektnost Parlamentni listy Jirsa ODS Politicka korektnost je jednim z hlavnich duvodu neresitelnosti soucasne evropske krize Parlamentni listy Retrieved 10 January 2017 Exministr Vondra ostre Politicka korektnost nas dusi Pelikan je hipster Parlamentni listy Retrieved 10 January 2017 a b Strapacova Michaela Hlousek Vit 2018 Anti Islamism without Moslems Cognitive Frames of Czech Antimigrant Politics Journal of Nationalism Memory amp Language Politics 12 1 30 doi 10 2478 jnmlp 2018 0001 S2CID 150011011 O nas ODS Obcanska demokraticka strana Retrieved 11 March 2023 Komentar predsedy ODS Petra Fialy a europoslancu za ODS k vysledkum britskeho referenda Obcanska demokraticka strana in Czech Retrieved 24 June 2016 Silny program pro silne Cesko ODS Czech Republic enshrines self defence in Constitution Visegrad Post 23 July 2021 Projev prezidenta republiky na Zofinskem setkani ODS Klaus cz in Czech Retrieved 24 November 2017 Modry ptak si zlomil kridla Z ODS je mala strana CT24 in Czech Ceska televize Retrieved 24 November 2017 Glosa Mirek Topolanek za vodou ODS uz pod vodou Aktualne cz in Czech 10 April 2013 Retrieved 24 November 2017 Fiala Prejmenovat ODS Nerikam ze jsem o tom nikdy nepremyslel Novinky cz in Czech 6 October 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2017 Babis nestacil v televizni diskusi na sefa ODS Fialu Jeho prazdne fraze se rozplynuly jako dym Reflex cz in Czech Retrieved 24 November 2017 a b Loga ODS v promenach casu PDF ODS Retrieved 19 March 2017 Ctvrtstoleti s ODS Momenty vzestupu ceske pravice na vrchol i nasledneho padu Aktualne cz in Czech 21 April 2016 Retrieved 19 March 2017 Simon Jeffrey 2004 NATO and the Czech and Slovak Republics Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield p 69 ISBN 0 7425 2902 9 Retrieved 3 April 2017 Loga a barvy politickych stran 3 4 ODS KDU SZ Svobodni a dalsi strany IPM in Czech 28 January 2015 Retrieved 19 March 2017 ODS predstavila nove logo se vzhuru leticim ptakem Denik cz in Czech 30 May 2015 Retrieved 19 March 2017 Stanovy O nas Obcanska demokraticka strana in Czech Retrieved 30 June 2016 Struktura ODS Odsregionliberec cz Retrieved 30 June 2016 Regiony ODS Obcanska demokraticka strana Obcanska demokraticka strana in Czech Retrieved 30 June 2016 Koutnik Ondrej Vznik a vyvoj politicke strany Unie svobody v letech 1998 2004 PDF Theses cz Retrieved 8 February 2017 Stav clenske zakladny PDF ODS cz Archived from the original PDF on 15 April 2007 Retrieved 20 January 2017 Miroslav Macek Kdo konkretne je za dluhy ODS odpovedny Parlamentni listy Retrieved 20 January 2017 Sjezd KDS souhlasil s integraci s ODS Hospodarske noviny in Czech Economia a s 20 November 1995 Retrieved 11 August 2017 Factcheck politickych diskuzi Demagog cz in Czech Retrieved 9 December 2017 ODS mizi clenove po stovkach Novinky cz in Czech 3 April 2014 Retrieved 20 January 2017 Trikolora ma uz vic fanousku nez STAN a Pirati Novinky cz 22 July 2019 Retrieved 25 July 2019 Martinek Jan 18 April 2013 Z ODS odesly ctyri tisice clenu Novinky cz Retrieved 20 January 2017 Rieger Lukas 23 September 2014 Pocet clenu stran vcera a dnes PDF Ctrnactidenik 15 2014 Retrieved 30 June 2016 Vedeni ODS mobilizuje cleny maji shanet nove partajniky Novinky in Czech 20 April 2016 Retrieved 30 June 2016 ODS mistni sdruzeni Slapanice Ods slapanice cz Retrieved 17 July 2017 Nabor clenu a fundraising weby stran zaspaly dobu IPM in Czech 5 October 2015 Retrieved 17 July 2017 ODS oslavila 25 let od sveho zalozeni Spustila projekt Podporovatele ODS a Tvare ODS Obcanska demokraticka strana in Czech Retrieved 17 July 2017 Policy Analysis in the Czech Republic Bristol University of Bristol 2016 pp 280 281 ISBN 978 1 44731 814 9 Mrklas Ladislav ODS a zahranicni partneri CEVRO Retrieved 30 June 2016 Lev Dolezal Revue Proglas 4 2001 Komentar ODS mezi stagnaci a rustem CDK old cdk cz Retrieved 30 June 2016 192 946 votes which is 6 96 if counting only regions where ODS ran by itself Volby do zastupitelstev kraju volby cz Prehledne Vsechny kraje uz maji vedeni Starostove a ODS ziskali ctyri hejtmany Aktualne cz 19 November 2020 Krajske volby 2016 iDnes cz Bibliography edit Hanley Sean 2008 The New Right in the New Europe Czech Transformation and Right Wing Politics 1989 2006 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 34135 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Obcanska demokraticka strana Official website nbsp in English and Czech Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Civic Democratic Party Czech Republic amp oldid 1220263098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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