fbpx
Wikipedia

Socialist Party (Belgium)

The Socialist Party[11][12][13] (French: Parti socialiste, PS) is a social democratic[2][3][4][5][6] French-speaking political party in Belgium. As of the 2019 elections, it is the third largest party in the Belgian Chamber of Representatives and the largest Francophone party. The party is led by Paul Magnette. The party supplies the Minister-president of the French Community (Rudy Demotte), and the Brussels-Capital Region (Rudi Vervoort). In the German-speaking community, the party is known as the Sozialistische Partei (SP).

Socialist Party
French: Parti socialiste
Dutch: Socialistische Partij
German: Sozialistische Partei
AbbreviationPS
PresidentPaul Magnette
Founded1978
Preceded byBelgian Socialist Party
HeadquartersNational Secretariat
Bd de l'Empereur/Keizerslaan 13, Brussels
Think tankInstitut Emile Vandervelde[1]
Youth wingMovement of Young Socialists
IdeologySocial democracy[2][3][4][5][6]
Progressivism[7]
Eco-socialism[7]
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionCentre-left[8] to left-wing[9][10]
European affiliationParty of European Socialists
International affiliationProgressive Alliance
Socialist International
European Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Flemish counterpartVooruit
Colours  Red
Chamber of Representatives
(French-speaking seats)
20 / 61
Senate
(French-speaking seats)
7 / 24
Walloon Parliament
23 / 75
Parliament of the French Community
28 / 94
Brussels Parliament
(French-speaking seats)
17 / 72
European Parliament
(French-speaking seats)
2 / 8
Website
www.ps.be

The PS is very commonly part of governing coalitions, and dominates most local authorities because of the extremely fragmented nature of Belgian political institutions, particularly in Francophone areas. In the years since 1999, the PS has simultaneously controlled five regional executive bodies: the Government of the French Community, the Walloon Government, the Government of the Brussels-Capital Region, as well as the COCOF, a local subsidiary in Brussels of the French Community Government, and the Government of the German-speaking Community.

The party, or its members, have from time to time been brought into connection with criminal activities and political scandals, mostly concerning bribery and financial fraud (Cools assassination, Agusta scandal, Dassault Affair, Carolorégienne affair, ICDI affair). The Carolorégienne affair caused Jean-Claude Van Cauwenberghe to step down as Minister-President of the Walloon region.

Electoral results

The PS performed well in the 2003 general election, but were overtaken as the largest Francophone party by the Reformist Movement in the 2007 general election.

In the 10 June 2007 general elections, the party won 20 out of 150 seats in the Chamber of Representatives and 4 out of 40 seats in the Senate. The PS was a member of the Leterme I Government, Van Rompuy I Government, Leterme II Government and currently the Di Rupo I Government of 6 December 2011, with former PS leader Elio Di Rupo serving as Prime Minister of Belgium.

Timeline

Results for the Chamber of Representatives, in percentages for the Kingdom of Belgium.

2019 Belgian federal election2014 Belgian general election2010 Belgian general election2007 Belgian general election2003 Belgian general election1999 Belgian general election1995 Belgian general election1991 Belgian general election1987 Belgian general election1985 Belgian general election1981 Belgian general election1978 Belgian general election

Ideology

The ideology and image of the PS is a mix of social-democracy, combined with a modern electoral marketing. In its political program, the party claims to be progressive and ecosocialist.[7]

Notable figures

 
The Brussels headquarters of the PS (2006)

Chairmen

Other

Electoral results

Chamber of Representatives

Election Votes % Seats +/− Government
1978 689,876 12.5
31 / 212
Coalition
1981 733,137 12.2
35 / 212
  4 Opposition
1985 834,488 13.8
35 / 212
  0 Opposition
1987 961,361 15.6
40 / 212
  5 Coalition
1991 831,199 13.5
35 / 212
  5 Coalition
1995 720,819 11.9
21 / 150
  14 Coalition
1999 631,653 10.2
19 / 150
  2 Coalition
2003 855,992 13.0
25 / 150
  6 Coalition
2007 724,787 10.9
20 / 150
  5 Coalition
2010 894,543 13.7
26 / 150
  6 Coalition
2014 787,165 11.7
23 / 150
  3 Opposition
2019 641,623 9.5
20 / 150
  3 External support (2020)
Coalition (2020–)

Senate

Election Votes % Seats +/−
1978 685,307 12.5
17 / 106
1981 755,512 12.7
18 / 106
  1
1985 832,792 13.9
18 / 106
  0
1987 958,686 15.7
20 / 106
  2
1991 814,136 13.3
18 / 106
  2
1995 764,610 12.8
5 / 40
  13
1999 597,890 9.7
4 / 40
  1
2003 840,908 12.8
6 / 40
  2
2007 678,812 10.2
4 / 40
  2
2010 880,828 13.6
7 / 40
  3

