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Progressive Citizens' Party

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Progressive Citizens' Party
Fortschrittliche Bürgerpartei
AbbreviationFBP
PresidentAlexander Batliner
Deputy Prime MinisterSabine Monauni
Prime ministerial candidateErnst Walch
Founded1918
HeadquartersAltenbach 8
9490Vaduz
NewspaperNone[a]
Youth wingYoung FBP[2]
IdeologyConservatism[3][4]
National conservatism[5]
Economic liberalism[5]
Constitutional monarchism[5]
Christian democracy[3]
Political positionCentre-right[6]toright-wing[7]
European affiliationNone[note 1]
ColoursBlue
Landtag
10 / 25
Mayors
4 / 11
Municipal Councilsa
51 / 104
Website
www.fbp.li

a. Municipal Councils = Number listed onrespective websitesubtracted by number of elected mayors (who serve as members on their respective local councils, but are elected separately from other council members) as of 2 April 2023.

TheProgressive Citizens' Party in Liechtenstein(‹See Tfd›German:Fortschrittliche Bürgerpartei in Liechtenstein,FBP)[b]is aconservative[3][4]political partyinLiechtenstein.The FBP is one of the twomajorpolitical parties in Liechtenstein,along with theliberal-conservativePatriotic Union.Founded in 1918 along with the now-defunctChristian-Social People's Party,it is the oldestextantparty in Liechtenstein.[8]

History

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The party was established in 1918 by middle class citizens and members of the agricultural community as a response to the formation of theChristian-Social People's Party(VP).[9]In addition to being linked to the commercial and rural environment, the party was also firmly anchored in theclergy.It won the majority of the elected the1918 elections,[10]but the VP formed a government following theNovember 1918 Liechtenstein putsch.[11]

The VP won elections in1922,January 1926andApril 1926,but the FBP won the1928 elections,and became the party of government until 1938,[11]withJosef Hoopserving as prime minister until 1945. In 1938 the FBP allowed thePatriotic Union(VU) to join it in a coalition government. The two parties governed in coalition until the1997 elections,[12]after which the Patriotic Union formed a government. The FBP won the2001 electionsand its leaderOtmar Haslerbecame prime minister. Following the2005 electionsthe coalition was renewed,[12]with Hasler remaining prime minister. The VU'sKlaus Tschütscherheld the post between2009and2013,after which FBP leaderAdrian Haslerbecame prime minister.

In the2017 state election,the FBP lost 4.8% of the vote and was awarded only nine of the 25 seats. However, it remained the party with the most votes in the state parliament, as the Patriotic Union only gained slightly and still had eight Landtag members.[13]

In the2021 state elections,Adrian Hasler and government councilorMauro Pedrazzini(also a FBP member) decided not to run for government again after eight years. WithSabine Monauni,the FBP nominated a woman as prime minister candidate for the state elections for the first time. The party nominatedKatrin Eggenbergerand Manuel Frick as further candidates for the government.

The FBP won 35.9% of the votes in the 2021 state elections and won 10 seats in the Landtag. Mathematically, the FBP was elected by around 100 voters (0.6%) more. The discrepancy arose from the fact that the voters in theOberland,with 15 votes per ballot paper, had a higher weight on the total party vote result than the voters in theUnterlandwith ten votes per person. Voter turnout was stable at 78.0%. The FBP and VU formed a coalition government, which appointed Monauni as deputy prime minister.[14]If she had become prime minister, she would have been the first female to hold the position.[15]

Ideology and policy

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The FBP tends to be conservative on social/cultural issues. As for economic issues, it iseconomically liberalbut also claims to follow asocial market economypolicy.[16]The party states its policies are based onChristianvalues such as solidarity, respect and justice.[16]It also advocates a dualistic form of government, claiming to support both themonarchyand the people as sovereigns.[16]

LGBT rights

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Compared to thePatriotic Union,members of the FBP are more inclined to supportLGBT rights:

