Значение слова "CENTER PARTY" найдено в 3 источниках

CENTER PARTY

найдено в "Historical dictionary of Weimar Republik"
Center Party: translation

(Zentrum)
   Founded in the Prussian Abgeordnetenhaus in 1858 as Fraktion des Zentrums, the Center Party was the political voice of Prussian, and later German, Catholicism. Although plans were conceived in the Republic's early months to change its name and to appeal to Protestants* and workers—the Center campaigned in January 1919 as the Christliche Volkspartei (Christian People's Party)—such ideas were abandoned when it became clear that fears of a socialist Kulturkampf(Bismarck's policy of branding Catholics* subversives and denying them civil rights) were chimerical. Thus there was little in the Weimar years to distinguish the Party from its imperial counterpart (its Bavarian branch, favoring federalism above centralization, became known as the Bavarian People's Party*). Other than that its membership was Catholic, the Center's electorate, especially after the enfranchisement of women,* was a mi-crocosm of Germany. Since the country's Catholic population was reduced by the Versailles Treaty* in far greater proportion than its Protestant population, the Party's Reichstag* faction dropped by just under a quarter. Moreover, throughout the Weimar years it experienced a steady loss of electoral support. Meanwhile, studies of voter patterns indicated that women's suffrage provided the Center with a more stable base of support than would otherwise have been the case—a fact that annoyed the old hierarchy.
   As a party representing both a religious minority and a broad socioeconomic spectrum, the Center generally supported positions favoring toleration and de-mocracy during the Weimar years. But open-mindedness came at a price: many priests, intellectuals, and Catholic landowners, repelled by democracy and the Party's inclination to work with socialists, deserted the Center in favor of the DNVP. At the same time, however, only the most reactionary Catholics regretted the passing of the Hohenzollern monarchy.Ultimately, by tolerating the Repub-lic, the Center became one of the Weimar Coalition* parties with the SPD and the DDP.
   The Center's religious basis served increasingly as a handicap to political compromise, especially where issues of church and state were entangled. Grow-ing ambivalence with parliamentary democracy led the Center from solidarity with the SPD during Weimar's early years (e.g., in passage of the 1922 Law for the Protection of the Republic*) to association with the DNVP (inspired by a resolution to maintain separate confessional schools). Moreover, its loose al-liance with the liberal Windthorstbund, a Catholic youth group linked with the Party since the 1870s, became increasingly uncomfortable. Internal discord erupted in 1927 when Finance Minister and Party colleague Heinrich Kohler* drafted a provocative civil-service salary increase; damned by Adam Stegerwald,* leader of the Catholic labor movement, the bill divided the Party's Reichstag faction. Germania, the Party's official newspaper, struggled through-out the Weimar era to define Center policy; its editorial pages mirrored the political conflict between leftist and rightist proponents.
   The analysis of the Center Party by Ellen Evans accents an important point: founded originally as a defender of Catholic interests, the Center was so suc-cessful at shaping the Weimar Constitution,* thereby giving Catholics every-thing for which they had toiled for five decades, that its role as advocate for a threatened minority became anachronistic. Gradually comprehending the change, its leadership grew conservative and turned to the Right. In 1933, under the dubious leadership of Ludwig Kaas,* the Party surrendered its parliamentary responsibility by voting for Hitler's* Enabling Act.*
   REFERENCES:Ellen Evans, "Center Wages Kulturpolitik" and German Center Party; Morsey, Deutsche Zentrumspartei and Untergang; Scholder, Churches and the Third Reich.


найдено в "Historical Dictionary of Israel"
Center Party: translation

   An ideologically centrist political party formed in late 1998 to contest the 17 May 1999 election (see KNESSET ELECTIONS) to the 15th Knesset. Its founders were former Likud members of the Knesset and cabinet ministers Dan Meridor, Ronnie Milo, and Yitzhak Mordechai and former Israel Defense Forces chief of staff Amnon Lipkin-Shahak.In seeking to create a third political constituency, the party's founders were responding to strong popular support for a political party that would occupy the ideological middle ground between the Likud and Israel Labor parties and their respective alliance partners. On foreign and security policy, the Center Party platform advocated "examining Palestinian interests, including their aspiration for a state, in the framework of [final status] negotiations, while maintaining [Israel's] vital interests." With regard to relations with Syria and Lebanon, it envisioned a "new strategic situation in the north with territorial compromise on the Golan Heights." Its domestic policy platform promised increased national unity based on a more equitable distribution of resources to all segments of Israeli society; efforts to improve the country's educational system; the promulgation of a formal, written constitution; and an end to "religious coercion" practiced by the ultra-Orthodox political parties.
   The Center Party selected as its leader the former defense minister Yitzhak Mordechai, who also was its candidate for prime minister until the eve of the 17 May 1999 elections, when he withdrew and threw his support to One Israel candidate Ehud Barak. The party won six seats in the 15th Knesset and joined the governing coalition announced by Barak on 6 July 1999, with Mordechai as transportation minister and Lipkin-Shahak as minister of tourism. The party dissolved in 2001 during the 15th Knesset, with its key actors either returning to their roots in the Likud Party or withdrawing from party politics.


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре политической терминологии"
= centrist party партия центра, центристская партия


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