Regional

Brussels Parliament

Election Votes % Seats +/− Government
F.E.C. Overall
1989 96,189 22.0 (#1)
18 / 75
Coalition
1995 88,370 21.4 (#2)
17 / 75
  1 Coalition
1999 68,307 18.6 (#3) 16.0 (#3)
13 / 75
  4 Coalition
2004 130,462 33.4 (#1) 28.7 (#1)
26 / 89
  13 Coalition
2009 107,303 26.2 (#2) 23.3 (#2)
21 / 89
  5 Coalition
2014 108,755 26.6 (#1) 23.5 (#1)
21 / 89
  Coalition
2019 85,530 22.0 (#1) 18.7 (#1)
17 / 89
  4 Coalition

Walloon Parliament

Election Votes % Seats +/− Government
1995 665,986 35.2 (#1)
30 / 75
Coalition
1999 560,867 29.4 (#1)
25 / 75
  5 Coalition
2004 727,781 36.9 (#1)
34 / 75
  9 Coalition
2009 657,803 32.8 (#1)
29 / 75
  5 Coalition
2014 626,473 30.9 (#1)
30 / 75
  1 Coalition (2014–2017)
Opposition (2017–2019)
2019 532,422 26.2 (#1)
23 / 75
  7 Coalition

German-speaking Community Parliament

Election Votes % Seats +/− Government
1990 6,407 16.3
4 / 25
  0 Opposition
1995 5,958 16.1
4 / 25
  0 Coalition
1999 5,519 15.0
4 / 25
  0 Coalition
2004 6,903 19.0
5 / 25
  1 Coalition
2009 7,231 19.3
5 / 25
  0 Coalition
2014 6,047 16.1
4 / 25
  1 Coalition
2019 5,820 14.8
4 / 25
  0 Coalition

European Parliament

 
Previous logo of the Socialist Party
Election Votes % Seats +/−
F.E.C. G.E.C. F.E.C. G.E.C. Overall
1979 575,824 27.4 (#1) 10.6
4 / 24
1984 762,293 34.0 (#1)
5 / 24
  1
1989 854,207 38.1 (#1) 14.5
5 / 24
  0
1994 680,142 4,820 30.4 (#1) 12.6 (#5)
3 / 25
  2
1999 596,567 25.8 (#2) 9.6
3 / 25
  0
2004 878,577 36.1 (#1) 14.9 (#3) 13.5
4 / 24
  1
2009 714,947 5,527 29.1 (#1) 14.6 (#4) 10.9
3 / 22
  1
2014 714,645 5,835 29.3 (#1) 15.1 (#4) 10.7
3 / 21
  0
2019 651,157 4,655 26.7 (#1) 11.4 (#4) 9.7
2 / 21
  1

See also

References

  1. ^ "L'IEV - PS - Parti Socialiste". PS.be. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
  2. ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram (2019). "Wallonia/Belgium". Parties and Elections in Europe.
  3. ^ a b Slomp, Hans (30 September 2011). Europe, A Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics. ABC-CLIO. pp. 465–. ISBN 978-0-313-39182-8. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  4. ^ a b Dimitri Almeida (27 April 2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. CRC Press. pp. 71–. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  5. ^ a b Richard Collin; Pamela L. Martin (2012). An Introduction to World Politics: Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 218–. ISBN 978-1-4422-1803-1. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  6. ^ a b Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko; Matti Mälkiä (2007). Encyclopedia of Digital Government. Idea Group Inc (IGI). pp. 397–. ISBN 978-1-59140-790-4. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  7. ^ a b c https://www.ps.be/Content/Uploads/PSOfficiel/PDFs/170%20engagements%20A5-3.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ Josep M. Colomer (24 July 2008). Comparative European Politics. Taylor & Francis. pp. 220–. ISBN 9780203946091. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
  9. ^ "Le PS: se réinventer à gauche tout en forgeant des compromis". Le Soir (in French). 9 August 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  10. ^ "Laurette Onkelinx (PS) : "Le PTB ne représente pas la classe ouvrière"". RTBF (in French). Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  11. ^ Chee, Foo Yun (23 September 2020). "Belgian king names two to form government - 16 months after election". Reuters. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  12. ^ Anderson, Emma (20 July 2020). "Belgian Socialist leader warns of new election if coalition not formed in 50 days". Politico. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  13. ^ Walsh, David (2 October 2020). "Belgium: New seven-party coalition government officially sworn in". Euronews. Retrieved 4 January 2021.

