Progressive Constitutionalist Party (Malta)

History

The PCP was established in 1953 by Mabel Strickland, owner of the Times of Malta and daughter of Gerald Strickland, the founder of the Constitutional Party.[1] It was a split from the Constitutional Party, which Strickland had left in protest against its support for the Labour Party's policy of integration with the United Kingdom.[1]

The party failed to win a seat in elections in 1953 and 1955, but won a single seat in the 1962 elections. However, it lost its seat in the post-independence 1966 elections. After failing to win a seat in the 1971 elections it subsequently disappeared.[2]

Ideology

The party promoted loyalty to the Catholic church and the British Crown, but advocated dominion status for Malta to avoid any cultural assimilation or secularisation that integration with the United Kingdom would bring.[2] It also held a strict anti-communist line.[1]

gollark: +++delete jabu's swag
gollark: You can't do that. Our clearance management systems are protected against deletion attacks.
gollark: That information is beyond your clearance level.
gollark: That information has been deleted.
gollark: They become deleted. They enter a deletion state.

References

  1. Vincent E McHale (1983) Political parties of Europe, Greenwood Press, p635 ISBN 0-313-23804-9
  2. McHale, p636
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.