United Smallholders' Party

The United Historical Smallholders and Civic Party (Hungarian: Egyesült Történelmi Kisgazda és Polgári Párt), known mostly by its acronym EKGP or its shortened form United Smallholders' Party (Hungarian: Egyesült Kisgazdapárt), was an agrarianist political party in Hungary, after having several MPs and cabinet members left the Independent Smallholders, Agrarian Workers and Civic Party (FKGP) to continue to support the conservative cabinet of József Antall.

United Historical Smallholders and Civic Party

Egyesült Történelmi Kisgazda és Polgári Párt
First leaderJános Szabó
Last leaderZsolt Rajkai
Founded6 November 1993
Dissolved2 August 2003
Split fromIndependent Smallholders, Agrarian Workers and Civic Party (FKGP)
IdeologyAgrarianism,
National conservativism
Political positionCentre-right
ColoursGreen
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History

Following the decision of FKGP party leader József Torgyán, who withdrew his party's support from the Antall cabinet, which was composed of three parties (MDF, FKGP and KDNP), the parliamentary caucus of the FKGP split into two groups on 24 February 1992. The majority of the causus, the Group of 33 MPs, later 36 MPs continued to support the government, while FKGP (Group of 12 MPs then 10 MPs) went into opposition. The pro-government faction formed the United Smallholders' Party as a formal organizational unit on 6 November 1993.[1] Minister of Agriculture János Szabó was elected as the first party chairman on 19 December 1993, while István Böröcz became leader of the EKGP parliamentary group. 22 members of the Group of 36 MPs joined the new party.[1] Following the death of Antall, the EKGP remained a supporter of the Péter Boross government.

During the 1994 parliamentary election, the EKGP received only 0.82 percent of the votes, while its main rival the Torgyán-led FKGP again entered the parliament with 8.82 percent of the votes.[2] On 17 December 1994, Szabó was replaced by Géza Zsiros. On 4 February 1996, Zsolt Rajkai became the new chairman. The EKGP had been eroded for the coming years. It was unable to run candidates in the following 1998 and 2002 parliamentary elections, as a result the Metropolitan Court of Budapest dissolved the party on 2 August 2003.[1]

Party leaders

PeriodChairmanExecutive Vice-ChairmanVice-ChairmenSecretary-General
1993–1994János SzabóIstván BöröczGyula Kiss
Zsolt Rajkai
László Horváth
Antal Bélafi
1994–1996Géza ZsirosIstván TarElemér Gergátz
Árpád Hadházy
István Pohankovics
Béla Utassy
1996–?Zsolt RajkaiSándor ZsámbokiElemér Gergátz
Árpád Hadházy
István Pohankovics
Béla Utassy

Election results

National Assembly

Election year National Assembly Government
# of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–
1994 44,315
0.82% (#12)
0 / 386
extra-parliamentary
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gollark: Then banned people who were banned from that from using #discussion.

References

  1. Vida 2011, p. 343.
  2. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p. 899. ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7

Sources

  • Vida, István (2011). "Egyesült Történelmi Kisgazda és Polgári Párt (EKGP)". Magyarországi politikai pártok lexikona (1846–2010) [Encyclopedia of the Political Parties in Hungary (1846–2010)] (in Hungarian). Gondolat Kiadó. p. 343. ISBN 978-963-693-276-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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