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词条 People of the Orient Party – Christian Democrats
释义

  1. History

  2. Election results

     National Assembly 

  3. References

  4. Sources

{{Infobox political party
|country=Hungary
|name = People of the Orient Party – Christian Democrats
|native_name = Kelet Népe Párt, Kereszténydemokraták
|colorcode = #80CCCC
|logo =
|leader1_title = Leader
|leader1_name = Frigyes Szent-Tamási
|foundation = 21 October 1989
|dissolution = 3 December 1998
|successor = People of the Orient Alliance – Christian National Defence Force (KNSZ–KNV)
|ideology = Christian nationalism
Clerical fascism
Royalism
|position = Far-right
|newspaper = Kelet Népe
|colours =
|headquarters =
|website =
}}{{Politics of Hungary}}

The People of the Orient Party – Christian Democrats ({{lang-hu|Kelet Népe Párt, Kereszténydemokraták}}; KNP–KD), also known as simply People of the Orient Party, was a far-right clerical nationalist political party in Hungary.

History

From Conservative liberalism and Christian democracy, the KNP–KD gradually changed its political position to national far-right party. Initially, the party strived for an neutral, independent parliamentary democratic Hungary,{{sfn|Vida|2011|p=365}} but its position changed by 1998, when under the banner "Faith, Home, Loyalty", the KNP–KD demanded the restoration of the 1000-year-old Kingdom of Hungary.{{sfn|Vida|2011|p=365}}

The KNP–KD participated the 1990 parliamentary election with only one candidate, who received 0.01 percent of the individual votes.[1] On 11 March 1993 it became a founding member of the Christian National Unity led by the Independent Smallholders, Agrarian Workers and Civic Party (FKGP). For a short time, the KNP–KD also concluded an alliance with the neo-Nazi Albert Szabó's Party for World-National People's Supremacy (VNP), but also had a good relationship with the Hungarian Legitimist Party (MLGP) and the Hungarian Freedom Party, which split from the Freedom Party (SZP). The KNP–KD withdrew from contest in the 1994 parliamentary election. The KNP–KD abolished in December 1998 and succeeded by the People of the Orient Alliance – Christian National Defence Force (KNSZ–KNV) which, however, never actually functioned due Szent-Tamási's poor health then death.{{sfn|Vida|2011|p=366}}

Election results

National Assembly

Election yearNational AssemblyGovernment
# of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–
1990 346
0.01%
0|386|hex=#80CCCC}} extra-parliamentary

References

1. ^Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p. 899. {{ISBN|978-3-8329-5609-7}}

Sources

  • {{cite book |author-last=Vida |author-first=István | title=Magyarországi politikai pártok lexikona (1846–2010) [Encyclopedia of the Political Parties in Hungary (1846–2010)] |publisher=Gondolat Kiadó |year=2011 |pages=365–366 |chapter=Kelet Népe Párt, Kereszténydemokraták (KNP–KD) |isbn=978-963-693-276-3|ref=harv|language=hu}}
{{Hungarian political parties}}{{Hungarian far right}}{{DEFAULTSORT:People of the Orient Party - Christian Democrats}}

7 : 1989 establishments in Hungary|1998 disestablishments in Hungary|Defunct political parties in Hungary|Far-right political parties in Hungary|Monarchism in Hungary|Political parties disestablished in 1998|Political parties established in 1989

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