Lithuanian People's Party

Last updated
Lithuanian People's Party
Lietuvos liaudies partija
Leader Tauras Jakelaitis
FoundedMarch 27, 2010 (2010-03-27)
HeadquartersA. Stulginskio g. 4/7, Vilnius
Membership2500
Ideology Russophilia [1] [2]
Political position Left-wing [3]
Seimas
0 / 141
European Parliament
0 / 12
Municipal councils
0 / 1,461
Mayors
0 / 60

The Lithuanian People's Party (Lithuanian : Lietuvos liaudies partija) is a minor left-wing pro-Russian political party in Lithuania. [3] It describes itself as left-of-centre. [4] It was founded in 2010 as a split from the Lithuanian Peasant Popular Union, and was led by the party's former chairman and the first prime minister of independent Lithuania, Kazimira Prunskienė. It has no representatives on the European, national or municipal level.

Contents

History

After having left the party to run in the 2009 presidential election, Kazimira Prunskienė announced her intention to create a new political party in 2009. Its initiative group was made up of former members of the Peasant Popular Union. Prunskienė cited her conflict with Ramūnas Karbauskis, the party's new chairman, and its narrow focus on farmers as her reasons to establish a new party. [5]

The party was founded as the Lithuanian People's Movement (Lithuanian : Lietuvos liaudies sąjūdis) on 5 December 2009. The party's founding conference was attended by Konstantin Kosachev, member of the State Duma of the Russian Federation and the United Russia party, who described the new party as United Russia's first partner in Lithuania. [6] As the name was already reserved, however, the party held a second founding conference on 27 March 2010 where it renamed itself to its current name. [7]

It won seven seats in the 2011 Lithuanian municipal elections, its most successful election result. [8]

On 26 September 2011, the party signed a cooperation agreement with United Russia, which Prunskienė described as a pragmatic defense of national interests. [9]

In 2014, Andrius Šedžius  [ lt ], businessman and former member of the Social Democratic Party of Lithuania, was elected as the party's new chairman, after Prunskienė was hospitalized because of a heart attack. [10] It was also joined by the National Party "Lithuanian Path" (Lithuanian : Tautinė partija „Lietuvos kelias“), led by Lilijana Astra, known for its criticism towards the Polish community and their demand for allowing non-Lithuanian letters in state documents. [10] The party attempted to run in the 2014 European Parliament election and its list was led by Milda Bartašiūnaitė-Rudalevičienė, a former member of the Liberal Movement and a self-described "sex expert" known for a sexting scandal with Minister of Education Gintaras Steponavičius, but did not collect the required number of signatures. [10]

The party's committee voted to expel Šedžius in March 2015, violating the party's statute. [11] A party conference was supposed to be held, but Šedžius instead joined Order and Justice and attempted to dissolve the party. [12] The party remained and far-right, eurosceptic and anti-NATO politician Rolandas Paulauskas, signatory of the 1990 Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania, was temporarily elected chairman instead. [10]

Tauras Jakelaitis temporarily held the position of chairman during the 2020 parliamentary election, while the party's list was led by Nendrė Černiauskienė, former advisor to Minister of Health Aurelijus Veryga. [13] She gained media attention for bringing a crooked wooden kriwe stick ( krivūlė  [ lt ]) to election debates. [14] In the nationwide proportional election, the party finished last of parties that contested the election. [15]

In July 2024, former candidate for president of the Republic of Lithuania Eduardas Vaitkus announced that he will lead the party to the Seimas of the Republic of Lithuania in 2024 Lithuanian parliamentary election.

Political positions

The People's Party openly describes itself as a Russophilic party which seeks a cooperative relationship with Lithuania's eastern neighbours. It is considered a left-wing party. [3] According to Prunskienė, th People's Party seeks compromise between business interests and social policy; it aims to "achieve balance and compromises, to combine favorable conditions for business, economic growth with the social responsibility of the state, the development of the capital with the development of the regions, the interests of the countryside and cities, the participation of women and men in politics, the cultural expression of Lithuanian culture and all ethnic groups living in the country." [16]

During the electoral campaign for the 2020 parliamentary election, it was the only party which supported the withdrawal of Lithuania from the European Union. It also vowed to establish progressive taxation, ban propaganda against the traditional family, adopt a first-past-the-post electoral system and legalize representative recall. [13]

It proposed normalizing relations with Belarus and ending the boycott on the Astravets Nuclear Power Plant. [17]

Election results

Seimas

ElectionVotes [lower-alpha 1]  %Seats+/–Government
2016 12,8511.05 (#12)
0 / 141
Steady2.svg 0Opposition
2020 2,9460.26 (#17)
0 / 141
Steady2.svg 0Opposition
  1. Proportional representation votes.

