Coexistence (political party) explained

Country:Slovakia
Coexistence
Native Name:Együttélés-Spolužitie-Wspólnota-Soužití
Abbreviation:COEX, EGY
Leader:Miklós Duray
Foundation:1990
Dissolved:18 March 1998
Merged:Party of the Hungarian Coalition
Ideology:Minority politics
Hungarian nationalism[1]
Position:Centre-left[2]
International:Liberal International
Membership:6,000
Membership Year:1997
Colours: Green

Coexistence (Slovak: Spolužitie, Hungarian: Együttélés, Polish: Wspólnota, Soužití) was a political party in Czechoslovakia and Slovakia between 1990 and 1998. Although largely a Hungarian minority party, its membership also included Germans, Poles, Ruthenians and Ukrainians.[3] Their Czech sister party still exists.[4]

History

The party was established in February 1990 by Miklós Duray,[5] and allied with the Hungarian Christian Democratic Movement to take part in the general elections that year.[6] In the elections to the Czechoslovakian Federal Assembly the two parties won five seats in the Chamber of the People and seven in the Chamber of the Nations. In the elections to the National Council of Slovakia the alliance won 14 seats.

The parties maintained their alliance for the 1992 elections,[7] maintaining the same number of seats in the Federal Assembly and the Slovak National Council.

In 1994 Coexistence allied with the Hungarian Christian Democratic Movement and the Hungarian Civic Party to form the Hungarian Coalition.[8] In the elections that year the alliance won seventeen seats (nine of which were Coexistence members),[5] making it the third largest party in the National Council. The three parties officially merged into the Party of the Hungarian Coalition on 18 March 1998.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sofia. Szomolimyil. Grzgorij. Meseznikov. 1997. Parteiensysteme in postkommunistischen Gesellschaften Osteuropas. 145, 155. 18 May 2023. 978-3-322-85102-4. Das Parteiensystem der Slowakei. 10.1007/978-3-322-85102-4 . paywall.
  2. Koudelka. Zdeněk. Současná Slovenská politika. Politologický Časopis. 14 February 1997. 204. 19 March 2017.
  3. Janusz Bugajski (2002) Political Parties of Eastern Europe: A Guide to Politics in the Post-Communist Era ME Sharpe, p320
  4. Web site: Miklósa Duraya osieroceni Polacy na dalekim Śląsku. Coexistentia.
  5. Bugajski, p319
  6. http://eed.nsd.uib.no/webview/index.jsp?study=http://129.177.90.166:80/obj/fStudy/CZPA1990_Display&mode=cube&v=2&cube=http://129.177.90.166:80/obj/fCube/CZPA1990_Display_C1&top=yes Dataset: Slovakia: Parliamentary Election 1990
  7. http://eed.nsd.uib.no/webview/index.jsp?study=http://129.177.90.166:80/obj/fStudy/CZPA1990_Display&mode=cube&v=2&cube=http://129.177.90.166:80/obj/fCube/CZPA1990_Display_C1&top=yes Dataset: Slovakia: Parliamentary Election 1992
  8. Bugajski, p318
  9. http://www.nispa.org/news/ollos.rtf Hungarians in the Slovak Government