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Swiss People's Party

The Swiss People's Party (German: Schweizerische Volkspartei, SVP; Romansh: Partida populara Svizra, PPS), also known as the Democratic Union of the Centre (French: Union démocratique du centre, UDC; Italian: Unione Democratica di Centro, UDC), is a national-conservative,[18][19] right-wing populist political party in Switzerland. Chaired by Marco Chiesa, it is the largest party in the Federal Assembly, with 53 members of the National Council[20] and 6 of the Council of States.

Swiss People's Party /
Democratic Union of the Centre
Schweizerische Volkspartei (German)
Union démocratique du centre (French)
Unione Democratica di Centro (Italian)
Partida Populara Svizra (Romansh)
LeaderMarco Chiesa
Members in Federal CouncilAlbert Rösti
Guy Parmelin
Founded22 September 1971
Merger ofBGB
Democratic Party
HeadquartersBrückfeldstrasse 18 CH-3001 Berne
Youth wingYoung SVP
Membership (2015)90,000[1]
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing[A][14]
European affiliationNone[note 1]
Colours  Dark Green
Slogan"Swiss quality, the party of the middle class"
Federal Council
2 / 7
National Council
53 / 200
Council of States
6 / 46
Cantonal executives
23 / 154
Cantonal legislatures
590 / 2,609
Website
svp.ch (in German)

^ A: The party has also been described as far-right.[15][16][17]

The SVP originated in 1971 as a merger of the Party of Farmers, Traders and Independents (BGB) and the Democratic Party, while the BGB, in turn, had been founded in the context of the emerging local farmers' parties in the late 1910s. The SVP initially did not enjoy any increased support beyond that of the BGB, retaining around 11% of the vote through the 1970s and 1980s. This changed however during the 1990s, when the party underwent deep structural and ideological changes under the influence of Christoph Blocher; the SVP then became the strongest party in Switzerland by the 2000s.[21]

In line with the changes fostered by Blocher, the party started to focus increasingly on issues such as Euroscepticism and opposition to mass immigration. Its vote share of 28.9% in the 2007 Federal Council election was the highest vote ever recorded for a single party in Switzerland[22] until 2015, when it surpassed its own record with 29.4%.[23] Blocher's failure to win re-election as a Federal Councillor led to moderates within the party splitting to form the Conservative Democratic Party (BDP). As of 2019, the party is the largest in the National Council with 53 seats. It has six seats in the Council of States.

History

Background, farmers' parties

The early origins of the SVP go back to the late 1910s, when numerous cantonal farmers' parties were founded in agrarian, Protestant, German-speaking parts of Switzerland. While the Free Democratic Party had earlier been a popular party for farmers, this changed during World War I when the party had mainly defended the interests of industrialists and consumer circles.[24] When proportional representation was introduced in 1919, the new farmers' parties won significant electoral support, especially in Zürich and Bern, and eventually also gained representation in parliament and government.[25] By 1929, the coalition of farmers' parties had gained enough influence to get one of their leaders, Rudolf Minger, elected to the Federal Council.

In 1936, a representative party was founded on the national level, called the Party of Farmers, Traders and Independents (BGB). During the 1930s, the BGB entered the mainstream of Swiss politics as a right-wing conservative party in the bourgeois bloc. While the party opposed any kind of socialist ideas such as internationalism and anti-militarism, it sought to represent local Swiss traders and farmers against big business and international capital.[25]

The BGB contributed strongly to the establishment of the Swiss national ideology known as the Geistige Landesverteidigung (Spiritual Defence of the Nation), which was largely responsible for the growing Swiss sociocultural and political cohesion from the 1930s. In the party's fight against left-wing ideologies, sections of party officials and farmers voiced sympathy with, or failed to distance themselves from the emerging fascist movements.[26] After World War II, the BGB contributed to the establishment of the characteristic Swiss post-war consensual politics, social agreements and economic growth policies. The party continued to be a reliable political partner with the Swiss Conservative People's Party and the Free Democratic Party.[27]

Early years (1971–1980s)

In 1971, the BGB changed its name to the Swiss People's Party (SVP) after it merged with the Democratic Party from Glarus and Graubünden.[28] The Democratic Party had been supported particularly by workers, and the SVP sought to expand its electoral base towards these, as the traditional BGB base in the rural population had started to lose its importance in the post-war era. As the Democratic Party had represented centrist, social-liberal positions, the course of the SVP shifted towards the political centre following internal debates.[29] The new party however continued to see its level of support at around 11%, the same as the former BGB throughout the post-war era. Internal debates continued, and the 1980s saw growing conflicts between the Bern and Zürich cantonal branches, where the former branch represented the centrist faction, and the latter looked to put new issues on the political agenda.[29]

When the young entrepreneur Christoph Blocher was elected president of the Zürich SVP in 1977, he declared his intent to oversee significant change in the political line of the Zürich SVP, bringing an end to debates that aimed to open the party up to a wide array of opinions. Blocher soon consolidated his power in Zürich, and began to renew the organisational structures, activities, campaigning style and political agenda of the local branch.[30] The young members of the party was boosted with the establishment of a cantonal Young SVP (JSVP) in 1977, as well as political training courses. The ideology of the Zürich branch was also reinforced, and the rhetoric hardened, which resulted in the best election result for the Zürich branch in fifty years in the 1979 federal election, with an increase from 11.3% to 14.5%. This was contrasted with the stable level in the other cantons, although the support also stagnated in Zürich through the 1980s.[31]

Rise of the new SVP (1990s–present)

The struggle between the SVP's largest branches of Bern and Zürich continued into the early 1990s. While the Bern-oriented faction represented the old moderate style, the Zürich-oriented wing led by Christoph Blocher represented a new radical right-wing populist agenda. The Zürich wing began to politicise asylum issues, and the question of European integration started to dominate Swiss political debates. They also adopted more confrontational methods.[32] The Zürich wing subsequently started to gain ground in the party at the expense of the Bern wing, and the party became increasingly centralised as a national party, in contrast to the traditional Swiss system of parties with loose organisational structures and weak central powers.[33] During the 1990s, the party also doubled its number of cantonal branches (to eventually be represented in all cantons), which strengthened the power of the Zürich wing, since most new sections supported their agenda.[34]

