Republican Party of Albania explained

Country:Albania
Republican Party of Albania
Native Name:Partia Republikane e Shqipërisë
Colorcode:
  1. 022E4B
Leader:Fatmir Mediu
Founder:Sabri Godo
Foundation:10 January 1991[1]
Ideology:National conservatism[2]
Position:Right-wing[3]
European:European Conservatives and Reformists Party (global partner)[4]
Colours:Blue
Headquarters:Tirana
Seats1 Title:Parliament
Seats2 Title:Council Seats

The Republican Party of Albania (PR or PRSH) is a national-conservative[2] political party in Albania. It currently holds 3 of the 140 seats in the Parliament of Albania, in alliance with the Democratic Party of Albania.

History

The party was founded on 10 January 1991 under the leadership of the writer Sabri Godo, who was also its first Chairman. The party was formed with the backing of the Italian Republican Party.[5] After the Democratic Party, it was the second party to be founded in Albania after the anti-communist revolution in the autumn of 1990.

In the 1992 elections the party received 2.9% of the national vote and won a single seat.[6] They joined a coalition with the Democratic Party, but had little influence on the policies being shaped. The 1996 elections saw the party almost double its share of the vote to 5.9%, winning three seats.[6] After the 1997 uprising, in which the center-right coalition was overthrown by socialist supporters, the party became an opposition party. In the 1997 elections the party was reduced to a single seat.[6]

Before the 2001 elections, the party joined the Union for Victory Coalition under the leadership of the Democratic Party, which won 46 seats. In the 2005 elections the party received 20% of the vote in the national voting for the proportional seats, putting it in first place. Although it won 11 proportional seats, it failed to win a single constituency seat,[7] resulting in the party only being the third largest in Parliament.[8] For the 2009 elections the party was part of the "Alliance for Changes" coalition. However, it was reduced to a single seat, after seeing its vote share fall to just 2.1% of the national total. In the 2011 local elections the party won a total of 67,039 votes throughout the country, twice the amount they had received in the 2009 Albanian parliamentary election.[9]

Election results

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–Status
199127,3931.47
199252,4772.891
199694,5675.742
199731,5732.412
2001Part of BF 4
2005272,74619.966
200931,9902.1110
201352,1683.022
20173,2250.20 3
2021Part of PD–AN3

Notes and References

  1. Robert Elsie (2010) Historical Dictionary of Albania, Scarecrow Press, p384
  2. Web site: Albania. Parties and Elections in Europe. Wolfram. Nordsieck. 2017.
  3. The Albanian Electoral Systems since 1990. Albanian Elections Observatory Brief. 19 April 2013. 1. 2 July 2013.
  4. Web site: Welcome to our new member parties . ACRE . 7 April 2017 . 7 April 2017 . 8 April 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170408081542/http://www.acreurope.eu/item/acre_welcomes_our_new_member_parties . dead .
  5. Book: Alan John Day. Roger East. Richard Thomas. A Political and Economic Dictionary of Eastern Europe. 7 February 2013. 2002. Psychology Press. 978-1-85743-063-9. 11–.
  6. [Dieter Nohlen]
  7. http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/a/albania/albania2005.txt Republic of Albania: Legislative Elections of 3 July 2005
  8. Nohlen & Stöver, p143
  9. http://www.kohajone.com/zarticle.php?id=59033 "Aleanca per Qytetarin", fiton me 70.890 vota