词条 | Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| name = Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions | native_name = Chasse, pêche, nature et traditions | country = France | colorcode = {{Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions/meta/color}} | logo = Logo du CPNT.png | leader = Eddie Puyjalon | president = | secretary_general = | foundation = 1989 | dissolution = | headquarters = BP 87546 64075 Pau | ideology = {{Nowrap|Agrarianism Traditional conservatism Euroscepticism}} | position = | national = Union for a Popular Movement | european = Libertas | europarl = | international = | colours = Green and blue | blank1_title = Members | blank1 = | seats1_title = Seats in the National Assembly | seats1 = {{Composition bar|0|577|hex={{Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions/meta/color}}}} | seats2_title = Seats in the Senate | seats2 = {{Composition bar|0|343|hex={{Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions/meta/color}}}} | seats3_title = Seats in the European Parliament | seats3 = {{Composition bar|0|72|hex={{Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions/meta/color}}}} | seats4_title = Seats in Regional Councils | seats4 = | website = www.cpnt.fr | footnotes = Constitution of France Parliament; government; president }} Hunting, Fishing, Nature and Traditions ({{lang-fr|Chasse, pêche, nature et traditions}}; {{IPA-fr|ʃas, pɛʃ, natyʁ e tʁadiˈsjɔ̃}}; abbreviated as CPNT {{IPA-fr|se.pe.ɛnˈte}}) is an agrarianist French political party which aims to defend the traditional values of rural France. Its current leader is Eddie Puyjalon. The party states it is neither right nor left but represents rural people on the whole in their diversity. The party was a member of the Presidential Majority of Nicolas Sarkozy. History{{refimprove section|date=April 2013}}Formed in 1985, it contested both the European elections of 1989 and 1994 without success. In 1999, it obtained six seats, led by Jean Saint-Josse who was at the top of the list. It lost all representation at the following election to the European Parliament in 2004, when it obtained less than the minimum 3% of votes that allow a party to be reimbursed for campaign expenses. Consequently, it faced a deficit of 300,000 euros. At one stage, it had 32 regional councillors, but lost all of them in that same year. After these problems, most members of the CPNT have joined the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) or the Movement for France, but the party is still in existence, and nominated Frédéric Nihous, a hunter from Northern France, as a candidate in the Presidential election of 2007. Nihous won 1.15% of votes only, much lower than Jean Saint-Josse in 2002. In the 2009 European Parliament election, the party ran as the junior partner of the Movement for France under the etiquette of the Libertas political movement led by Irish businessman Declan Ganley. They won 4.8% of the vote, but only one seat, that of MPF leader Philippe de Villiers. In August 2009, CPNT President Frédéric Nihous announced interest in joining the Liaison Committee for the Presidential Majority, which co-ordinates the parties which support the policies of President Nicolas Sarkozy.[1] After the standing down of Frédéric Nihous in march 2016, Eddie Puyjalon assumed the leadership of the party[2]. Presidents
Popular support and electoral recordCPNT is strong, for obvious reasons, in certain rural areas of France with an important community of hunters. It is strong in the Somme River estuary to the west of Abbeville, in the Manche department and the Gironde department. In the 1999 European election, CPNT won 25% of the vote in the Somme,[3] 15.4% in the Manche, 15.2% in the Landes department and 11.9% in Gironde. In stark contrast, the party barely won 1% of the vote that year in the Alsatian department of Bas-Rhin[4] and did poorly in the east of France, much more industrialized and much less agrarian. CPNT has three general councillors: one in the Somme, one in Gironde and one in the Hérault department. Presidential
Legislative
European Parliament
See also
References1. ^{{cite web|url= http://www.france-info.com/spip.php?article329770&theme=9&sous_theme=10.|title= Après le MPF, CPNT se raccroche à l’UMP}} 2. ^{{Cite news|url=https://france3-regions.francetvinfo.fr/aquitaine/gironde/le-girondin-eddie-puyjalon-succede-frederic-nihous-la-presidence-de-cpnt-951601.html|title=Le girondin Eddie Puyjalon succède à Frédéric Nihous à la présidence de CPNT|work=France 3 Nouvelle-Aquitaine|access-date=2018-08-10|language=fr}} 3. ^{{cite web|url= http://www.interieur.gouv.fr/sections/a_votre_service/resultats-elections/eur1999/001/080/index.html|title= Ministry of the Interior results page|deadurl= yes|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20110615091949/http://www.interieur.gouv.fr/sections/a_votre_service/resultats-elections/eur1999/001/080/index.html|archivedate= 2011-06-15|df= }} 4. ^{{cite web|url= http://www.interieur.gouv.fr/sections/a_votre_service/resultats-elections/eur1999/003/067/index.html|title= Ministry of the Interior results page|deadurl= yes|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20110615092007/http://www.interieur.gouv.fr/sections/a_votre_service/resultats-elections/eur1999/003/067/index.html|archivedate= 2011-06-15|df= }} 5. ^Results of Libertas France, where CPNT was the junior party in a coalition including the stronger Movement for France 6. ^Libertas won one seat, but no CPNT candidate was elected External links
9 : Right-wing parties in France|Libertas.eu|Agrarian parties|Political parties of the French Fifth Republic|Political parties established in 1989|Recreational political parties|Eurosceptic parties in France|1989 establishments in France|Hunting in France |
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