Liberal Union
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The Liberal Union (in Dutch: Liberale Unie), or LU, was a Dutch liberal political party. A major party in its time, the LU was one of the historic predecessors of the Liberal State Party, and therefore of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy.
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[edit] Party History
[edit] History before foundation
Liberals had been an important political force in the Netherlands. Since 1848 they were the dominant political force. They were organized in lose political clubs and caucuses. Liberals were divided between progressive, centrist and conservative liberals, but because of the lack of organized political parties, these divisions were not very strong. In 1879 the division became explicit when a separate parliamentary party was formed by supporters of Kappeyne van de Copello. With the rise of both catholic and protestant parties, the liberals were forced to organize themselves better.
[edit] Party History
In 1885 all the liberal political clubs and caucuses were united in the Liberal Union. The Union was factionalized: it had a progressive, a conservative and a centrist faction.
In 1888 the liberals are forced in opposition by a majority of the confessional political parties. In 1891 the confessional parties lose their majority and a liberal cabinet led by Van Tienhoven is formed. The cabinets most important proposal is the relaxation of the census, proposed by minister of home affairs Tak: the law would grant the right to vote to all men able to read and write. All political parties are divided on the subject and with a very narrow majority the proposal is rejected. In reaction to this the cabinet resigns and new elections are held. In these elections the division between pro-suffrage Takkians and anti-suffrage anti-Takkians grows. The Liberal Union is also split on the subject. A group of conservative liberals leaves the party. They remained a lose political club until 1906, when they founded the League of Free Liberals.
The 1894 elections are won by anti-Takkians and the Liberal Union is confined to opposition. After the 1897 elections the liberals regain their majority and a cabinet led Pierson enacts a series of social laws, including the Learning Obligation law, which forces all children to go to school between the ages of six and twelve in order to combat child labour.
In 1901 the progressive liberals the party they founded the Free-thinking Liberal League together with the Radicale Bond. This causes the liberals to lose their majority in the subsequent elections. In 1905 however a cabinet is formed by the two liberal parties, led by De Meester. In 1909 they lose their majority to the confessional parties again. The 1913 election shows no clear majority: the socialists are asked to join the liberals in a coalition. They refuse however. An extra-parliamentary cabinet is formed by Cort van der Linden, formed by liberals from all three liberal parties. This cabinet enacts universal suffrage and ends the Schoolstrijd.
After the disastrous 1918 elections, in which the liberals lose half of their seats: they fall from thirty-seven to twenty seats. In 1921 the LU merged with the League of Free Liberals, and several minor liberal parties (the Economic League, Middleclass Party and the Neutral Party to form the Liberal State Party, the mainstream liberal party.
[edit] Ideology & Issues
The Union started out as a moderately progressive liberal party, committed to the freedom of the individual. Gradually it became more conservative. It was in favour of a small government, which nonetheless got its income from progressive taxation and would enact social legislation. The party was fiscally conservative. It furthermore was in favour of the universal suffrage and proportional representation.
[edit] Representation
[edit] Leadership
Chairman of the Lower House parliamentary party
- 1902-1913 Hendrik Goeman Borgesius
- 1913-1917 Theodoor de Meester
- 1918-1921 Pieter Rink
- 1891-1894 Van Tienhoven
- 1897-1901 Pierson
- 1905-1908 De Meester
- 1913-1918 Cort van der Linden
[edit] Members of the Lower House of Parliament
Development of the number of seats in the Lower House, of the 100 available. Before 1918 elected in single member districts, after that by proportional representation:
- 1918 - 6
- 1913 - 22
- 1909 - 20
- 1905 - 25
- 1901 - 18
- 1897 - 35
- 1894 - 57 (this includes conservative liberals)
- 1891 - 53 (this includes conservative liberals)
- 1888 - 46
[edit] Electorate
Liberal received support from Atheist and Latudinarian Protestant voters from higher classes: businessmen, civil servants, wealthy farmers and voters from free professions (lawyers, doctors etc.). The party performed particularly well in the major trading cities Amsterdam and Rotterdam, in provincial centres like Arnhem, Zutphen and Leeuwarden, in the rich municipalities around Hilversum and the Hague and in northern rural provinces, like Groningen and Drenthe.
[edit] Relationships to other parties
The Liberal Union formed a lose alliance with the League of Free Liberals and the Free-thinking Liberal League. The parties cooperated in several cabinets. The liberal legislation to extend suffrage and to better the position of workers was often supported by the social-democratic SDAP.
[edit] See also
- Liberalism
- Contributions to liberal theory
- Liberalism worldwide
- List of liberal parties
- Liberal democracy
- Liberalism in the Netherlands