In 1991, the party for the first time became the strongest party in Zürich, with 20.2% of the vote.[35] The party broke through in the early 1990s in both Zürich and Switzerland as a whole, and experienced dramatically increasing results in elections.[36] From being the smallest of the four governing parties at the start of the 1990s, the party by the end of the decade emerged as the strongest party in Switzerland.[37] At the same time, the party expanded its electoral base towards new voter demographics.[38] The SVP in general won its best results in cantons where the cantonal branches adopted the agenda of the Zürich wing.[39] In the 1999 federal election, the SVP for the first time became the strongest party in Switzerland with 22.5% of the vote, a 12.6% share increase. This was the biggest increase of votes for any party in the entire history of the Swiss proportional electoral system, which was introduced in 1919.[40]

As a result of the remarkable increase in the SVP's popularity, the party gained a second ministerial position in the Federal Council in 2003, which was taken by Christoph Blocher. Before this, the only SVP Federal Councillor had always been from the moderate Bern wing.[note 2][41] The 2007 federal election still confirmed the SVP as the strongest party in Switzerland with 28.9% of the vote and 62 seats in the National Council, the largest share of the vote for any single party ever in Switzerland.[42] However, the Federal Council refused to re-elect Blocher, who was replaced by Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf of the moderate Graubünden branch.[42][43][21] In response, the national SVP withdrew its support from Widmer-Schlumpf and its other Federal Councillor, fellow SVP moderate Samuel Schmid, from the party, along with Widmer-Schlumpf's whole cantonal section.[42][44] The SVP thus formed the first opposition group in Switzerland since the 1950s.[42]

In 2008, the SVP demanded that Widmer-Schlumpf resign from the Federal Council and leave the party. When she refused, the SVP demanded that its Grisons branch expel her. Since Swiss parties are legally federations of cantonal parties, the federal SVP could not expel her itself. The Grisons branch stood by Widmer-Schlumpf, leading the SVP to expel it from the party. Shortly afterward, the Grisons branch reorganised itself as the Conservative Democratic Party (BDP). Soon afterward, virtually all of the SVP's Bern branch, including Schmid, defected to the new party.[44][45] The SVP regained its position in government in late 2008, when Schmid was forced to resign due to a political scandal, and was replaced with Ueli Maurer.[44][46]

The 2011 federal election put an end to the continuous progression of the SVP since 1987. The party drew 26.6% percent of the vote, a 2.3-point decrease from the previous elections in 2007. This loss could be partly attributed to the split of the BDP, which gained 5.4% of the vote in 2011. However the SVP rebounded strongly in the 2015 federal election, gathering a record 29.4% of the national vote and 65 seats in parliament.[47] Media attributed the rise to concerns over the European migrant crisis.[23][11][48][49] The party received the highest proportion of votes of any Swiss political party since 1919, when proportional representation was first introduced,[50] and it received more seats in the National Council than any other political party since 1963, when the number of seats was set at 200.[23] The SVP gained a second member in the Federal Council again, with Guy Parmelin replacing Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf after the party's election gains.[51][52]

 
Percentages of the SVP at district level in 2011

Ideology

 
The SVP's positions in the Swiss political spectrum (2007).

The SVP adheres to national conservatism, aiming at the preservation of Switzerland's political sovereignty and a conservative society.[21] Furthermore, the party promotes the principle of individual responsibility and is skeptical toward any expansion of governmental services. This stance is most evident in the rejection of an accession of Switzerland to the European Union, the rejection of military involvement abroad, and the rejection of increases in government spending on social welfare and education.

The emphasis of the party's policies lie in foreign policy, immigration and homeland security policy as well as tax and social welfare policy. Among political opponents, the SVP has gained a reputation as a party that maintains a hard-line stance.

Foreign policy

In its foreign policy the SVP opposes the growing involvement of Switzerland in intergovernmental and especially supranational organisations, including the UN, EEA, EU, Schengen and Dublin treaties, and closer ties with NATO. The party stands for a strict neutrality of the country and the preservation of the strong role of the Swiss army as the institution responsible for national defense. They believe that the army should remain a militia force and should never become involved in interventions abroad.

In June and July 2010, the party used the silly season for floating the notion of a "Greater Switzerland", where instead of Switzerland joining the EU, the border regions of Switzerland's neighbours would join Switzerland, submitted in July in the form of a motion to the Federal Council by Dominique Baettig, signed by 26 SVP Councillors.[53][54][55][56] Some, such as newspaper Die Welt, have also speculated that the initiative could be a response to the suggestion by Muammar al-Gaddafi to dissolve Switzerland and divide its territory among its neighbouring countries.[57]

Another key concern of the SVP is what it alleges is an increasing influence of the judiciary on politics. According to the SVP, this influence, especially through international law, increasingly puts the Swiss direct democracy in question. Public law which is legitimate by direct democracy standards should be agreed upon by the federal court. The European law, which according to the SVP is not democratically legitimate, shall always be subordinate to the Swiss law. The SVP also criticises the judiciary as undemocratic because the courts have made decisions against the will of the majority.

Immigration

 
Poster, with the slogan "To Create Security", derived from the SVP's 2007 proposal of a new law which would authorise the deportation of criminal foreigners.[58][59]
 
SVP poster against "uncontrolled" Muslim immigration.

In its immigration policy the party commits itself to make asylum laws stricter and to reduce immigration. The SVP warns of immigration into the social welfare system and criticises the high proportion of foreigners among the public insurance benefit recipients and other social welfare programs. According to the opinion of the party, such benefits amount to waste of taxpayers' money. Numerous SVP members have shown themselves to be critical of Islam by having participated in the minaret controversy, during which they pushed for an initiative to ban the construction of minarets. In November 2009 this ban won the majority vote (57.5%) and became an amendment to the Swiss Constitution. However, the four existing minarets are not affected by the new legislation. Other recent victories of the SVP in regards to immigration policy include the federal popular initiatives "for the expulsion of criminal foreigners" (52.3%), and "Against mass immigration" (50.3%) in 2010 and 2014 respectively.

