Chairperson | Pekka Mustonen |
---|---|
Deputy chairs | Satu Immonen Marek Nečada Riikka Nieminen |
Founded | 24 May 2008 |
Headquarters | Franzéninkatu 5 E 1 00500 Helsinki |
Newspaper | Purje (discontinued 2013) |
Youth wing | Pirate Youth |
Membership (2019) | 173 |
Ideology | Pirate politics Freedom of information Information privacy |
Political position | Big tent |
European affiliation | European Pirate Party |
International affiliation | Pirate Parties International |
Colours | Purple Black White |
Website | |
www.piraattipuolue.fi | |
Part of a series on |
Pirate Parties |
---|
The Pirate Party (Finnish : Piraattipuolue, Swedish : Piratpartiet) is a Pirate Party in Finland that was registered as a political party from 2009 to 2023. The group currently has around 173 paying members. [1] The chairman of the party is Pekka Mustonen. [2] The party is a member of Pirate Parties International and European Pirate Party.
In January 2008, Matti Hiltunen registered the domain piraattipuolue.fi and set up a BBS on the site. In May 2008, about 50 founding members of the party held the founding assembly in Tampere. [3] In September 2008 the party started to collect the 5,000 supporter cards needed to officially register the party. The party's goal was to take part in the 2009 European Parliamentary election. The supporter cards were collected by 1 June 2009, [4] too late for the elections. The party was officially registered on 13 August 2009. [5]
In October 2009, the Pirate Party took part in the special municipal election of Loviisa with 1 candidate, but did not win a seat. The party's first major election was the 2011 Finnish parliamentary election with 127 candidates in 11 constituencies, [6] receiving 0.5% of votes and becoming the largest party to have no seats in parliament. [7] In the 2014 European Parliament election it won 12,378 votes (0.7%). [8] In the 2015 Finnish parliamentary election the party received 25,105 or 0.8% of total votes, and was left without seats in the parliament. [9] Consequently, the Ministry of Justice de-registered the party for failing to win seats in two consecutive parliamentary elections. [10] The party collected the required 5,000 supporter cards again and was re-registered on 6 June 2016. [11] After failing to win seats in the next two parliamentary elections, it was de-registered again in 2023. [12]
In the 2017 municipal elections, the Pirate Party gained two seats on municipal councils, one in Helsinki and one in Jyväskylä. Helsinki council member Petrus Pennanen received 1,364 votes; [13] Jyväskylä council member Arto Lampila received 191 votes. [14] Both lost their seats in the municipal elections of 2021.
In its political agenda, the party aims to develop open democracy, safeguard civil rights and increased transparency in politics. It wants to free information and culture from prohibitive restrictions and review the utility of the patent system, all while increasing privacy and freedom of speech. The party supports a universal basic income and wants to abolish daylight saving time. [15]
The party has a youth organisation, the Pirate Youth (Finnish : Piraattinuoret). It was founded on 5 February 2009 in Helsinki. It has an upper age-limit of 28 years. [16] Membership of Piraattinuoret is free of charge.
Election | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | Government |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | 15,103 | 0.51 | 0 / 200 | New | Extra-parliamentary |
2015 | 25,105 | 0.85 | 0 / 200 | 0 | Extra-parliamentary |
2019 | 19,032 | 0.62 | 0 / 200 | 0 | Extra-parliamentary |
2023 | 3,058 | 0.10 | 0 / 200 | 0 | Extra-parliamentary |
Year | Elected | Votes | Share | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | 0 | 12,355 | 0.7% | |
2019 | 0 | 12,579 | 0.7% | [17] |
Year | Elected | Votes | Share | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | 0 | 5,986 | 0.2% | |
2017 | 2 | 9,075 | 0.4% | [18] |
2021 | 0 | 2,608 | 0.1% |
The Green League, shortened to the Greens, is a green political party in Finland. Ideologically, the Green League is positioned on the centre-left of the political spectrum. It is a reformist party and it is supportive of feminism, animal rights and green liberal ideas.
The Left Alliance is a socialist political party in Finland.
The Finns Party, formerly known as the True Finns, is a right-wing populist political party in Finland. It was founded in 1995 following the dissolution of the Finnish Rural Party.
