Evangelical People's Party
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Evangelical People's Party | |
---|---|
Leader | Cathy Ubels |
Founded | March 1981 |
Dissolved | March 9, 1991 merged in to the GreenLeft |
Headquarters | |
Political Ideology | progressive Christianity |
International Affiliation | none |
European Affiliation | none |
European Parliament Group | none |
Colours | Purple |
Website | none |
See also | Politics of the Netherlands |
The Evangelical People's Party (Dutch: Evangelische Volkspartij, EVP) was a minor progressive Christian political party in the Netherlands.
Contents |
[edit] History
The EVP was founded in March 1981 by members of the main christian-democratic CDA, which were united in the group "Not by Bread Alone" (Niet bij Brood Alleen) and members of the Evangelical Progressive Party, which had previously left the Anti Revolutionary Party. Both groups were opposed to the formation of the CDA and its conservative course.
After winning one seat in the 1982 election - it was unable to do so in 1981, the party joined the opposition. It party became divided between a progressive and a more centrist wing. The former wanted to cooperate with the Political Party of Radicals, which had split from the Catholic People's Party in 1968 and its leftwing allies, the leftwing-socialist Pacifist Socialist Party and the destalinized Communist Party of the Netherlands. The EVP was more reserved towards the CPN. The latter wanted to cooperate with the social-democratic Labour Party and the CDA. Although some members were willing to cooperate, the party congress rejected to cooperate with the CPN, PSP and PPR in the 1984 European Parliament elections.
After the party lost its seat in the 1986 elections cooperation become more important. For the 1989 elections the PPR, PSP and CPN initiated a common list GreenLeft. The EVP was hesitant to join, and only after the talks were concluded opted to enter. It got one candidate on an ineligible elventh place. In 1991 the party officially dissolved itself into the GreenLeft in the Moses and Aaron-church in Amsterdam. Prominent EVP-members became involved in the Leftwing Cheek, a platform for the New Testament and Politics. This platform still exists, but it is only of limited importance within the party.
[edit] Ideology & Issues
The party combined a leftwing with a green program, inspired on the New Testament. The Sermon on the Mount was an important inspiration for the party. It saw it as its evangelical imperative to create a society where justice, peace and solidarity would rule. Important issues for the party were:
- A pacifist foreign policy, especially opposition to the placement of nuclear weapons.
- It sought to formulate an alternative to both capitalism and communism. It proposed the economy of enough, in which incomes would be redistributed, people would get more rest (for instance by a government-financed sabbatical for all) and damage to the environment would be limited.
- The party was progressive on ethical issues, such as gay rights and abortion, which is unusual for a Christian party.
[edit] Representation
In this table the election results of the EVP in Tweede Kamer and Provincial elections is represented, as well as the party's political leadership: the fractievoorzitter, is the chair of the parliamentary party and the lijsttrekker is the party's top candidate in the general election, these posts are normally taken by the party's leader.
Year | TK | Fractievoorzitter | Lijsttrekker |
---|---|---|---|
1982 | 1 | Cathy Ubels | Cathy Ubels |
1983 | 1 | Cathy Ubels | no elections |
1984 | 1 | Cathy Ubels | no elections |
1985 | 1 | Cathy Ubels | no elections |
[edit] Electorate
The EVP's small electorate consisted out of leftwing protestants, mostly former adherents of the Anti Revolutionary Party, for whom opposition to the placement of nuclear weapons was an important issue. The party was open to non-religious persons.
[edit] Organization
[edit] Linked organisations
The EVP published a periodical called "EVP info", which was continued after 1990 as "The Leftwing Cheek" within the GreenLeft. Its scientific institute was Foundation for Formation and Education, which published "Schering en Inslag"
[edit] Relationships to other parties
The party had good relations with the Political Party of Radicals (PPR), which also had its roots in the Christian Democracy and emphasized green ideals. It also had good relations with the social-democratic Labour Party and the Pacifist Socialist Party (PSP). In 1989 it chose for the PPR and the PSP and merged into the GreenLeft, together with the Communist Party of the Netherlands, a party to which it was more reserved, because of its atheism, alignment with communist dictatorships and centralized organization.
[edit] International Comparison
Internationally the party is comparable to other small parties which combine leftwing politics with religious inspiration, like the Swiss Christian Social Party.