The 2014 referendum resulted in a narrow victory for the SVP. Following the vote, the Swiss government entered into negotiations with the EU and, in 2016, concluded an agreement that would provide for preferences for Swiss citizens in hiring. The SVP criticized the agreement as weak.[60] In response, in 2020, the party placed the ballot a referendum called the "For Moderate Immigration" initiative, which would terminate the Free Movement of Persons bilateral agreement within one year of passage. It would also bar the government from concluding any agreements that would grant the free movement of people to foreign nationals. The initiative was opposed by the other major parties in Switzerland.[61] Other parties were concerned that because of the "guillotine clause" in the bilateral agreements, this would terminate all of the Bilateral I agreements with the EU which include provisions on the reduction of trade barriers as well as barriers in agriculture, land transport and civil aviation.[62] Swiss voters rejected the referendum with 61.7% against. Only four cantons voted in favor.[63][64]

Economy

The SVP supports supply-side economics. Thus it is a proponent of lower taxes and is against deficit spending. The SVP is not as liberal in terms of its agricultural policy since, in consideration of it being the most popular party among farmers, it refuses to reduce agricultural subsidies or curtail the current system of direct payments to farmers, to ensure larger farming businesses do not dominate the marketplace. The expansion of the Schengen Area eastward was looked at skeptically by the SVP, which it associated with economic immigration and higher crime rates.

Environment

In terms of the environment, transportation and energy policy the SVP opposes governmental measures for environmental protection. In its transportation policy, the party therefore endorses the expansion of the Swiss motorway network and is against the preference of public transportation over individual transportation. It supports the construction of Megaprojects such as AlpTransit but criticizes the cost increases and demands more transparency. In the scope of environmentalism and energy policy, the SVP is against the carbon tax and supports the use of nuclear energy. In the context of reductions of CO2 emissions, the SVP cites the limited impact of Switzerland and instead supports globally, and legally binding agreements to address global climate change.

Social policy

In social welfare policy the SVP rejects expansion of the welfare state, and stands for a conservative society. It opposes the public financing of maternity leave and nursery schools. The SVP is skeptical toward governmental support of gender equality, and the SVP has the smallest proportion of women among parties represented in the Federal Assembly of Switzerland. In its education policy, it opposes tendencies to shift the responsibility of the upbringing of children from families to public institutions. The party claims an excessive influence of anti-authoritarian ideas originating from the protests of 1968. In general, the party supports strengthening crime prevention measures against social crimes and, especially in the areas of social welfare policy and education policy, a return to meritocracy.

Election results

National Council

 
Popular vote, 1919–2019. The SVP (until 1971 BGB, in dark green) in 1999 reduced to insignificance the right-wing Swiss Democrats and Freedom Party, which had reached their apex in 1991.
 
The Swiss People's Party is the largest party in the northeast of the country, including Zürich and Bern, and is the largest party in ten cantonal legislatures (coloured green above, as of 2022).
 
Map of Swiss cantons shaded by the party that won the most votes in elections to the National Council in 2015. The Swiss People's Party received the most votes in 16 of the 26 Swiss cantons (coloured green above).
Election Votes % Seats +/–
1971 217,908 11.1 (#4)
23 / 200
1975 190,445 9.9 (#4)
21 / 200
  2
1979 210,425 11.6 (#4)
23 / 200
  2
1983 215,457 11.1 (#4)
23 / 200
 
1987 211,535 11.0 (#4)
25 / 200
  2
1991 240,353 11.9 (#4)
25 / 200
 
1995 280,420 14.9 (#4)
29 / 200
  4
1999 440,159 22.5 (#1)
44 / 200
  15
2003 561,817 26.6 (#1)
55 / 200
  11
2007 672,562 28.9 (#1)
62 / 200
  7
2011 641,106 26.6 (#1)
54 / 200
  8
2015 740,954 29.4 (#1)
65 / 200
  11
2019 620,343 25.6 (#1)
53 / 200
  12

Party strength over time

Canton 1971 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019
Percentage of the total vote for the Swiss People's Party in Federal Elections 1971–2019[65]
Switzerland 11.1 9.9 11.6 11.1 11.0 11.9 14.9 22.5 26.7 28.9 26.6 29.4 25.6
Zürich 12.2 11.3 14.5 13.8 15.2 20.2 25.5 32.5 33.4 33.9 29.8 30.7 26.7
Bern 29.2 27.1 31.5 29.0 27.8 26.3 26.0 28.6 29.6 33.6 29.0 33.1 30.0
Lucerne *a * * * * * 14.1 22.8 22.9 25.3 25.1 28.5 24.7
Uri * * * * * * * * 31.3 * * 44.1 36.3
Schwyz * 3.0 * 6.5 7.6 9.2 21.5 35.9 43.6 45.0 38.0 42.6 36.9
Obwalden * * * * * * * * 33.6 32.9 43.1 34.5 37.3
Nidwalden * * * * * * * * * * 45.2 82.8 64.2
Glarus * * 81.8 92.3 85.6 42.8 * * * 35.1 * * *
Zug * * * * * * 15.2 21.4 27.7 29.1 28.3 30.5 26.6
Fribourg 8.7 4.3 6.4 8.8 8.9 9.7 8.3 11.4 21.4 22.0 21.4 25.9 20.2
Solothurn * * * * * * 6.7 18.6 22.5 27.1 24.3 28.8 25.9
Basel-Stadt * * * * * 2.0 * 13.6 18.6 18.5 16.5 17.6 12.4
Basel-Landschaft 11.8 10.7 10.6 11.2 12.0 12.3 10.8 18.0 26.5 28.5 26.9 29.8 25.1
Schaffhausen * * 21.1 22.6 23.5 19.2 20.4 26.0 28.5 39.1 39.9 45.3 39.5
Appenzell A.Rh. * * * * * * 22.0 37.5 38.3 * 30.5 36.1 49.5
Appenzell I.Rh. * * * * * * * 25.7 * * * * 29.1
St. Gallen * * * 1.9 * * 8.4 27.6 33.1 35.8 31.5 35.8 31.3
Graubünden 34.0 26.9 21.1 22.0 20.0 19.5 26.9 27.0 33.8 34.7 24.5 29.7 29.9
Aargau 12.5 12.8 13.9 14.1 15.7 17.9 19.8 31.8 34.6 36.2 34.7 38.0 31.5
Thurgau 26.0 25.1 26.4 22.8 21.7 23.7 27.0 33.2 41.0 42.3 38.7 39.9 36.7
Ticino 2.4 * 2.3 2.1 1.3 1.0 1.5 5.3 7.6 8.7 9.7 11.3 11.7
Vaud 7.7 8.0 6.8 6.2 6.2 7.3 7.8 10.7 20.3 22.4 22.9 22.6 17.4
Valais * * * * * * * 9.0 13.4 16.6 19.7 22.1 19.8
Neuchâtel * * * * * * * * 22.5 23.2 21.4 20.4 12.7
Genève * * * * * 1.1 * 7.5 18.3 21.1 16.0 17.6 13.7
Jura b b * 2.0 * * * 7.2 8.3 13.7 15.5 12.8 14.5
1.^a * indicates that the party was not on the ballot in this canton.
2.^b Part of the Canton of Bern until 1979.