Differences between the two main political parties in Liechtenstein on LGBT rights
Subjects on LGBT rights Progressive Citizens' Party Patriotic Union
Motion to introduce a Registered Partnership law (24 October 2007)[17] 10 For,2 Against 6 For,4 Against
Response to the candidate survey conducted by the Youth wing of the Free List party (leading up to the2021 general election), containing the following question:Should same-sex couples have the same rights as heterosexual couples in all areas?[18] 20 candidates;18(9 'Yes',9 'Rather Yes') to2('Rather No') 22 candidates;15(8 'Yes',7 'Rather Yes') to7(6 'Rather No',1 'No')
Response to a voter poll conducted in February 2021 by theLiechtenstein Institute,regarding the same survey question listed in the row above.[19] 74%(47% 'Yes',27% 'Rather Yes') to27%(13% 'No',14% 'Rather No')a 68%(41% 'Yes',27% 'Rather Yes') to32%(15% 'No',17% 'Rather No')
Signatories on a motion submitted on 21 September 2022 (i.e., to ask the Landtag to introduce legislation that would legalize same-sex civil marriage)[20][21][22]
15 / 25
(60%)
10 / 10
(100% of sitting members, excluding their three (3) substitute members)
2 / 10
(20% of sitting members, excluding their three (3) substitute members)
Amendment of the General Civil Code and the Partnership Act (Equality of same-sex couples in adoption law)[23] 10 For,0 Against 7 For,3 Against
a. Percentages do not add up to 100%.

The FBP also voteden blocwith theFree List(FL) party on 6 May 2022 to narrowly defeat a proposed legislation (i.e.,Amendment to the Article 25 of the Partnership Act) that would have limited adoption and reproductive rights of same-sex couples.[24][25][26]

Electoral history

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Landtag elections

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Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Rank Government
1918 Franz Verling
7 / 15
New 1st Coalition
1922 Josef Ospelt
4 / 15
Decrease3 Decrease2nd Opposition
1926 (Jan) Bernhard Risch
6 / 15
Increase2 Steady2nd Opposition
1926 (Apr) Ludwig Marxer
6 / 15
Steady0 Steady2nd Opposition
1928 Josef Hoop
11 / 15
Increase5 Increase1st Majority
1930
15 / 15
Increase4 Steady1st Majority
1932
13 / 15
Decrease2 Steady1st Majority
1936
11 / 15
Decrease2 Steady1st Majority
1939
8 / 15
Decrease3 Steady1st Coalition
1945 1,553 54.72
8 / 15
Steady0 Steady1st Coalition
1949 Alexander Frick 1,555 52.93
8 / 15
Steady0 Steady1st Coalition
1953 (Feb) 1,458 50.54
8 / 15
Steady0 Steady1st Coalition
1953 (Jun) 1,568 50.43
8 / 15
Steady0 Steady1st Coalition
1957 1,689 52.36
8 / 15
Steady0 Steady1st Coalition
1958 1,839 54.47
9 / 15
Increase1 Steady1st Coalition
1962 Gerard Batliner 1,599 47.18
8 / 15
Decrease1 Steady1st Coalition
1966 1,791 48.47
8 / 15
Steady0 Steady1st Coalition
1970 1,978 48.83
7 / 15
Decrease1 Decrease2nd Coalition
1974 Walter Kieber 17,332 50.08
8 / 15
Increase1 Increase1st Coalition
1978 18,872 50.85
7 / 15
Decrease1 Decrease2nd Coalition
1982 Otto Hasler 18,273 46.53
7 / 15
Steady0 Steady2nd Coalition
1986 39,853 42.75
7 / 15
Steady0 Steady2nd Coalition
1989 75,417 42.13
12 / 25
Increase5 Steady2nd Coalition
1993 (Feb) Markus Büchel 71,209 44.19
12 / 25
Steady0 Steady2nd Coalition
1993 (Oct) 65,075 41.34
11 / 25
Decrease1 Steady2nd Coalition
1997 65,914 39.20
10 / 25
Decrease1 Steady2nd Opposition
2001 Otmar Hasler 92,204 49.90
13 / 25
Increase3 Increase1st Majority
2005 94,545 48.74
12 / 25
Decrease1 Steady1st Coalition
2009 Ernst Walch 86,951 43.47
11 / 25
Decrease1 Decrease2nd Coalition
2013 Adrian Hasler 77,644 40.00
10 / 25
Decrease1 Increase1st Coalition
2017 68,673 35.24
9 / 25
Decrease1 Steady1st Coalition
2021 Sabine Monauni 72,319 35.88
10 / 25
Increase1 Decrease2nd Coalition

Notes

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  1. ^PreviouslyLiechtensteiner Volksblatt.[1]
  2. ^Fortschrittliche Bürgerparteican also be translated as "Progressive Civic Party".
  1. ^The Progressive Citizens' Party is not an official member of any pan-European political party, but its members in theParliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europesit withALDE-PACE,and its youth wing is a member of theEuropean Young Conservatives.

