Democratic Centre (Latvia) Explained

Country:Latvia
Democratic Centre and Non-Partisan Public Workers
Native Name:Demokrātiskais centrs un bezpartejiskie sabiedriskie darbinieki
Merger:Workers' Party
Latvian People's Party
Ideology:Centrism
Agrarianism
Position:Centre
Headquarters:Riga

The Democratic Centre (Latvian: Demokrātiskais Centrs), officially the Democratic Centre and Non-Partisan Public Workers (Demokrātiskais centrs un bezpartejiskie sabiedriskie darbinieki),[1] was a political party in Latvia in the inter-war period.

History

The Democratic Centre was initially established as an alliance of the Workers' Party and the Latvian People's Party prior to the 1922 elections, in which it won six seats, becoming the fourth-largest faction in the first Saeima. The following year the two parties officially merged into the Democratic Centre.

The party won five seats in the 1925 elections, becoming the third-largest faction in the 2nd Saeima. The 1928 elections saw the party reduced to three seats, although it recovered to win six seats in the 1931 elections,[2] which included the election of Berta Pīpiņa, the first woman elected to serve in the Saeima.[3] The party was dissolved after the 15 May 1934 Latvian coup d'état.

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Nohlen & Stöver, p1143
  3. News: Чанка (Chanka). Лина (Lina). Восемь первых женщин Латвии. 9 April 2017. Mixnews. 8 March 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20170409204502/http://www.mixnews.lv/ru/exclusive/news/171659_vosem-pervyx-zhens4in-latvii/. 9 April 2017. Riga, Latvia. Russian. Eight women's firsts of Latvia. dead.