Leadership

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Swiss People's Party is not an official member of any pan-European political party, but its three members in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe sit with ALDE-PACE, and its youth wing is a member of the European Young Conservatives.
  2. ^ The Swiss Federal Council is based on a consensus model called the magic formula, whereby seats in the seven-member Federal Council are assigned according to each of the four major parties' shares of the latest general election.

References

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  2. ^ "Switzerland election: Victory for nationalist Swiss People's Party". Belfast Telegraph. October 19, 2015.
  3. ^ Skenderovic 2009, p. 124: "... and prefers to use terms such as 'national-conservative' or 'conservative-right' in defining the SVP. In particular, 'national-conservative' has gained prominence among the definitions used in Swiss research on the SVP.".
  4. ^ a b Geden 2006, p. 95.
  5. ^ "Switzerland - Political parties". Norwegian Centre for Research Data. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
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  10. ^ Switzerland: Selected Issues (EPub). International Monetary Fund. 10 June 2005. pp. 97–. ISBN 978-1-4527-0409-8. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
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  39. ^ Skenderovic 2009, p. 151.
  40. ^ Skenderovic 2009, p. 150.
  41. ^ Skenderovic 2009, p. 134.
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Bibliography

  • Geden, Oliver (2006). Diskursstrategien im Rechtspopulismus: Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs und Schweizerische Volkspartei zwischen Opposition und Regierungsbeteiligung. VS Verlag. ISBN 978-3-531-15127-4.
  • Skenderovic, Damir (2009). The radical right in Switzerland: continuity and change, 1945-2000. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-580-4.
  • Cormon, Pierre (2014). . Editions Slatkine. ISBN 978-2-8321-0607-5. Archived from the original on 2014-11-04.

