Andrássy-Friedrich Party

The Christian National Agricultural Workers' and Civic Party (Hungarian: Keresztény Nemzeti Földmíves és Polgári Párt), more commonly known as the Andrássy-Friedrich Party (Hungarian: Andrássy-Friedrich Párt, AFP) after the leaders, Gyula Andrássy the Younger and István Friedrich, was a political party in Hungary during the early 1920s.

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History

The party first contested national elections in 1922,[1] winning eleven seats in the parliamentary elections that year, making it the third largest faction in Parliament.

Despite the party's success, it did not contest any further elections.[1]

gollark: Probably.
gollark: Oh, and, additionally (I thought of and/or remembered this now), knowing your actions are monitored is likely to change your behavior too, and make you less likely to do controversial things, which is not very good.
gollark: i.e. demonstrate that they can actually function well, enforce the law reasonably, have reasonable laws *to* enforce in the first place, with available resources/data, **before** invading everyone's privacy with the insistence that they will totally make everyone safer.
gollark: Reduced privacy in return for more safety and stuff might be better if governments had a track record of, well, actually doing that sort of thing effectively.
gollark: I... see.

References

  1. Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p907 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
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