External links

  • Official website
  • Official website of German-speaking section

socialist, party, belgium, socialist, party, french, parti, socialiste, social, democratic, french, speaking, political, party, belgium, 2019, elections, third, largest, party, belgian, chamber, representatives, largest, francophone, party, party, paul, magnet. The Socialist Party 11 12 13 French Parti socialiste PS is a social democratic 2 3 4 5 6 French speaking political party in Belgium As of the 2019 elections it is the third largest party in the Belgian Chamber of Representatives and the largest Francophone party The party is led by Paul Magnette The party supplies the Minister president of the French Community Rudy Demotte and the Brussels Capital Region Rudi Vervoort In the German speaking community the party is known as the Sozialistische Partei SP Socialist Party French Parti socialisteDutch Socialistische PartijGerman Sozialistische ParteiAbbreviationPSPresidentPaul MagnetteFounded1978Preceded byBelgian Socialist PartyHeadquartersNational SecretariatBd de l Empereur Keizerslaan 13 BrusselsThink tankInstitut Emile Vandervelde 1 Youth wingMovement of Young SocialistsIdeologySocial democracy 2 3 4 5 6 Progressivism 7 Eco socialism 7 Pro EuropeanismPolitical positionCentre left 8 to left wing 9 10 European affiliationParty of European SocialistsInternational affiliationProgressive AllianceSocialist InternationalEuropean Parliament groupProgressive Alliance of Socialists and DemocratsFlemish counterpartVooruitColours RedChamber of Representatives French speaking seats 20 61Senate French speaking seats 7 24Walloon Parliament23 75Parliament of the French Community28 94Brussels Parliament French speaking seats 17 72European Parliament French speaking seats 2 8Websitewww wbr ps wbr bePolitics of BelgiumPolitical partiesElectionsThe PS is very commonly part of governing coalitions and dominates most local authorities because of the extremely fragmented nature of Belgian political institutions particularly in Francophone areas In the years since 1999 the PS has simultaneously controlled five regional executive bodies the Government of the French Community the Walloon Government the Government of the Brussels Capital Region as well as the COCOF a local subsidiary in Brussels of the French Community Government and the Government of the German speaking Community The party or its members have from time to time been brought into connection with criminal activities and political scandals mostly concerning bribery and financial fraud Cools assassination Agusta scandal Dassault Affair Caroloregienne affair ICDI affair The Caroloregienne affair caused Jean Claude Van Cauwenberghe to step down as Minister President of the Walloon region Contents 1 Electoral results 1 1 Timeline 2 Ideology 3 Notable figures 3 1 Chairmen 3 2 Other 4 Electoral results 4 1 Chamber of Representatives 4 2 Senate 4 3 Regional 4 3 1 Brussels Parliament 4 3 2 Walloon Parliament 4 3 3 German speaking Community Parliament 4 4 European Parliament 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksElectoral results EditThe PS performed well in the 2003 general election but were overtaken as the largest Francophone party by the Reformist Movement in the 2007 general election In the 10 June 2007 general elections the party won 20 out of 150 seats in the Chamber of Representatives and 4 out of 40 seats in the Senate The PS was a member of the Leterme I Government Van Rompuy I Government Leterme II Government and currently the Di Rupo I Government of 6 December 2011 with former PS leader Elio Di Rupo serving as Prime Minister of Belgium Timeline Edit Results for the Chamber of Representatives in percentages for the Kingdom of Belgium Ideology EditThe ideology and image of the PS is a mix of social democracy combined with a modern electoral marketing In its political program the party claims to be progressive and ecosocialist 7 Notable figures Edit The Brussels headquarters of the PS 2006 Chairmen Edit Andre Cools 1978 1981 previously leader of the Walloon branch of the BSP PSB Guy Spitaels 1981 1992 Philippe Busquin 1992 1999 Elio Di Rupo 1999 2011 Thierry Giet 2011 2013 ad interim Paul Magnette 2013 2014 ad interim Elio Di Rupo 2014 2019 Paul Magnette 2019 Other Edit Rudy Demotte Andre Flahaut Jean Claude Marcourt Philippe