External links

  • svp.ch (in German, French, and Italian)
  • Swiss People`s Party in

swiss, people, party, german, schweizerische, volkspartei, romansh, partida, populara, svizra, also, known, democratic, union, centre, french, union, démocratique, centre, italian, unione, democratica, centro, national, conservative, right, wing, populist, pol. The Swiss People s Party German Schweizerische Volkspartei SVP Romansh Partida populara Svizra PPS also known as the Democratic Union of the Centre French Union democratique du centre UDC Italian Unione Democratica di Centro UDC is a national conservative 18 19 right wing populist political party in Switzerland Chaired by Marco Chiesa it is the largest party in the Federal Assembly with 53 members of the National Council 20 and 6 of the Council of States Swiss People s Party Democratic Union of the Centre Schweizerische Volkspartei German Union democratique du centre French Unione Democratica di Centro Italian Partida Populara Svizra Romansh LeaderMarco ChiesaMembers in Federal CouncilAlbert RostiGuy ParmelinFounded22 September 1971Merger ofBGBDemocratic PartyHeadquartersBruckfeldstrasse 18 CH 3001 BerneYouth wingYoung SVPMembership 2015 90 000 1 IdeologySwiss nationalism 2 National conservatism 3 4 Social conservatism 5 Economic liberalism 4 Agrarianism 6 7 Right wing populism 8 9 10 Anti immigration 11 Anti Islam 12 Euroscepticism 13 Political positionRight wing A 14 European affiliationNone note 1 Colours Dark GreenSlogan Swiss quality the party of the middle class Federal Council2 7National Council53 200Council of States6 46Cantonal executives23 154Cantonal legislatures590 2 609Websitesvp wbr ch in German Politics of SwitzerlandPolitical partiesElections A The party has also been described as far right 15 16 17 The SVP originated in 1971 as a merger of the Party of Farmers Traders and Independents BGB and the Democratic Party while the BGB in turn had been founded in the context of the emerging local farmers parties in the late 1910s The SVP initially did not enjoy any increased support beyond that of the BGB retaining around 11 of the vote through the 1970s and 1980s This changed however during the 1990s when the party underwent deep structural and ideological changes under the influence of Christoph Blocher the SVP then became the strongest party in Switzerland by the 2000s 21 In line with the changes fostered by Blocher the party started to focus increasingly on issues such as Euroscepticism and opposition to mass immigration Its vote share of 28 9 in the 2007 Federal Council election was the highest vote ever recorded for a single party in Switzerland 22 until 2015 when it surpassed its own record with 29 4 23 Blocher s failure to win re election as a Federal Councillor led to moderates within the party splitting to form the Conservative Democratic Party BDP As of 2019 update the party is the largest in the National Council with 53 seats It has six seats in the Council of States Contents 1 History 1 1 Background farmers parties 1 2 Early years 1971 1980s 1 3 Rise of the new SVP 1990s present 2 Ideology 2 1 Foreign policy 2 2 Immigration 2 3 Economy 2 4 Environment 2 5 Social policy 3 Election results 3 1 National Council 3 2 Party strength over time 4 Leadership 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditBackground farmers parties Edit The early origins of the SVP go back to the late 1910s when numerous cantonal farmers parties were founded in agrarian Protestant German speaking parts of Switzerland While the Free Democratic Party had earlier been a popular party for farmers this changed during World War I when the party had mainly defended the interests of industrialists and consumer circles 24 When proportional representation was introduced in 1919 the new farmers parties won significant electoral support especially in Zurich and Bern and eventually also gained representation in parliament and government 25 By 1929 the coalition of farmers parties had gained enough influence to get one of their leaders Rudolf Minger elected to the Federal Council In 1936 a representative party was founded on the national level called the Party of Farmers Traders and Independents BGB During the 1930s the BGB entered the mainstream of Swiss politics as a right wing conservative party in the bourgeois bloc While the party opposed any kind of socialist ideas such as internationalism and anti militarism it sought to represent local Swiss traders and farmers against big business and international capital 25 The BGB contributed strongly to the establishment of the Swiss national ideology known as the Geistige Landesverteidigung Spiritual Defence of the Nation which was largely responsible for the growing Swiss sociocultural and political cohesion from the 1930s In the party s fight against left wing ideologies sections of party officials and farmers voiced sympathy with or failed to distance themselves from the emerging fascist movements 26 After World War II the BGB contributed to the establishment of the characteristic Swiss post war consensual politics social agreements and economic growth policies The party continued to be a reliable political partner with the Swiss Conservative People s Party and the Free Democratic Party 27 Early years 1971 1980s Edit In 1971 the BGB changed its name to the Swiss People s Party SVP after it merged with the Democratic Party from Glarus and Graubunden 28 The Democratic Party had been supported particularly by workers and the SVP sought to expand its electoral base towards these as the traditional BGB base in the rural population had started to lose its importance in the post war era As the Democratic Party had represented centrist social liberal positions the course of the SVP shifted towards the political centre following internal debates 29 The new party however continued to see its level of support at around 11 the same as the former BGB throughout the post war era Internal debates continued and the 1980s saw growing conflicts between the Bern and Zurich cantonal branches where the former branch represented the centrist faction and the latter looked to put new issues on the political agenda 29 When the young entrepreneur Christoph Blocher was elected president of the Zurich SVP in 1977 he declared his intent to oversee significant change in the political line of the Zurich SVP bringing an end to debates that aimed to open the party up to a wide array of opinions Blocher soon consolidated his power in Zurich and began to renew the organisational structures activities campaigning style and political agenda of the local branch 30 The young members of the party was boosted with the establishment of a cantonal Young SVP JSVP in 1977 as well as political training courses The ideology of the Zurich branch was also reinforced and the rhetoric hardened which resulted in the best election result for the Zurich branch in fifty years in the 1979 federal election with an increase from 11 3 to 14 5 This was contrasted with the stable level in the other cantons although the support also stagnated in Zurich through the 1980s 31 Rise of the new SVP 1990s present Edit The struggle between the SVP s largest branches of Bern and Zurich continued into the early 1990s While the Bern oriented faction represented the old moderate style the Zurich oriented wing led by Christoph Blocher represented a new radical right wing populist agenda The Zurich wing began to politicise asylum issues and the question of European integration started to dominate Swiss political debates