Union of Right Forces

Union of Right Forces
Сою́з Пра́вых Сил
President (s) Sergey Kiriyenko
(1998—2001)
Boris Nemtsov
(2001—2004)
Viktor Nekrutenko
(2004—2005)
Nikita Belykh
(2005—2008)
Founded December 10, 1998 (1998-12-10)
Dissolved November 15, 2008 (2008-11-15)
Succeeded by Right Cause
Newspaper "Just Cause"
Membership  (2007) 57,410
Ideology Liberal conservatism
Pro-Europeanism
Political position Centre-right
International affiliation International Democrat Union
Colours              Blue, red, white
Slogan "Оur cause is just"
Website
www.sps.ru

The Union of Right Forces political party, or SPS (Russian: Сою́з Пра́вых Сил, СПС/Soyuz Pravykh Sil), is a Russia political public organization and former party, initially founded as an electoral bloc in 1999 and associated with free market reforms, privatization, and the legacy of the "young reformers" of the 1990s: Anatoly Chubais, Boris Nemtsov, and Yegor Gaidar. The party was officially self-dissolved in 2008. Nikita Belykh was the party's last leader in 2005-2008.

In 2011, the SPS was refounded by some of its former members as the Union of Right Forces Movement. In 2012, it was registered as a political public organization, a type of NGO. In Russia, participation in elections require being accepted into the list of political parties controlled by the Ministry of Justice. The current leader of the SPS is Leonid Gozman.

Both the former SPS and the refounded SPS were accepted as an associate member of the International Democrat Union.

Political party (1999-2008)

The SPS was established in 1999, following a merger of several smaller liberal parties, including Democratic Choice of Russia and Democratic Russia. In the 1999 parliamentary elections the SPS won 8.6% of the vote and 32 seats in the Russian State Duma (lower house of the Federal Assembly of Russia).

In the 2000 presidential election, the SPS supported Vladimir Putin's candidacy, though many of the party leaders supported Grigory Yavlinsky.

From 2000 to 2003, the SPS was led by former Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov. Under Nemtsov's leadership, SPS strongly opposed what they saw to be the authoritarian policies of President Vladimir Putin and argued that political and media freedoms in Russia had been curtailed.

In the 2003 parliamentary elections the SPS, according to official results, received 4% of the vote and failed to cross the 5% threshold necessary for parliamentary representation. A number of SPS candidates came second in single-mandate electoral districts the party had previously held, such as Irina Khakamada in St. Petersburg, Vladimir V. Kara-Murza in Moscow, or Boris Nadezhdin in the Moscow region. Despite allegations of fraud, Boris Nemtsov accepted responsibility for the election defeat and resigned as SPS leader in January 2004. On 28 May 2005 Nikita Belykh was elected as the new leader of the party.

Plans to merge with Yabloko were shelved in late 2006.[1]

The party won 0.96% of votes in the 2007 elections, not breaking the 7% barrier, and thus received no seats in the Duma.

In 2008, Nikita Belyh left his chair to Leonid Gozman. On 1 October 2008, the federal political council of the party voted to dissolve the party and merge it with Civilian Power and Democratic Party of Russia, forming a new liberal-democratic party called Right Cause,[2] which succeeded the SPS as a member of the International Democrat Union.

Political public organization (2011-present)

In 2011, a group of former members accused the Right Cause of being too close to the Russian government under Vladimir Putin and refounded the SPS, registering it as a political public organization. As a consequence, the International Democrat Union suspended the membership of the Right Cause and returned it to  the new SPS.

On 27 February 2014, the SPS formally condemned the 2014 Russian military intervention in Ukraine.[3]

See also

References

  1. Russian liberal SPS, Yabloko parties give up unification plans RIA Novosti, 16 December 2006.
  2. SPS Party Announced Dissolution Kommersant, 2 October 2008
  3. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 March 2014. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
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