Municipal

ElectionVotes [lower-alpha 1]  %Council seatsMayors+/–
2011 11,8720.46 (#12)
7 / 1,466
0 / 60
2015 4,9610.49 (#11)
5 / 1,473
0 / 60
Decrease2.svg 2
2019 Did not competeDid not compete
0 / 1,442
0 / 60
Decrease2.svg 5
2023 Did not competeDid not compete
0 / 1,498
0 / 60
Steady2.svg 0
  1. Municipal council election votes.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Homeland Union</span> Political party in Lithuania

The Homeland Union – Lithuanian Christian Democrats, also colloquially known as the Conservatives, is a centre-right political party in Lithuania. It has 18,000 members and 50 of 141 seats in the Seimas. Its current leader is Gabrielius Landsbergis, who replaced Andrius Kubilius in 2015. It is a member of the European People's Party (EPP) and the International Democracy Union (IDU).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union</span> Political party in Lithuania

The Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union is a green-conservative and agrarian political party in Lithuania led by Ramūnas Karbauskis. The party is considered one of the main representatives of the left wing of Lithuanian politics. Lithuanian journalist Virgis Valentinavičius described the party as "the mixture of the extreme left in economic matters and the extreme right in some social issues, all spiced up with an anti-establishment rhetoric of radical change".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2002–03 Lithuanian presidential election</span>

Presidential elections were held in Lithuania on 22 December 2002 and 5 January 2003. Incumbent President Valdas Adamkus ran for reelection alongside sixteen other candidates, the largest field of presidential candidates in the country's history. Though Adamkus held a large lead over his closest opponent, Rolandas Paksas of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), in the first round of the election, Paksas defeated Adamkus in the second round with 54.71% of the vote.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liberals' Movement (Lithuania)</span> Lithuanian political party

Liberals' Movement, abbr. LS, is a conservative-liberal political party in Lithuania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Resurrection Party</span> Political party in Lithuania

The National Resurrection Party was a short-lived political party in Lithuania. In the 2008 Lithuanian parliamentary election, it became one of the largest parties in the Tenth Seimas of Lithuania, but quickly lost popularity, disintegrated and merged with the Liberal and Centre Union in 2011.

The Samogitian Party is a minor ethnic-regionalist autonomist party of Lithuania's Samogitian minority founded in February 2009.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lithuanian Green Party</span> Lithuanian political party

The Lithuanian Green Party is a green-liberal political party in Lithuania. It was founded in 2011. The party's chairwoman is environmental activist Ieva Budraitė. From 2012 to 2022, it was represented by a single member in the Seimas, until its final representative, Algirdas Butkevičius, left the party.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 Lithuanian parliamentary election</span>

Parliamentary elections were held in Lithuania on 9 and 23 October 2016 to elect the 141 members of the Seimas. 71 were elected in single-member constituencies using the two-round system, and the remaining 70 in a single nationwide constituency using proportional representation. The first round was held on 9 October and the second round on 23 October.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saulius Skvernelis</span> Prime Minister of Lithuania (2016–2020)

Saulius Skvernelis is a Lithuanian politician who served as prime minister of Lithuania between 2016 and 2020. He had previously served as police commissioner, and was Minister of the Interior from 2014 to 2016. Though he was an independent politician, he was backed by the Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union and was a member of its parliamentary group until 2022, as a result of which he became the first head of government in European history primarily backed by a green party.

The Political Party "Lithuanian List" is an anti-establishment, anti-corruption political party in Lithuania. It was represented in the Lithuanian unicameral legislature, Seimas, from 2016 to 2019.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lithuanian Regions Party</span> Lithuanian political party

The Lithuanian Regions Party, also translated as the Lithuanian Party of Regions, is a political party in Lithuania. It was founded in 2018 as the Social Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania following a split of members from Social Democratic Party of Lithuania after the LSDP's decision to exit a coalition government with the Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union in 2017.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2024 Lithuanian parliamentary election</span>

Parliamentary elections are scheduled to be held in Lithuania by 13 October 2024, with a second round on 27 October 2024.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Union of Democrats "For Lithuania"</span> Political party in Lithuania

The Union of Democrats "For Lithuania" is a centre-left and green Lithuanian political party founded on 29 January 2022 by Saulius Skvernelis, former Prime Minister of Lithuania. The party is moderately socially conservative.

