Finnish People's Democratic League
Finnish People's Democratic League | |
---|---|
Finnish name | Suomen Kansan Demokraattinen Liitto |
Swedish name | Demokratiska Förbundet för Finlands Folk |
Founded | October 29, 1944 |
Dissolved | 1990 |
Merged into | Left Alliance |
Newspaper |
Vapaa Sana 1944–1956 Kansan Uutiset 1957–1990 |
Student wing | Socialist Student League |
Youth wing | Finnish Democratic Youth League |
Women's wing | Democratic Women's League of Finland |
Children's wing | Democratic Union of Finnish Pioneers |
Ideology |
Socialism, Communism, Marxism, Anti-Capitalism |
Political position | Left-wing to far-left |
Politics of Finland Political parties Elections |
Finnish People's Democratic League (Finnish: Suomen Kansan Demokraattinen Liitto, SKDL; Swedish: Demokratiska Förbundet för Finlands Folk, DFFF) was a Finnish political organisation with the aim of uniting those left of the Finnish Social Democratic Party. It was founded in 1944 as the anti-communist laws in Finland were repealed, and lasted until 1990, when it merged into the newly formed Left Alliance. At its time, SKDL was one of the largest leftist parties in democratic Europe, with its main member party, the Communist Party of Finland, being one of the largest communist parties west of the Iron Curtain. The SKDL enjoyed its greatest electoral success in the 1958 parliamentary election, when it gained a support of approximately 23 per cent and a representation of 50 MPs of 200 total, making it the largest party in the Eduskunta.
SKDL joined several Finnish governments. The first SKDL minister was Yrjö Leino who took office in November 1944. After the 1945 parliamentary election SKDL was a major player in the Paasikivi III coalition with social democrats and parties of the centre, and in 1946 SKDL's Mauno Pekkala became the prime minister. The Pekkala government led the state until summer 1948, after which the SKDL didn't participate in any coalitions until 1966. The late 1960s governments, led by social democrats and including centre, were called popular front by the SKDL. The party left the government in spring 1971 but returned in 1975. Kalevi Sorsa's third coalition was the last one SKDL was in, until December 1982.
Organisation
A person could be aligned to the SKDL through its basic organisations or as member of the "community members" which were the Communist Party of Finland (SKP), the Democratic League of Finnish Women (1944–1990), Academic Socialist Society (1944–1965), Suomen Toverikuntien Liitto (1946–1952), the Socialist Unity Party (SYP) (1946–1955), the Socialist Student League (1965–) and the Democratic Youth League of Finland (1967–1990). During most of its existence the SKDL had over 50 000 "own" members. In addition to the community members, tens of different nationwide organizations were controlled by the SKDL members, see for example the People's Temperance League.
The supporters of the SKP constantly had a majority in the SKDL, thus it was regarded by many as a communist front. The SKP members often attended two consecutive meetings to decide on the same issues. However, not even socialism was mentioned in the party programme until the late 1960s. The number of communist party members amongst the SKDL MPs constantly increased from 1945 on, even though many prominent left-wing socialists and former social democrats had joined the alliance in the 1940s.
One of the few organized non-SKP forces in SKDL was the Socialist Unity Party (SYP) which was founded mainly by former social democrats in 1946. The small and marginalized SYP left the SKDL in 1955 but most of the socialists inside the SKDL chose not to follow the decision made by the party chair Atos Wirtanen and they remained members of the SKDL through its basic organisations. In the early 1970s a Joint Committee of the SKDL Socialists was formed but it never developed an organisation and remained a loose coalition.
Publications
Vapaa Sana was SKDL's party organ from 1944 until 1956. SKDL also published many regional daily newspapers. In 1957 Vapaa Sana was merged with the SKP organ Työkansan Sanomat to launch Kansan Uutiset, which was the organ of both parties until 1990. Kansan Uutiset still appears and since 2000 it has been the organ of Left Alliance.
Leaders
Chairmen
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General secretaries
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Electoral results
Parliamentary elections
Year of election |
Votes | Seats | Parliamentary status | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | +/- | ||
1945 | 398,618 | 23.47 | 49 / 200 |
new | #2 |
1948 | 375,538 | 20.0 | 38 / 200 |
–11 | #3 |
1951 | 391,134 | 21.6 | 43 / 200 |
+5 | #3 |
1954 | 433,251 | 21.6 | 43 / 200 |
±0 | #3 |
1958 | 450,220 | 23.2 | 50 / 200 |
+7 | #1 |
1962 | 506,829 | 22.0 | 47 / 200 |
–3 | #2 |
1966 | 502,374 | 21.1 | 41 / 200 |
–6 | #3 |
1970 | 420,556 | 16.6 | 36 / 200 |
–5 | #4 |
1972 | 438,757 | 17.0 | 37 / 200 |
+1 | #3 |
1975 | 519,483 | 18.9 | 40 / 200 |
+3 | #2 |
1979 | 518,045 | 17.9 | 35 / 200 |
–5 | #3 |
1983 | 400,930 | 13.5 | 26 / 200 |
–9 | #4 |
1987 | 270,433 | 9.4 | 16 / 200 |
–10 | #4 |
Local elections
Year | Councillors | Votes | Share of votes |
---|---|---|---|
1945 | 2 496 | 275 324 | |
1947 | 2 005 | 314 156 | 20,4% |
1950 | 2 517 | 347 102 | 23,04% |
1953 | 2 546 | 406 324 | 23,10% |
1956 | 2 272 | 353 967 | 21,2% |
1960 | 2 409 | 432 146 | 22,0% |
1964 | 2 417 | 470 550 | 21,9% |
1968 | 1 770 | 382 882 | 16,91% |
1972 | 1 731 | 437 130 | 17,48% |
1976 | 2 050 | 494 920 | 18,45% |
1980 | 1 835 | 456 177 | 16,64% |
1984 | 1 482 | 354 582 | 13,15% |
1988 | 1 209 | 270 532 | 10,29% |
Presidential elections
Year | Electors | Votes | Share of votes |
Candidate |
---|---|---|---|---|
1950 | 67 | 338 035 | 21,4% | Mauno Pekkala |
1956 | 56 | 354 575 | 18,7% | Eino Kilpi |
1962 | 63 | 451 750 | 20,5% | Paavo Aitio |
1968 | 56 | 345 609 | 17,0% | supported Urho Kekkonen of Centre |
1978 | 56 | 445 098 | 18,2% | supported Urho Kekkonen of Centre |
1982 | 32 | 348 359 | 11,0% | Kalevi Kivistö |
1988 | 26 |
330 072 286 833 |
10,7% 9,6% |
Kalevi Kivistö Liike 88 |
None of the party's own candidates were elected President, although Urho Kekkonen was elected both times when SKDL seconded him.