Patriotic People's Front Explained

Patriotic People's Front
Native Name:Hazafias Népfront
Native Name Lang:Hungarian
Dissolved:June 1990
Successor:Patriotic Electoral Coalition
Headquarters:Budapest, Hungary
Position:Far-left
Colors: Red
Country:Hungary

The Patriotic People's Front (Hungarian: Hazafias Népfront, HNF) was originally a Hungarian political resistance movement during World War II which become later an alliance of political parties in the Hungarian People's Republic. In the latter role, it was dominated by the Communist Party–known as the Hungarian Working People's Party (MDP) from 1948 to 1956 and the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party (MSzMP) from 1956 onward.

History

The Hungarian Front (Magyar Front) was founded by the Hungarian Communist Party (then briefly known as the Peace Party) as a resistance movement against the occupation of Hungary by Nazi German forces during World War II and included the Social Democratic Party (MSZDP), the Independent Smallholders' Party (FKgP) and the National Peasant Party (NPP).[1] The Hungarian Front was replaced by the Hungarian National Independence Front (Magyar Nemzeti Függetlenségi Front, MNFF) on 2 December 1944 which also included the Civic Democratic Party (PDP).[2]

On 1 February 1949,[3] the MNFF become the Hungarian Independence People's Front (MFN), a popular front like in other Communist countries. By this time, the Front was dominated by the MDP (as the Communist Party had been renamed following a merger with the Social Democrats). The non-Communist parties in the Front had been taken over by fellow travellers who turned their parties into loyal partners of the MDP. As such, the MFN took on the same character as similar groupings in the emerging Soviet bloc. The non-Communist members became subservient to the MDP, and had to accept the MDP's "leading role" as a condition of their continued existence.

Under these circumstances, voters were presented with a single list from the MFN at the 1949 elections. The Communist-dominated legislature chosen at this election enacted a new, Soviet-style Constitution, which formally marked the onset of out-and-out Communist rule in Hungary. Elections were held under similar conditions in 1953.

Under Imre Nagy (22–24 October 1954), the MFN was reorganised as the Patriotic People's Front (HNF). During the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, the MSzMP replaced the MDP as the dominant force in the HNF.

Under the somewhat more moderate goulash Communism of János Kádár, the HNF still had near-complete control over the electoral system. As such, at all elections from 1958 to 1985, voters were presented with a single list of HNF candidates.

The Constitution charged the HNF with leading the nation in "complete building up of socialism, for the solution of political, economic, and cultural tasks."[4] While more than one candidate could stand in at least some constituencies after 1966, all prospective candidates had to accept the HNF program to be eligible. The MSzMP used the HNF to actively mobilize against candidates it deemed unacceptable. This made it extremely difficult for independent candidates to get on the ballot.[5] Through the HNF, the MSzMP was able to effectively predetermine the composition of the legislature.

In about 1990, the HNF became the Patriotic Electoral Coalition.

Electoral history

National Assembly elections

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–PositionGovernment
Hungarian Independence People's Front
19495,478,51597.1% 402 1st
19536,256,65399.0% 104 1st
Patriotic People's Front
19586,431,83299.6% 40 1st
19636,813,05898.9% 2 1st
19677,086,59699.7% 9 1st
19717,189,12599.0% 3 1st
197599.6% 1st
19807,462,59399.3% 1st
19857,145,60199.1% 35 1st

Notes and References

  1. http://www.kislexikon.hu/magyar_front.html Magyar Front
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20070310151418/http://www.rev.hu/html/hu/tanulmanyok/1945_56/koalicios.htm Koalíciós közjáték 1945–1948
  3. https://www.arcanum.hu/hu/online-kiadvanyok/Lexikonok-magyarorszag-a-masodik-vilaghaboruban-lexikon-a-zs-F062E/m-F0B8D/magyar-nemzeti-fuggetlensegi-front-F0BBC/ Magyar Nemzeti Függetlenségi Front
  4. Burant, Stephen R. Hungary: A Country Study p202
  5. Burant, p. 181-185