References

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  1. ^"Fortschrittliche Bürgerpartei".e-archiv.li(in German). Liechtenstein National Archives.Retrieved22 February2014.
  2. ^"Junge FBP"(in German). FBP.Retrieved30 June2023.
  3. ^abcNordsieck, Wolfram (2021)."Liechtenstein".Parties and Elections in Europe.Retrieved10 February2021.
  4. ^ab"The curious case of Liechtenstein: A country caught between a prince and democracy".London School of Economics.30 January 2017. Archived fromthe originalon 1 February 2017.Retrieved1 July2023.
  5. ^abcStefanini, Sara (5 February 2017)."Liechtenstein's Populists Gain Ground".Politico.Retrieved5 February2017.
  6. ^"Liechtenstein voters elect new government".The Local.Agence France-Presse.3 February 2013.Retrieved1 July2023.
  7. ^O'Mara, Michael, ed. (1999).Facts about the World's Nations.H. W. Wilson.p. 565.ISBN9780824209551.
  8. ^"History".Fürstentum Liechtenstein.Government of Liechtenstein Marketing. Archived fromthe originalon 21 February 2014.Retrieved13 February2014.
  9. ^Vincent E McHale (1983)Political parties of Europe,Greenwood Press, p609ISBN0-313-23804-9
  10. ^Nohlen, D& Stöver, P (2010)Elections in Europe: A data handbook,p1182ISBN978-3-8329-5609-7
  11. ^abMcHale, p611
  12. ^abNohlen & Stöver, p1157
  13. ^"The 2017 elections in Liechtenstein: Slight changes and a stronger parliamentary opposition".Party Systems & Governments Observatory.7 February 2017.Archivedfrom the original on 11 August 2020.Retrieved11 August2020.
  14. ^"Liechtenstein election: Just 23 ballots separate two biggest parties".Euronews.8 February 2021.Retrieved9 February2021.
  15. ^Daragahi, Borzou (9 February 2021)."Liechtenstein's women only got the vote in 1984. Now the country could get its first female prime minister".The Independent.Retrieved10 February2021.
  16. ^abc"Unser Selbstverständnis"(in German). FBP.Archivedfrom the original on 29 March 2023.Retrieved30 June2023.
  17. ^"Motion Betreffend Eingetragene Partnerschaft Gleichgeschlechtlicher Paare Der Abgeordneten Paul Vogt, Pepo Frick Und Andrea Matt Vom (25. SEPTEMBER 2007)"(in German).
  18. ^"Gleiche Leiche Rechte für Alle!"(in German). FreieListe.li. 18 January 2021.
  19. ^"Wahlumfrage: Rückhalt für gleichgeschlechtliche Paare"(in German). Das Liechtensteiner Vaterland. 6 March 2021.
  20. ^"Motion zur öffnung der Ehe für alle"(PDF).Landtag.li(in German). 21 September 2022.
  21. ^""Ehe für alle" kommt ins Rollen ".Vaterland.li(in German). 21 September 2022.
  22. ^"15 Abgeordnete wollen die" Ehe für alle "".Vaterland.li(in German). 14 September 2022.
  23. ^"Landtag, 2. Dezember 2022, Trakt. 25-29 (watch from 01:19:27 to 01:44:37; see vote result around the 01:41:53 mark)".vimeopro(in German). 2 December 2022.
  24. ^"Abänderung des Partnerschaftsgesetzes und des Allgemeinen Bürgerlichen Gesetzbuches (Einführung der Stiefkindadoption für eingetragene Partner/innen und Lebensgefährt/innen) (Nr. 19/2022) [1. Lesung: 11. März 2022] - Stellungnahme der Regierung (Nr. 41/2022); 2. Lesung".landtag.li(in German). 6 May 2022.
  25. ^"Landtag, 6. Mai 2022, Trakt. 25 - 29".vimeopro(in German). 6 May 2022.
  26. ^"Art. 25 gekippt: Etappensieg für gleichgeschlechtliche Paare - Liechtenstein - Liechtensteiner Volksblatt, die Tageszeitung für Liechtenstein".Liechtensteiner Volksblatt(in German).
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