Democratic Union (Slovakia)

Slovak political party

The Democratic Union (Slovak: Demokratická únia, DÚ) was a liberal party in Slovakia.[3]

History

The party was established on 25 March 1995 by a merger of the Democratic Union of Slovakia and the National Democratic Party, and was led by was Eduard Kukan. In 1998, it joined the Slovak Democratic Coalition,[4] and in 2000, it merged into the Slovak Democratic and Christian Union.[5]

References

  1. ^ Mallok, Katarína (2005), Frauen und politische Macht in der postkommunistischen Slowakei (PDF), p. 155
  2. ^ a b Christoph, Thanei (2002). "Wahlen zum slowakischen Parlament". Konrad Adenauer Stiftung. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
  3. ^ Kopecky, Petr; Učeň, Peter (2003), "Return to Europe? Patterns of Euroscepticism among the Czech and Slovak political parties", The Road to the European Union: The Czech and Slovak Republics, Manchester University Press, pp. 166–167, ISBN 9780719065972
  4. ^ Bútora, Martin; Bútorová, Zóra; Mesežnikov, Grigorij (2003), "Slovakia's democratic awakening", The Road to the European Union: The Czech and Slovak Republics, Manchester University Press, p. 52, ISBN 9780719065972
  5. ^ Hacker, Paul (2010), Slovakia on the road to independence, Penn State Press, p. 180, ISBN 978-0271054179
  • v
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In the National Council
(150 seats)
  • Direction (42)
  • Progressives (32)
  • Voice (27)
  • Slovakia (11)
    • Christians (2)
    • For the People (1)
    • New Majority (1)
  • Christian Democrats (12)
  • Freedom and Solidarity (10)
    • Civic Conservatives (1)
  • Slovak Nationalists (10)
  • Democrats (1)
  • Independents (1)
In the European Parliament
(15 seats)Extra-parliamentary parties
Significant defunct parties (post-1989)
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