Green League

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Green League
Name in Finnish Vihreä liitto
Name in Swedish Gröna förbundet
Leader Tarja Cronberg
Founded 1987
Headquarters Fredrikinkatu 33 A, 3rd floor
FI-00120 HELSINKI
Political Ideology Green
Political Position Centre-Left
European Affiliation European Greens - European Free Alliance
International Affiliation Global Greens
Colours Green
Website www.greens.fi
See also Finnish Politics

Finnish Parliament
Finnish Government
Finnish President
Political parties
Elections

The Green League (in Finnish: Vihreä liitto, Vihr.; in Swedish: Gröna förbundet), is a green political party in Finland. The current chairperson is Tarja Cronberg. The party was founded February 28, 1987, and registered as a political party the next year. The political activity had begun already in the early 1980s, when environmental activists, feminists and other active groups began to campaign on Green issues in Finland. In 1995 it was the first European Green party to be part of a state-level Cabinet.

The first two parliamentary representatives were elected before the registration, in the elections of 1983. These were the first independent representatives of the Finnish parliament. In 1987 the number of seats rose to four, and in 1991 to 10. In the 1995 election the Green League received a total of 9 seats (out of 200), joined the coalition-cabinet led by the Social Democrats, and Pekka Haavisto became the minister of Environment and Development Aid. Thereby he became the first green minister in Europe. The Green League received 7.3% of the vote, and gained two additional seats in 1999, rising the total to 11. The Greens continued in the next coalition-cabinet, but resigned on May 26, 2002, after the cabinet's decision to allow the construction of a new nuclear plant was accepted in the parliament. In 2003 the Green League received 8.0% of the vote, giving a total of 14 seats. They raised their seats to 15 in 2007 when they received 8.5%.

One of the fourteen Finnish representatives in the European Parliament is Green: Satu Hassi. Before the 2004 elections there were two: Heidi Hautala and Matti Wuori.

At the local level, Greens are an important factor in the largest cities of Finland. In the local election of 2000 the Greens had a 7.7% of the vote. In Helsinki (the capital) the Greens became the 2nd largest party with 23.5% of the vote. In several other cities the Greens achieved the position of the 3rd largest party. Its weak spot is the rural countryside, particularly municipalities experiencing strong outward migration.

On the fourth of April 2007 it was announced that the Green League was one of the four parties continuing negotiations on forming next Finnish Government.

The Federation of Green Youth and Students is the Green Leagues youth organization.

Contents

[edit] Ideology

Vihreä liitto is no longer a protest party, nor an alternative movement. The party has found its political home at the centre-left with a political agenda based on green politics. Nevertheless, many Green candidates in the elections reject classification to "left" or "right".

In the party program Green League has criticized both market economy and socialism, because Greens think that both the systems do not care about environment, developing countries or future generations but, instead, concentrate too much on economic growth. Major principles in the party program are environmental protection, participatory democracy and social justice.

In chamber of the Parliament and assembly rooms of local councils the Greens are standing between the Centre Party and the Social Democrats.

[edit] Elections results

[edit] Parliament elections

Year MPs Votes Share of votes
1983 2 43 754 1,47%
1987 4 115 988 4,03%
1991 10 185 894 6,82%
1995 9 181 198 6,52%
1999 11 194 846 7,27%
2003 14 223 846 8,01%
2007 15 233 930 8,5%

[edit] Local council elections

Year Councillors Votes Share of votes
1984 101 76 441 2,8%
1988 94 61 581 2,34%
1992 343 184 787 6,9%
1996 292 149 334 6,3%
2000 338 171 707 7,7%
2004 313 175 933 7,4%

[edit] European parliament elections

Year MEPs Votes Share of votes
1996 1 170 670 7,6%
1999 2 166 786 13,4%
2004 1 172 786 10,4%

[edit] Presidential elections

Parliamentarian and former MEP Heidi Hautala has been a candidate in the presidential elections in 2000 and 2006, taking ca. 3,5 % share of votes in the first round.

[edit] Politicians

Part of the Politics series on Green politics

Topics

Green movement
Worldwide green parties
List of Green issues

Organizations

Global Greens · Africa · Americas · Asia-Pacific · Europe

Principles

Four Pillars
Global Greens Charter: ecological wisdom
social justice
participatory democracy
nonviolence
sustainability
respect diversity


Politics Portal ·  v  d  e 

[edit] List of party chairs

[edit] Current members of parliament

The following 15 Green politicians were elected to the Finnish Parliament in the March 2007 parliamentary election

[edit] See also

[edit] External link


v  d  e
Green Parties
Africa Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Mali, Mauritius, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Somalia, South Africa
Americas Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, St. Vincent & the Grenadines, United States
Asia-Pacific Australia, Iran, Israel, Japan, Mongolia, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, Pakistan, Philippines, Polynesia, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Vanuatu
Europe
(EGPFYEG)
Albania, Austria, Belgium (Flanders and Brussels), Belgium (Wallonia and Brussels), Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark (the Greens), Denmark (Socialist People's Party), England and Wales, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Kosovo, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Montenegro, Netherlands (The Greens), Netherlands (GreenLeft), Northern Ireland, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania (Ecological Party), Romania (Green Party), Russia, Scotland, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Spain (Catalonia), Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine
Italic links indicate observers or non-members of the Global Greens.