Christian Democratic Party of Moldova

History

Prior to the 1994 elections the PDCM joined the Bloc of Peasants and Intellectuals, alongside the Alliance of Free Peasants (AȚL), the Congress of Intellectuals, the Democratic Christian League of the Women of Moldova (LDCFM) and the National Liberal Party (PNL).[1] The bloc received 9% of the vote, winning 11 of the 104 seats and becoming the third-largest faction in Parliament.

In June 1994 the PDCM and the seatless Democratic Party merged into the Congress of the Intellectuals, which was renamed United Democratic Congress, before being renamed the Party of Democratic Forces in October 1995.[1]

gollark: Yep, that's right, some of my code actually obeys some law or other.
gollark: Oh, and in potatOS Lua you can *also* do: `(1 / " ") * string`
gollark: So you can do roughly the same things fairly easily.
gollark: Lua, sadly, doesn't have string split built in, but does have a ton of weird regexy string manipulation functions builtin.
gollark: In PotatOS Lua you can actually do `string / " "`.

References

  1. Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1334 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7


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