They also adopted more confrontational methods 32 The Zurich wing subsequently started to gain ground in the party at the expense of the Bern wing and the party became increasingly centralised as a national party in contrast to the traditional Swiss system of parties with loose organisational structures and weak central powers 33 During the 1990s the party also doubled its number of cantonal branches to eventually be represented in all cantons which strengthened the power of the Zurich wing since most new sections supported their agenda 34 In 1991 the party for the first time became the strongest party in Zurich with 20 2 of the vote 35 The party broke through in the early 1990s in both Zurich and Switzerland as a whole and experienced dramatically increasing results in elections 36 From being the smallest of the four governing parties at the start of the 1990s the party by the end of the decade emerged as the strongest party in Switzerland 37 At the same time the party expanded its electoral base towards new voter demographics 38 The SVP in general won its best results in cantons where the cantonal branches adopted the agenda of the Zurich wing 39 In the 1999 federal election the SVP for the first time became the strongest party in Switzerland with 22 5 of the vote a 12 6 share increase This was the biggest increase of votes for any party in the entire history of the Swiss proportional electoral system which was introduced in 1919 40 As a result of the remarkable increase in the SVP s popularity the party gained a second ministerial position in the Federal Council in 2003 which was taken by Christoph Blocher Before this the only SVP Federal Councillor had always been from the moderate Bern wing note 2 41 The 2007 federal election still confirmed the SVP as the strongest party in Switzerland with 28 9 of the vote and 62 seats in the National Council the largest share of the vote for any single party ever in Switzerland 42 However the Federal Council refused to re elect Blocher who was replaced by Eveline Widmer Schlumpf of the moderate Graubunden branch 42 43 21 In response the national SVP withdrew its support from Widmer Schlumpf and its other Federal Councillor fellow SVP moderate Samuel Schmid from the party along with Widmer Schlumpf s whole cantonal section 42 44 The SVP thus formed the first opposition group in Switzerland since the 1950s 42 In 2008 the SVP demanded that Widmer Schlumpf resign from the Federal Council and leave the party When she refused the SVP demanded that its Grisons branch expel her Since Swiss parties are legally federations of cantonal parties the federal SVP could not expel her itself The Grisons branch stood by Widmer Schlumpf leading the SVP to expel it from the party Shortly afterward the Grisons branch reorganised itself as the Conservative Democratic Party BDP Soon afterward virtually all of the SVP s Bern branch including Schmid defected to the new party 44 45 The SVP regained its position in government in late 2008 when Schmid was forced to resign due to a political scandal and was replaced with Ueli Maurer 44 46 The 2011 federal election put an end to the continuous progression of the SVP since 1987 The party drew 26 6 percent of the vote a 2 3 point decrease from the previous elections in 2007 This loss could be partly attributed to the split of the BDP which gained 5 4 of the vote in 2011 However the SVP rebounded strongly in the 2015 federal election gathering a record 29 4 of the national vote and 65 seats in parliament 47 Media attributed the rise to concerns over the European migrant crisis 23 11 48 49 The party received the highest proportion of votes of any Swiss political party since 1919 when proportional representation was first introduced 50 and it received more seats in the National Council than any other political party since 1963 when the number of seats was set at 200 23 The SVP gained a second member in the Federal Council again with Guy Parmelin replacing Eveline Widmer Schlumpf after the party s election gains 51 52 Percentages of the SVP at district level in 2011Ideology EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The SVP s positions in the Swiss political spectrum 2007 The SVP adheres to national conservatism aiming at the preservation of Switzerland s political sovereignty and a conservative society 21 Furthermore the party promotes the principle of individual responsibility and is skeptical toward any expansion of governmental services This stance is most evident in the rejection of an accession of Switzerland to the European Union the rejection of military involvement abroad and the rejection of increases in government spending on social welfare and education The emphasis of the party s policies lie in foreign policy immigration and homeland security policy as well as tax and social welfare policy Among political opponents the SVP has gained a reputation as a party that maintains a hard line stance Foreign policy Edit In its foreign policy the SVP opposes the growing involvement of Switzerland in intergovernmental and especially supranational organisations including the UN EEA EU Schengen and Dublin treaties and closer ties with NATO The party stands for a strict neutrality of the country and the preservation of the strong role of the Swiss army as the institution responsible for national defense They believe that the army should remain a militia force and should never become involved in interventions abroad In June and July 2010 the party used the silly season for floating the notion of a Greater Switzerland where instead of Switzerland joining the EU the border regions of Switzerland s neighbours would join Switzerland submitted in July in the form of a motion to the Federal Council by Dominique Baettig signed by 26 SVP Councillors 53 54 55 56 Some such as newspaper Die Welt have also speculated that the initiative could be a response to the suggestion by Muammar al Gaddafi to dissolve Switzerland and divide its territory among its neighbouring countries 57 Another key concern of the SVP is what it alleges is an increasing influence of the judiciary on politics According to the SVP this influence especially through international law increasingly puts the Swiss direct democracy in question Public law which is legitimate by direct democracy standards should be agreed upon by the federal court The European law which according to the SVP is not democratically legitimate shall always be subordinate to the Swiss law The SVP also criticises the judiciary as undemocratic because the courts have made decisions against the will of the majority Immigration Edit Poster with the slogan To Create Security derived from the SVP s 2007 proposal of a new law which would authorise the deportation of criminal foreigners 58 59 SVP poster against uncontrolled Muslim immigration In its immigration policy the party commits itself to make asylum laws stricter and to reduce immigration The SVP warns of immigration into the social welfare system and criticises the high proportion of foreigners among the public insurance benefit recipients and other social welfare programs According to the opinion of the party such benefits amount to waste of taxpayers money Numerous SVP members have shown themselves to be critical of Islam by having participated in the minaret controversy during which they pushed for an initiative to ban the construction of minarets In November 2009 this ban won the majority vote 57 5 and became an amendment to the Swiss Constitution However the four existing minarets