Heli Järvinen is a Finnish politician for the Green League, representing the Southern Savonia constituency from 2007 to 2011 and the Southeastern Finland constituency since 2015. She was elected to the Finnish Parliament in the parliamentary election of March 2007. She lost her seat in the Parliament of Finland in 2011 elections but was again elected in 2015. She was also a member of the municipal council of Kerimäki between 2005 and 2011. Since 2017 she has been a member of Savonlinna town council. She is the second vice-chairperson of the council.
Jussi Kristian Halla-aho is a Finnish politician, currently serving as the Speaker of the Parliament of Finland since 2023. Halla-aho has served as a member of the Parliament of Finland from 2011 to 2014 and again since 2019, and as the leader of the Finns Party from 10 June 2017 to 14 August 2021. Previously, between 2014 and 2019, he was a member of the European Parliament, where he was part of the Identity and Democracy group.
Change 2011 is a Finnish political party founded in 2009. The chairman of the party is Anita Saarinen. The party's name refers to 2011 Finnish parliamentary election, the first election the party participated in. The party's main goals are direct democracy, freedom of speech, and the interest of the citizens of Finland. The party also wants to "rationalize" immigration politics, and have "just sentences" given for violent and sexual crimes.
Jussi Niinistö is a Finnish politician and a former Minister of Defence and a former member of Finnish Parliament, representing the Finns Party 2011–2017 and Blue Reform since 2017. By occupation he is a military historian, a docent of Finnish history in the University of Helsinki and a docent of military history in the Finnish National Defence University. In 2013 he was elected as the first vice-chairman of the True Finns, but lost his seat in 2017.
Municipal elections were held in Finland on 28 October 2012, with advance voting between 17 and 23 October 2012. 9,674 municipal council seats were open for election in 304 municipalities. The number of councillors decreased by over 700 compared to the previous election due to the merging of several municipalities. The term of the elected councillors will begin on 1 January 2013.
Juhana Mikael Vartiainen is a Finnish politician, economist and a member of the Finnish Parliament, representing the National Coalition Party, which he joined after having been a member of the Social Democratic Party of Finland from 1975 to 2015. He was elected the Mayor of Helsinki in August 2021 by the Helsinki city council.
The Liberal Party – Freedom to Choose, formerly known as the Whisky Party, is a classical-liberal Finnish political party, founded in 2015 and admitted to the register of political parties in 2016. Lassi Kivinen was elected chairman in 2022. The party was de-registered in 2023 after failing to win seats in two consecutive parliamentary elections. It was re-registered in January 2024.
Animal Justice Party of Finland is a political party in Finland founded in 2015 and admitted to the registry of political parties in 2016. The party's chairman is Jaakko Perttunen. The party participated in the municipal elections in 2017. It was de-registered in 2023 after failing to win any seats in two consecutive parliamentary elections.
The Feminist Party is a Finnish feminist political party. It was founded in June 2016, and registered as a political party in January 2017. It calls gender equality, human rights, and human security the primary pillars of its politics.
Kansalaisliitto (abbr.KaL; formerly Independence Party is a de-registered Eurosceptic political party in Finland. It was founded in 1994 as Alliance for Free Finland. The party supports Finland’s membership in the European Economic Area, however it is against its membership in the European Union and the Eurozone. The party opposes Finland’s membership in NATO.
Seven Star Movement was a Finnish political party founded in 2018. The party was founded by Paavo Väyrynen, its president and only MP, after he was ousted from his previous party, Citizens' Party. The Seven Star Movement shut down its activities after the 2019 European Parliament election and was de-registered in 2023 after failing to win seats in two consecutive parliamentary elections.
Finnish People First was a nationalist political party in Finland. It was founded in 2018 and de-registered in 2023 after failing to win seats in two consecutive parliamentary elections. In July 2023, the party filed for bankruptcy and announced its dissolution.
Alviina Viivi Alametsä is a Finnish politician of the Green League who has been representing the Helsinki electoral district in the Finnish Parliament since 2024. She was a Member of the European Parliament from 2020 to 2024.
Municipal elections were held in Finland on 13 June 2021 after being rescheduled from 18 April due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Mikkel Antte Iisakki Näkkäläjärvi is the Party Secretary of the SDP. He served as the chairman of the Social Democratic Youth from 2016 until 2020 and is the second vice-chairman of the Rovaniemi City Council. Since spring 2020, he has been working as the regional manager of Northern Finland for the service sector trade union PAM.
Eemeli Peltonen is a Finnish politician and Member of Parliament.