The Union of the Fighters for Lithuania, previously known as the Union for the President of Lithuania was a minor political party in Lithuania of an eclectic far-right political orientation which was founded in 2011. It replaced the Lithuanian Liberty Union. It did not achieve any notable electoral results and was liquidated by the Supreme Election Commission in 2022 for failing to provide a list of members.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Petras Gražulis</span> Lithuanian right-wing politician

Petras Gražulis is a Lithuanian politician, former Member of the Seimas and current member of the European Parliament. Gražulis is also the incumbent chairman of the right-wing People and Justice Union party. He is known for his political scandals and hardline opposition to LGBT rights.

Together with the Vytis is a minor right-wing political party in Lithuania which was founded in 2007. It is led by engineer Vaclovas Žutautas. The party has not achieved significant success in Lithuanian elections.

Lithuania – For Everyone, known as the Emigrant Party before 2020, is a minor political party in Lithuania which represents the interests of the Lithuanian diaspora.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dawn of Nemunas</span> Political party in Lithuania

The Dawn of Nemunas is a Lithuanian political party founded by Remigijus Žemaitaitis after his expulsion from the Freedom and Justice party due to his antisemitic statements. The party was founded in November 2023 and registered in January 2024. The party was joined by two MPs who defected from the Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union and Labour Party in June 2024, increasing its representation in the Seimas to three seats.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lithuanian Christian Democracy Party</span> Political party in Lithuania

The Lithuanian Christian Democracy Party is a right-wing Christian democratic party in Lithuania founded in 2003. It first acquired a Member of the Seimas in 2024, when Mindaugas Puidokas joined the party and was elected as its chairman.

References

  1. "Opinion: Two new ex Prime Ministers' parties are facing difficulties". alfa.lt.
  2. Digrytė, Eglė. "K.Prunskienė: nebijokime būti vadinami prorusiška partija". DELFI.
  3. 1 2 3 Šuminas, Andrius; Aleksandravičius, Arnas; Gudinavičius, Arūnas (2017). "Negative Political Communication in Online Video Advertisements: Case Study of 2016 Lithuanian Parliamentary Election". Political Preferences. 14. Vilnius University: 56. doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.5216167. Lithuanian People's Party had no seats in Lithuanian parliament or European Parliament. Their ideological stance can be described as radical left and pro-Russian.
  4. "Lietuvos liaudies partija". www.vle.lt.
  5. "Rugsėjo pabaigoje K.Prunskienė planuoja surengti steigiamąjį naujos partijos suvažiavimą". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). 2009-08-07.
  6. Popovaitė, Inga (2009-12-05). "V.Putino atstovas apie K.Prunskienės partiją: pagaliau turėsime partnerius". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian).
  7. "K.Prunskienės partija pakeitė pavadinimą ir įstatus". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). 2010-03-27.
  8. "Partijų, koalicijų gautų balsų ir mandatų skaičius Lietuvoje". Supreme Election Commission of Lithuania (in Lithuanian). 2011.
  9. "Maskvoje Kazimira Prunskienė pasirašė bendradarbiavimo susitarimą su Vladimiro Putino partija". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian). 2011-09-26.
  10. 1 2 3 4 Aušra, Mindaugas (2016-09-19). "Seimo rinkimų dalyviai: Lietuvos liaudies partija". LRT (in Lithuanian).
  11. Januševičius, Alvydas (2015-03-23). "Liaudies partijos taryba išspyrė iš partijos savo pirmininką Andrių Šedžių" (in Lithuanian). 15min.lt.
  12. Januševičius, Alvydas (2015-10-15). "Andrius Šedžius rengiasi "Tvarkos ir teisingumo švarką", dar nenusivilkęs senojo". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian).
  13. 1 2 "Lietuvos liaudies partija". 15min.lt.
  14. "Į Seimą naujus kelius rado Nendrė Černiauskienė, Bernatonis ir Skardžius". Delfi (in Lithuanian). 2020-11-20.
  15. "Intersecting non-systemic actors: why Lithuania's populists can't be in the same boat?". Lithuania Tribune. 29 July 2024.
  16. Digrytė, Eglė. "K.Prunskienė: nebijokime būti vadinami prorusiška partija". DELFI.
  17. Andrukaitytė, Milena (2020-09-09). "Rinkimai 2020: Lietuvos liaudies partija siūlo pirkti elektrą iš Astravo". 15min.lt (in Lithuanian).