are not affected by the new legislation Other recent victories of the SVP in regards to immigration policy include the federal popular initiatives for the expulsion of criminal foreigners 52 3 and Against mass immigration 50 3 in 2010 and 2014 respectively The 2014 referendum resulted in a narrow victory for the SVP Following the vote the Swiss government entered into negotiations with the EU and in 2016 concluded an agreement that would provide for preferences for Swiss citizens in hiring The SVP criticized the agreement as weak 60 In response in 2020 the party placed the ballot a referendum called the For Moderate Immigration initiative which would terminate the Free Movement of Persons bilateral agreement within one year of passage It would also bar the government from concluding any agreements that would grant the free movement of people to foreign nationals The initiative was opposed by the other major parties in Switzerland 61 Other parties were concerned that because of the guillotine clause in the bilateral agreements this would terminate all of the Bilateral I agreements with the EU which include provisions on the reduction of trade barriers as well as barriers in agriculture land transport and civil aviation 62 Swiss voters rejected the referendum with 61 7 against Only four cantons voted in favor 63 64 Economy Edit The SVP supports supply side economics Thus it is a proponent of lower taxes and is against deficit spending The SVP is not as liberal in terms of its agricultural policy since in consideration of it being the most popular party among farmers it refuses to reduce agricultural subsidies or curtail the current system of direct payments to farmers to ensure larger farming businesses do not dominate the marketplace The expansion of the Schengen Area eastward was looked at skeptically by the SVP which it associated with economic immigration and higher crime rates Environment Edit In terms of the environment transportation and energy policy the SVP opposes governmental measures for environmental protection In its transportation policy the party therefore endorses the expansion of the Swiss motorway network and is against the preference of public transportation over individual transportation It supports the construction of Megaprojects such as AlpTransit but criticizes the cost increases and demands more transparency In the scope of environmentalism and energy policy the SVP is against the carbon tax and supports the use of nuclear energy In the context of reductions of CO2 emissions the SVP cites the limited impact of Switzerland and instead supports globally and legally binding agreements to address global climate change Social policy Edit In social welfare policy the SVP rejects expansion of the welfare state and stands for a conservative society It opposes the public financing of maternity leave and nursery schools The SVP is skeptical toward governmental support of gender equality and the SVP has the smallest proportion of women among parties represented in the Federal Assembly of Switzerland In its education policy it opposes tendencies to shift the responsibility of the upbringing of children from families to public institutions The party claims an excessive influence of anti authoritarian ideas originating from the protests of 1968 In general the party supports strengthening crime prevention measures against social crimes and especially in the areas of social welfare policy and education policy a return to meritocracy Election results EditNational Council Edit Popular vote 1919 2019 The SVP until 1971 BGB in dark green in 1999 reduced to insignificance the right wing Swiss Democrats and Freedom Party which had reached their apex in 1991 The Swiss People s Party is the largest party in the northeast of the country including Zurich and Bern and is the largest party in ten cantonal legislatures coloured green above as of 2022 Map of Swiss cantons shaded by the party that won the most votes in elections to the National Council in 2015 The Swiss People s Party received the most votes in 16 of the 26 Swiss cantons coloured green above Election Votes Seats 1971 217 908 11 1 4 23 2001975 190 445 9 9 4 21 200 21979 210 425 11 6 4 23 200 21983 215 457 11 1 4 23 200 1987 211 535 11 0 4 25 200 21991 240 353 11 9 4 25 200 1995 280 420 14 9 4 29 200 41999 440 159 22 5 1 44 200 152003 561 817 26 6 1 55 200 112007 672 562 28 9 1 62 200 72011 641 106 26 6 1 54 200 82015 740 954 29 4 1 65 200 112019 620 343 25 6 1 53 200 12Party strength over time Edit Canton 1971 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019Percentage of the total vote for the Swiss People s Party in Federal Elections 1971 2019 65 Switzerland 11 1 9 9 11 6 11 1 11 0 11 9 14 9 22 5 26 7 28 9 26 6 29 4 25 6Zurich 12 2 11 3 14 5 13 8 15 2 20 2 25 5 32 5 33 4 33 9 29 8 30 7 26 7Bern 29 2 27 1 31 5 29 0 27 8 26 3 26 0 28 6 29 6 33 6 29 0 33 1 30 0Lucerne a 14 1 22 8 22 9 25 3 25 1 28 5 24 7Uri 31 3 44 1 36 3Schwyz 3 0 6 5 7 6 9 2 21 5 35 9 43 6 45 0 38 0 42 6 36 9Obwalden 33 6 32 9 43 1 34 5 37 3Nidwalden 45 2 82 8 64 2Glarus 81 8 92 3 85 6 42 8 35 1 Zug 15 2 21 4 27 7 29 1 28 3 30 5 26 6Fribourg 8 7 4 3 6 4 8 8 8 9 9 7 8 3 11 4 21 4 22 0 21 4 25 9 20 2Solothurn 6 7 18 6 22 5 27 1 24 3 28 8 25 9Basel Stadt 2 0 13 6 18 6 18 5 16 5 17 6 12 4Basel Landschaft 11 8 10 7 10 6 11 2 12 0 12 3 10 8 18 0 26 5 28 5 26 9 29 8 25 1Schaffhausen 21 1 22 6 23 5 19 2 20 4 26 0 28 5 39 1 39 9 45 3 39 5Appenzell A Rh 22 0 37 5 38 3 30 5 36 1 49 5Appenzell I Rh 25 7 29 1St Gallen 1 9 8 4 27 6 33 1 35 8 31 5 35 8 31 3Graubunden 34 0 26 9 21 1 22 0 20 0 19 5 26 9 27 0 33 8 34 7 24 5 29 7 29 9Aargau 12 5 12 8 13 9 14 1 15 7 17 9 19 8 31 8 34 6 36 2 34 7 38 0 31 5Thurgau 26 0 25 1 26 4 22 8 21 7 23 7 27 0 33 2 41 0 42 3 38 7 39 9 36 7Ticino 2 4 2 3 2 1 1 3 1 0 1 5 5 3 7 6 8 7 9 7 11 3 11 7Vaud 7 7 8 0 6 8 6 2 6 2 7 3 7 8 10 7 20 3 22 4 22 9 22 6 17 4Valais 9 0 13 4 16 6 19 7 22 1 19 8Neuchatel 22 5 23 2 21 4 20 4 12 7Geneve 1 1 7 5 18 3 21 1 16 0 17 6 13 7Jura b b 2 0 7 2 8 3 13 7 15 5 12 8 14 51 a indicates that the party was not on the ballot in this canton 2 b Part of the Canton of Bern until 1979 Leadership EditHans Conzett 1971 1976 Fritz Hofmann 1976 1984 Adolf Ogi 1984 1988 Hans Uhlmann 1988 1995 Ueli Maurer 1996 2008 Toni Brunner 2008 2016 Albert Rosti 2016 2020 Marco Chiesa 2020 present See also EditCampaign for an Independent and Neutral Switzerland List of political parties in SwitzerlandNotes Edit The Swiss People s Party is not an official member of any pan European political party but its three members in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe sit with ALDE PACE and its youth wing is a member of the European Young Conservatives The Swiss Federal Council is based on a consensus model called the magic formula whereby seats in the seven member Federal Council are assigned according to each of the four major parties shares of the latest general election References Edit The Swiss Confederation A Brief Guide Federal Chancellery 2015 p 18 Archived from the original PDF on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 14 2016 Switzerland election Victory for nationalist Swiss People s Party Belfast Telegraph October 19 2015 Skenderovic 2009 p 124 and prefers to use terms such as national conservative or conservative right in defining the SVP In particular national conservative has gained prominence among the definitions used in Swiss research on the SVP a b Geden 2006 p 95 Switzerland Political parties Norwegian Centre for Research Data Retrieved 