German-Baltic Reform Party
Latvian political party
The German-Baltic Reform Party (German: Deutsch-Baltische Reformpartei) was a Baltic German political party in Latvia during the inter-war period. It contested elections as part of the Committee of the German Baltic Parties alliance. The party was led by Edwin Magnus.[1]
History
The party was formed on 25 January 1920 by moderate rightwing-liberal sectors in the German minority. It was dissolved on 15 May 1934 following the self-coup by Kārlis Ulmanis.
Members of the Saeima
Body | Years | Member | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Constituent Assembly | 1920–1922 | Edwin Magnus | |
First Saiema | 1922–1925 | Manfred von Vegesack | |
Second Saeima | 1925–1928 | – | |
Third Saeima | 1928–1931 | Lothar Schoeler | |
Fourth Saeima | 1931–1934 | Lothar Schoeler | Alliance leader from 19 October 1933 |
References
- ^ Wende, Frank (1981). Lexikon zur Geschichte der Parteien in Europa. Stuttgart: Kröner, p. 372
- v
- t
- e
(100 seats)
- New Unity
- 26; JV
- LP
- KN
- TPuN
- VuV
- Union of Greens and Farmers
- United List
- 15; LZP
- LP
- Latvian Association of Regions
- LRA
- VP
- National Alliance
- 13
- For Stability!
- 11
- The Progressives
- 10
- Latvia First
- 9
(9 seats out of 720)
- New Unity
- 2; EPP
- National Alliance
- 2; ECR
- For Latvia's Development
- 1; RE
- United List
- 1; ECR
- The Progressives
- 1; Greens-EFA
- Harmony
- 1; S&D
- Latvia First
- 1; PfE
- Action Party
- Alliance of Young Latvians
- Awakening
- Awakening for Latvia
- KDS
- Centre Party
- For a Humane Latvia
- Force of People's Power
- Honor to serve Riga
- People's Servants for Latvia
- Platform 21
- Progressive Christian Party
- Republic
- Sovereign Power
- New Conservative Party
- United for Latvia
interwar parties
- Agrarian Union of the Landless
- Christian National Union
- Democratic Centre
- German-Baltic Reform Party
- Group of Non-Partisan Citizens
- Jewish
- Agudas Israel
- Bund
- Ceire Cion
- Jewish National Bloc
- Mizrachi
- Labour League of Latvia
- Latgale
- List of Lithuanians and Catholics
- New Farmers-Small Landowners Party
- Non-Partisan Landless Farmers
- Party for Peace and Order
- Party of the Orthodox
- Polish-Catholic Latvian Union of Poles
- Russian Public Workers' Association
- Union of Social Democrats – Mensheviks and Rural Workers
- United List of Russians
- Vecticībnieki
- Workers' Party
- Portal:Politics
- List of political parties
- Politics of Latvia
This article about a Latvian political party is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e