Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party Explained

Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party
Abbreviation:LSAP
POSL
Leader:[1]
[2]
Foundation:5 July 1902 (historical)
1945 (modern)
Ideology:Social democracy
Headquarters:68, rue de Gasperich
Luxembourg
International:Progressive Alliance
Socialist International
Europarl:Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Regional:SGD/SVD[3]
Country:Luxembourg
Native Name:Luxembourgish; Letzeburgesch: Lëtzebuerger Sozialistesch Aarbechterpartei
Youth Wing:Luxembourg Socialist Youths
Position:Centre-left
Seats1 Title:Chamber of Deputies
Seats2 Title:European Parliament
Seats3 Title:Local councils
Seats4 Title:Benelux Parliament
Colours: Red

The Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (Luxembourgish; Letzeburgesch: Lëtzebuerger Sozialistesch Aarbechterpartei, French: Parti ouvrier socialiste luxembourgeois, German: Luxemburger Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei), abbreviated to LSAP or POSL,[4] is a social democratic,[5] [6] pro-European political party in Luxembourg. The LSAP sits on the centre-left of the political spectrum.

The LSAP is the third-largest party in the Chamber of Deputies, having won 11 of 60 seats at the 2023 general election, and has one seat in the European Parliament. Since March 2022, the party's President have been Francine Closener and Dan Biancalana.[7]

The party is close to the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions, the country's largest trade union centre, but they have no formal links.[8] The LSAP is particularly strong in the south of the country,[8] controlling most of the mayoralties in the large towns of the Red Lands. It is affiliated with the Socialist International, the Progressive Alliance, and the Party of European Socialists.

History

The party was formed on 5 July 1902 as the Social Democratic Party. Left-wing elements split in 1905 to create the Social Democratic Workers' Party. These were both re-united in 1912. In 1916, the party was renamed to 'Socialist Party', part of the Second International.

On 2 January 1921, communist elements split to create the Communist Party of Luxembourg. The Socialist Party was renamed the "Luxembourg Workers' Party" in 1924, and was a member of the Labour and Socialist International between 1923 and 1940.[9] On 5 November 1937, the Party joined the government for the first time, in a coalition under Prime Minister Pierre Dupong.

Post-war

The party was reformed after the Second World War as the 'Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party', in the mould of the Labour Party in the United Kingdom,[10] where the government had been exiled. In the first election after the war, in 1945, the LSAP was the big loser, falling to 26% of the vote, but remained in the National Union Government, along with all other parties.[10] In 1947, the party started its process of re-building itself, and it managed to join a coalition government (1951–1959 in the Dupong-Bodson and Bech Bodson governments, and 1964–1968 in the Werner-Cravatte government). The discussions over the party's direction split the LSAP again. On 2 May 1970, Henry Cravatte was ejected as President by a trades union-led coup. In March 1971, centrist elements, led by Cravatte, split to create the Social Democratic Party.[11] Those who left included 6 Deputies and most of the party leadership.

However, the LSAP could recover by 1974 and joined the DP in a centre-left coalition (the Thorn-Vouel-Berg government), which enacted important social reforms: judicial system reforms (including a humanisation of the penal system), introduction of a fifth week of holiday, general introduction of the 40-hour week, the salary index, reform of unemployment benefits. This did not prevent an electoral defeat in 1979. In this legislative period, the LSAP held their famous energy conference, and decided a moratorium for the atomic power station of Remerschen. This was the definitive end of the project.

In 1984, the LSAP were re-united with most of the Social Democratic Party (some members joined the Christian Social People's Party).

Recent history

Following the 2004 general election, the LSAP served in the government of Luxembourg as junior partner to the Christian Social People's Party (CSV) under Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker in the first Juncker–Asselborn government, with the LSAP's Jean Asselborn serving as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs. The coalition with the CSV continued as the second Juncker–Asselborn government following the 2009 general election, which lasted until July 2013 when the LSAP withdrew its support from the government, necessitating early elections.[12]

Following the 2013 general election, the LSAP was in a three-party Bettel–Schneider government with the Democratic Party and The Greens, with the Democratic Party's Xavier Bettel serving as Prime Minister and Etienne Schneider of the LSAP as Deputy Prime Minister. Since 2023, they have been in opposition again.

