New Farmers' Union
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The New Farmers' Union (Latvian: Jaunzemnieku savienība, JS) was a centrist political party in Latvia in the inter-war period.
History[edit]
The party was established by the merger of several parties, and was officially known as the Latvian New Farmers' Union, the List of Non-Partisan New Farmers, Progressive Old Farmers and Labour Intelligentsia.[1] It first contested national elections in 1922, when it won three seats in the 1st Saeima. It went on to retain its three seats in the 2nd Saeima after the 1925 elections.
Shortly before the 1928 elections it was proposed that the party should merge with the New Farmers-Small Landowners Party (J-S), which had also won three seats in the 1925 elections. Although the merger did not happen, many party members left to join J-S after the party failed to win a seat in the 1928 elections.
References[edit]
- ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1130 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
(100 seats)
(8 seats out of 705)
interwar parties
- Agrarian Union of the Landless
- Christian National Union
- Democratic Centre
- German-Baltic Reform Party
- Group of Non-Partisan Citizens
- Jewish
- Labour League of Latvia
- Latgale
- List of Lithuanians and Catholics
- New Farmers-Small Landowners Party
- Non-Partisan Landless Farmers
- Party for Peace and Order
- Party of the Orthodox
- Polish-Catholic Latvian Union of Poles
- Russian Public Workers' Association
- Union of Social Democrats – Mensheviks and Rural Workers
- United List of Russians
- Vecticībnieki
- Workers' Party