Bergpartei, die ÜberPartei
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- Politics of Germany
- Political parties
- Elections
Bergpartei, die ÜberPartei, stylized as bergpartei, die überpartei (German pronunciation: [ˌbɛʁkpaʁˈtaɪ diː ˌʔyːbɐpaʁˈtaɪ]) and shortened as B*, is a left-wing anarchist, dadaist party in Germany. Its main proposals include universal basic income, restricting private ownership and leaving NATO.[1]
It is known for the holding of a vegetable battle between two rival districts of Berlin[2] and the video activist film festival nodogma.[3][4]
Program
B* has no domination claim, but refuses to be a joke party. Its additional designation is: radical feminist arm, utopian solidarity branch, post-identity anti-national, anti-materialist action.
The party is considered left-wing and has roots in the Berlin squatter scene. It supports a system of unconditional, universal basic income, proposes strict restrictions on private ownership, advocates leaving NATO and seeks to implement a system that would let the people directly exercise political power through direct democracy and anarchism.[1]
In 2005, the Bergpartei was the first German party to enshrine the unconditional basic income, then called existence money, in its program.[5]
Posters and slogans
The party is famous for its handmade posters and billboards.[6]
- Eat the rich, not animal cadavers
- Bikes don't burn
- Every day sabotage day
- 'Fuck your major projects
- Toughen the laws of nature
- Small but slow
- Growth is a pitfall
- Ads annoy everyone
History
It was founded on 1 April 2011 by fusing two grassroot squatter parties.[7]
The party's founding chairholder was Jan Theiler.[8]
Electoral Results
In the Berlin elections 2011, the party gained 0.9 % in the district Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (including 3.2% in the former squats area "Wahlkreis 5"[9]). In the national elections 2013, the party gained 0.4% in the same district.[10] Berlin 2016: 3,1 % in area Wahlkreis 5 and 0,5 % in the whole district of Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg. 2021 elections were held in Berlin and the federal level at the same time. Bergpartei decided to support the referendum to expropriate landlords but still doubled their votes.
See also
- Dadaism
- Green anarchism
- List of political parties in Germany
Webpages
- www.bergpartei.de official page of Bergpartei
Notes
- ^ a b c Tangian, Andranik (2020). Analytical Theory of Democracy: History, Mathematics and Applications. Düsseldorf: Springer Nature Switzerland AG. p. 363. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-39691-6. ISBN 978-3-030-39691-6. ISSN 2197-8530.
- ^ Wasserschlacht - The Great Border Battle on Vimeo
- ^ "Website of the Nodogma film festival". Archived from the original on 2022-01-17. Retrieved 2013-07-30.
- ^ Exberliner about Nodogma
- ^ "Suchergebnisse für "bergpartei" – Grundeinkommen ist wählbar!". www.grundeinkommen-ist-waehlbar.de. 13 September 2017. Retrieved 2021-09-04.
- ^ Signs of times Exberliner
- ^ "Exberliner about Überpartei". Archived from the original on 2015-02-12. Retrieved 2013-07-30.
- ^ article by thelocal
- ^ "official election data by the ministry of statistics". Archived from the original on 2015-04-03. Retrieved 2013-07-30.
- ^ "official election data by the ministry of statistics". Archived from the original on 2013-09-28. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
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(733 seats)
(96 seats for Germany)
Major parties |
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Minor parties |
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Major parties |
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Regional parties |
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above the district level)
- Alliance C
- Animal Protection Alliance
- APPD
- Basic Income Alliance
- Bavaria Party
- Bergpartei, die ÜberPartei
- BüSo
- Centre Party
- DAVA
- Democracy in Motion
- dieBasis
- Feminist Party
- Free Saxony
- German Communist Party
- DSU
- Wir Bürger
- Marxist–Leninist Party
- NPD
- Verjüngungsforschung
- The Humanists
- Party of Reason
- The Third Path
- The Republicans
- The Urbans
- Socialist Equality Party
- Statt Party
- V-Partei3
- Values Union
- CDU: does not participate in the state election in Bavaria; instead, an associated party CSU is participating here.
- Greens: are currently not in the state parliament of the Saarland
- FDP: is currently not in state parliaments of Brandenburg, Lower Saxony, Saarland and Saxony.
- AfD: is currently not in the state parliament of Schleswig-Holstein.
- The Left: is currently not in the state parliaments of Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Hesse, Lower Saxony, North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland and Schleswig-Holstein.
- Free Voters: are currently only in the state parliaments of Bavaria and Rhineland-Palatinate.