Election results

Chamber of Deputies

ElectionVotes%Elected seatsSeats after+/–Government
1919231,67215.6 (#2)New
192273,96310.7 (#4) 2
1925253,25616.2 (#2)
1928352,97032.6 (#2) 4
1931153,80519.2 (#2) 3
1934404,72929.4 (#2) 1
1937238,66524.7 (#2) 4
1945569,02523.4 (#2) 7
1948481,75537.8 (#1) 4
1951372,17733.8 (#2) 4
1954831,83635.1 (#2) 2
1959848,52334.9 (#2)
1964999,84337.7 (#1) 4
1968837,55532.3 (#2) 3
1974875,88129.2 (#2) 1
1979787,86324.3 (#2) 3
19841,104,74033.6 (#2) 7
1989840,09426.2 (#2) 3
1994797,45025.4 (#2) 1
1999695,71822.3 (#3) 4
2004784,04823.4 (#2) 1
2009695,83021.6 (#2) 1
2013664,58620.2 (#2)
2018621,33217.6 (#2) 3
2023711,89018.9 (#2) 1

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European Parliament

ElectionVotes%Seats+/–
1979211,10621.6 (#3)
1984296,38229.9 (#2) 1
1989252,92025.4 (#2)
1994251,500 24.8 (#2)
1999239,04823.6 (#2)
2004240,48422.1 (#2) 1
2009219,34919.5 (#2)
2014137,50411.7 (#4)
2019152,90012.2 (#4)
2024300,87921.7 (#2)

Presidents

The formal leader of the party is the president. However, often, a government minister will be the most important member of the party, as Jean Asselborn is now. Below is a list of presidents of the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party since 1945.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Comité directeur . lsap.lu . 31 August 2023.
  2. Web site: Comité directeur . lsap.lu . 31 August 2023.
  3. Web site: Politieke fracties . . nl . 8 August 2023.
  4. LSAP is more commonly used, although the French POSL is also mandated by the party's statutes. Web site: LSAP party statutes. 19 July 2006. 17 March 2002. Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party. fr. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20060112074856/http://www.lsap.lu/forcedownload.php?iddownload=21&type=_pdf_. 12 January 2006.
  5. Book: Hans Slomp. Europe, A Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics. 13 July 2013. 30 September 2011. ABC-CLIO. 978-0-313-39182-8. 477.
  6. Book: Dimitri Almeida. The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. 14 July 2013. 27 April 2012. CRC Press. 978-1-136-34039-0. 71.
  7. Web site: Comité directeur . lsap.lu . 31 August 2023.
  8. Hearl (1987), p. 255
  9. Kowalski, Werner. Geschichte der sozialistischen arbeiter-internationale: 1923 – 19. Berlin: Dt. Verl. d. Wissenschaften, 1985. p. 308
  10. Thewes (2006), p. 123
  11. Lucardie . A.P.M. . De Stiefkinderen van de Sociaal-Democrati . dead . Jaarboek Documentatiecentrum Nederlandse Politieke Partijen 1990 . nl . https://web.archive.org/web/20110720163107/http://dnpp.eldoc.ub.rug.nl/FILES/root/publicatieLucardie/stiefkinderen/lucardie.pdf . 20 July 2011.
  12. News: Luxembourg Prime Minister Juncker calls for new elections amid scandal. 10 July 2013. Deutsche Welle. 16 July 2013.
  13. Web site: Les présidents du LSAP depuis 1945. https://web.archive.org/web/20090504174800/http://www.lsap.lu/2009/index.php?idnavigation=39&fidlanguage=2. dead. 4 May 2009. 23 April 2010. Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party.