Moureaux Laurette Onkelinx Jean Claude Van CauwenbergheElectoral results EditChamber of Representatives Edit Election Votes Seats Government1978 689 876 12 5 31 212 Coalition1981 733 137 12 2 35 212 4 Opposition1985 834 488 13 8 35 212 0 Opposition1987 961 361 15 6 40 212 5 Coalition1991 831 199 13 5 35 212 5 Coalition1995 720 819 11 9 21 150 14 Coalition1999 631 653 10 2 19 150 2 Coalition2003 855 992 13 0 25 150 6 Coalition2007 724 787 10 9 20 150 5 Coalition2010 894 543 13 7 26 150 6 Coalition2014 787 165 11 7 23 150 3 Opposition2019 641 623 9 5 20 150 3 External support 2020 Coalition 2020 Senate Edit Election Votes Seats 1978 685 307 12 5 17 1061981 755 512 12 7 18 106 11985 832 792 13 9 18 106 01987 958 686 15 7 20 106 21991 814 136 13 3 18 106 21995 764 610 12 8 5 40 131999 597 890 9 7 4 40 12003 840 908 12 8 6 40 22007 678 812 10 2 4 40 22010 880 828 13 6 7 40 3Regional Edit Brussels Parliament Edit Election Votes Seats GovernmentF E C Overall1989 96 189 22 0 1 18 75 Coalition1995 88 370 21 4 2 17 75 1 Coalition1999 68 307 18 6 3 16 0 3 13 75 4 Coalition2004 130 462 33 4 1 28 7 1 26 89 13 Coalition2009 107 303 26 2 2 23 3 2 21 89 5 Coalition2014 108 755 26 6 1 23 5 1 21 89 Coalition2019 85 530 22 0 1 18 7 1 17 89 4 CoalitionWalloon Parliament Edit Election Votes Seats Government1995 665 986 35 2 1 30 75 Coalition1999 560 867 29 4 1 25 75 5 Coalition2004 727 781 36 9 1 34 75 9 Coalition2009 657 803 32 8 1 29 75 5 Coalition2014 626 473 30 9 1 30 75 1 Coalition 2014 2017 Opposition 2017 2019 2019 532 422 26 2 1 23 75 7 CoalitionGerman speaking Community Parliament Edit Election Votes Seats Government1990 6 407 16 3 4 25 0 Opposition1995 5 958 16 1 4 25 0 Coalition1999 5 519 15 0 4 25 0 Coalition2004 6 903 19 0 5 25 1 Coalition2009 7 231 19 3 5 25 0 Coalition2014 6 047 16 1 4 25 1 Coalition2019 5 820 14 8 4 25 0 CoalitionEuropean Parliament Edit Previous logo of the Socialist Party Election Votes Seats F E C G E C F E C G E C Overall1979 575 824 27 4 1 10 6 4 241984 762 293 34 0 1 5 24 11989 854 207 38 1 1 14 5 5 24 01994 680 142 4 820 30 4 1 12 6 5 3 25 21999 596 567 25 8 2 9 6 3 25 02004 878 577 36 1 1 14 9 3 13 5 4 24 12009 714 947 5 527 29 1 1 14 6 4 10 9 3 22 12014 714 645 5 835 29 3 1 15 1 4 10 7 3 21 02019 651 157 4 655 26 7 1 11 4 4 9 7 2 21 1See also EditCharter of QuaregnonReferences Edit L IEV PS Parti Socialiste PS be Retrieved 11 September 2014 a b Nordsieck Wolfram 2019 Wallonia Belgium Parties and Elections in Europe a b Slomp Hans 30 September 2011 Europe A Political Profile An American Companion to European Politics ABC CLIO pp 465 ISBN 978 0 313 39182 8 Retrieved 23 August 2012 a b Dimitri Almeida 27 April 2012 The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties Beyond the Permissive Consensus CRC Press pp 71 ISBN 978 1 136 34039 0 Retrieved 14 July 2013 a b Richard Collin Pamela L Martin 2012 An Introduction to World Politics Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet Rowman amp Littlefield pp 218 ISBN 978 1 4422 1803 1 Retrieved 18 July 2013 a b Ari Veikko Anttiroiko Matti Malkia 2007 Encyclopedia of Digital Government Idea Group Inc IGI pp 397 ISBN 978 1 59140 790 4 Retrieved 18 July 2013 a b c https www ps be Content Uploads PSOfficiel PDFs 170 20engagements 20A5 3 pdf bare URL PDF Josep M Colomer 24 July 2008 Comparative European Politics Taylor amp Francis pp 220 ISBN 9780203946091 Retrieved 13 July 2013 Le PS se reinventer a gauche tout en forgeant des compromis Le Soir in French 9 August 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Laurette Onkelinx PS Le PTB ne represente pas la classe ouvriere RTBF in French Retrieved 1 February 2022 Chee Foo Yun 23 September 2020 Belgian king names two to form government 16 months after election Reuters Retrieved 4 January 2021 Anderson Emma 20 July 2020 Belgian Socialist leader warns of new election if coalition not formed in 50 days Politico Retrieved 4 January 2021 Walsh David 2 October 2020 Belgium New seven party coalition government officially sworn in Euronews Retrieved 4 January 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Parti Socialiste Belgium Official website Official website of German speaking section Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Socialist Party Belgium amp oldid 1132573606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.