27 March 2019 Svante Ersson Jan Erik Lane 28 December 1998 Politics and Society in Western Europe SAGE pp 108 ISBN 978 0 7619 5862 8 Retrieved 17 August 2012 Aleks Szczerbiak Paul Taggart 2008 Opposing Europe The Comparative Party Politics of Euroscepticism Volume 2 Comparative and Theoretical Perspectives Oxford University Press pp 70 ISBN 978 0 19 925835 2 Skenderovic 2009 pp 9 123 172 Mazzoleni Oskar 2007 The Swiss People s Party and the Foreign and Security Policy Since the 1990s Europe for the Europeans The Foreign and Security Policy of the Populist Radical Right Ashgate p 223 ISBN 9780754648512 Switzerland Selected Issues EPub International Monetary Fund 10 June 2005 pp 97 ISBN 978 1 4527 0409 8 Retrieved 19 July 2013 a b Anti immigration SVP wins Swiss election in big swing to right BBC News 19 October 2015 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Peri Bearman Rudolph Peters 28 August 2014 The Ashgate Research Companion to Islamic Law Ashgate Publishing p 261 ISBN 978 1472403711 Alexandre Afonso What does the Swiss immigration vote mean for Britain and the European Union Political Studies Association Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Political Parties Swissinfo 3 February 2011 Retrieved 12 April 2016 Carlisle Rodney 2005 Encyclopedia of Politics Portland OR SAGE p 442 ISBN 9781412904094 Koltrowitz Silke 23 September 2020 Judge under fire from Swiss right wing party wins re election Reuters Retrieved 29 September 2020 The Swiss parliament re elected supreme court judge Yves Donzallaz on Wednesday after attempts by his right wing Swiss People s Party SVP to oust him triggered a wave of protests Right Wing People s Party Win Swiss Elections Deutsche Welle 22 October 2007 Retrieved 29 September 2020 The right wing People s Party SVP emerged as the victor in the Swiss elections taking 29 percent of the vote Anti immigration SVP wins Swiss election in big swing to right BBC News 19 October 2015 Retrieved 29 September 2020 The right wing anti immigration Swiss People s Party SVP has won Switzerland s parliamentary election with a record 29 4 of the vote Far right parties in Italy s neighbors call for border checks over coronavirus Reuters 28 February 2020 The far right Swiss People s Party also called for strict border control immediately Most Swiss reject far right plan to end free movement with EU The Guardian 5 January 2020 The vote was put on the agenda by the far right People s party which is the largest in parliament and has two of seven seats in the federal cabinet Michael Shields 28 February 2020 Chances of Swiss EU treaty deal this month have vanished sources say Reuters President Ueli Mauer of the far right Swiss People s Party is seeking to meet von der Leyen whom he knows from when both were defense ministers of their neighboring countries Skenderovic 2009 p 124 Daniel Kubler Urs Scheuss Philippe Rochat 2013 The Metropolitan Bases of Political Cleavage in Switzerland In Jefferey M Sellers Daniel Kubler R Alan Walks Melanie Walter Rogg eds The Political Ecology of the Metropolis Metropolitan Sources of Electoral Behaviour in Eleven Countries ECPR Press p 211 ISBN 978 1 907301 44 5 Election 2015 results in graphics Swiss Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 19 October 2015 Retrieved 21 October 2015 a b c Cormon 2014 p 46 Record poll win for Swiss right BBC News 22 October 2007 Retrieved 15 February 2011 a b c Anti immigration party wins Swiss election in slide to the Right The Daily Telegraph Reuters 19 October 2015 Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Skenderovic 2009 pp 124 125 a b Skenderovic 2009 p 125 Skenderovic 2009 pp 125 126 Skenderovic 2009 pp 126 127 Geden 2006 p 94 a b Skenderovic 2009 p 128 Skenderovic 2009 p 130 Skenderovic 2009 pp 130 131 Cormon 2014 pp 46 56 Skenderovic 2009 p 129 Skenderovic 2009 p 133 Skenderovic 2009 p 147 Skenderovic 2009 p 131 Skenderovic 2009 p 145 Skenderovic 2009 pp 153 156 Skenderovic 2009 p 151 Skenderovic 2009 p 150 Skenderovic 2009 p 134 a b c d Far right leaves Swiss government BBC News 13 December 2007 Retrieved 2 February 2011 Skenderovic 2009 pp 129 130 a b c Magone Jose M Magone Jose 2009 Comparative European Politics An Introduction Taylor amp Francis p 428 ISBN 978 0 415 41892 8 Skenderovic 2009 pp 133 134 Swiss far right win cabinet post BBC News 10 December 2008 Retrieved 2 February 2011 Bundesamt fur Statistik Nationalratswahlen Ubersicht Schweiz Retrieved 2015 10 19 Larson Nina 19 October 2015 Swiss parliament shifts to right in vote dominated by migrant fears Yahoo AFP Retrieved 19 October 2015 Amid rising fears over refugees far right party gains ground in Swiss election Deutsche Welle 19 October 2015 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Gerber Marlene Mueller Sean October 23 2015 4 Cool Graphs that Explain Sunday s Swiss Elections The Washington Post Retrieved December 13 2016 Mombelli Armando December 10 2015 People s Party Gains Second Seat in Cabinet Swissinfo Retrieved December 10 2015 Bradley Simon December 10 2015 Wary Press Split Over Farmer Parmelin Swissinfo Retrieved December 10 2015 Capodici Vincenzo 22 July 2010 Kanton Baden Wurttemberg Fur Deutschland ein herber Verlust Basler Zeitung in German Retrieved 15 February 2011 Henckel Elisalex 11 June 2010 SVP will Baden Wurttemberg der Schweiz angliedern Die Welt Online in German Retrieved 15 February 2011 Henckel Elisalex 15 July 2010 Viele Baden Wurttemberger waren gerne Schweizer Die Welt Online in German Retrieved 15 February 2011 Wyborcza Gazeta 22 July 2010 Greater Switzerland just might take off Presseurop Retrieved 15 February 2011 Letvik Hakon 24 July 2010 Ide om Stor Sveits skaper munterhet Aftenposten in Norwegian Berlin Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 15 February 2011 Sciolino Elaine 8 October 2007 Immigration Black Sheep and Swiss Rage New York Times Schwerzenbach Retrieved 15 February 2011 Foulkes Imogen 6 September 2007 Swiss row over black sheep poster BBC News Geneva Retrieved 15 February 2011 Switzerland gets ready to vote on ending free movement with EU BBC 2020 09 26 Komitee prasentiert Argumente gegen Begrenzungsinitiative in German Swiss Radio and Television 30 June 2020 Gegen Personenfreizugigkeit SVP lanciert die Kampagne in German Swiss Radio and Television 11 August 2020 Vorlage Nr 631 Provisorisches amtliches Ergebnis in German Swiss Confederation 2020 09 27 Swiss Agree on 6 5 Billion for Jets Reject Immigration Limits Bloomberg 2020 09 27 Nationalratswahlen Kantonale Parteistarke Kanton 100 Report Swiss Federal Statistical Office 29 November 2019 Retrieved 4 December 2019 Bibliography EditGeden Oliver 2006 Diskursstrategien im Rechtspopulismus Freiheitliche Partei Osterreichs und Schweizerische Volkspartei zwischen Opposition und Regierungsbeteiligung VS Verlag ISBN 978 3 531 15127 4 Skenderovic Damir 2009 The radical right in Switzerland continuity and change 1945 2000 Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 84545 580 4 Cormon Pierre 2014 Swiss Politics for Complete Beginners Editions Slatkine ISBN 978 2 8321 0607 5 Archived from the original on 2014 11 04 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Schweizerische Volkspartei svp ch in German French and Italian Swiss People s Party in History of Social Security in Switzerland Portals Politics Conservatism Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swiss People 27s Party amp oldid 1140767750, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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