Harman Patil (Editor)

National Peasant Party (Hungary)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
First leader
  
Péter Veres

Newspaper
  
Szabad Szó

Last leader
  
Károly Dobszay

Ideology
  
Agrarianism

National Peasant Party (Hungary)

Founded
  
1939 (1st) 31 October 1956 (2nd) 11 June 1989 (3rd)

Dissolved
  
1949 (1st) 4 November 1956 (2nd) 15 June 1998 (3rd)

The National Peasant Party (Hungarian: Nemzeti Parasztpárt, NPP) was a political party in Hungary between 1939 and 1949. It was led by the writer Péter Veres. The party was revived for a short time during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and after the end of communism in 1989–90.

Contents

History

The party was established in 1939, but was only formalised as an organisation on 19 September 1944. It won 42 seats in the National Interim Assembly elections in 1944. By the following year it had 170,000 members, although it was reduced to 23 seats in the parliamentary elections that year. However, the following year the party won 36 of the 411 seats in the parliamentary elections.

For the 1949 elections it ran as part of the Communist-led Hungarian Independent People's Front, winning 39 seats. The adoption of a new constitution in August 1949 saw the country became a one-party state, with the NPP being merged into the Communist-led Hungarian Working People's Party.

Following the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, the party was revived under the name Petőfi Party and served in the short-lived new government. During the transition to democracy (1989–90), members of the Péter Veres Society re-established the party under the name Hungarian People's Party (MNP) on 11 June 1989 and participated in the Opposition Round Table Talks. The MNP had high hopes regarding the first democratic elections in 1990, however they received only 0.8% of the vote. After that the presidium took the name of Hungarian People's Party–National Peasant Party. Shortly before the 1994 parliamentary elections, two-thirds of the membership joined the National Democratic Alliance (NDSZ) led by Zoltán Bíró and Imre Pozsgay. The MNP–NPP was wiped out by the end of the decade.

Ideology

The party's main policy was land reform. It attracted the support from the middle and lower classes in the countryside, as well as intellectuals in the provinces, and was most popular in eastern Hungary. It was sponsored by the Communist Party, as the Communists could not attract support amongst rural voters. Its supporter base meant it was closer to the Hungarian Communist Party than the Hungarian Social Democratic Party, with some of its leaders, including Ferenc Erdei and József Darvas, being closet communists.

Parliamentary representation

1NPP was a member of the Communist-led Hungarian Independence People's Front (MFN). Hungary became a one-party state after the 1949 election.

References

National Peasant Party (Hungary) Wikipedia