Social Democratic Party (Luxembourg)

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Social Democratic Party
Parti Social Démocrate
 
 
Founded 2 May 1970
Dissolved 1984
 
Ideology Social democracy

The Social Democratic Party (Luxembourgish: Sozialdemokratescher Partei, French: Parti Social Démocrate, German: Sozialdemokratischen Partei), abbreviated to SDP, was a social democratic political party in Luxembourg between 1970 and 1984. It was a splinter from the centrist tendency within the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (LSAP).

The President of the party was Henry Cravatte, who had previously been the President of the LSAP between 1959 and 1970. Other key members include Albert Bousser and Astrid Lulling.

The party competed in the 1974 election, taking 9.2% of the vote and winning five seats, to draw level with the Communist Party, which had been the long-held fourth party in Luxembourgian politics. In 1979, the SDP lost three of their seats to a resurgent Christian Social People's Party (CSV). In the European election held on the same day, the SDP failed to win a seat, but did beat the Communist Party into fifth place.

Before it fought another election, the party disbanded, in 1984. Some of its members, including Cravatte, returned to the LSAP, whilst others, such as Lulling, joined the CSV, thereby completing their political metamorphosis from left to right.