Freedom and Solidarity Party

This article is about the political party in Turkey. For the Slovak party, see Freedom and Solidarity.
Freedom and Solidarity Party
Özgürlük ve Dayanışma Partisi
Leader Collective leadership
Founded 1996
Headquarters GMK Bulvari No: 87 / 18, Maltepe, Ankara
Ideology Socialist libertarian[1]
Anti-militarism[2]
Pro-Europeanism
Political position Left-wing
National affiliation United June Movement
International affiliation European Anticapitalist Left, Party of the European Left
Parliament:
0 / 550
Municipalities:
4 / 2,919
Website
http://odp.org.tr

Freedom and Solidarity Party (Turkish Özgürlük ve Dayanışma Partisi (ÖDP)) is a left-wing party in Turkey. The party has had limited electoral success, although it controls a number of town halls and is influential in some unions of public employees. It is a socialist libertarian party.[1]

History

It was founded in 1996 as a merger of several left-wing groupings. In the 1999 general election, its first major electoral outing, the party polled 0.8% of the vote, falling far behind the 10% threshold required for parliamentary representation. A deep internal crisis followed and by 2001, several of the initial groupings left. In 2002 elections, the party's share of the national vote fell further to 0.3%.

In the 2004 local elections, the ÖDP gained control of two town halls in Artvin and Yozgat provinces. In these elections, the ÖDP had joined an electoral coalition with the pro-Kurdish Democratic People's Party (Turkey) (DEHAP) and the left Social Democrat SHP (Sosyaldemokrat Halk Partisi). At the next 2009 local elections, Mithat Nehir was the sole victorious ÖDP candidate in the entire republic (17,723 votes for the whole country, i.e. 0.04%), and became mayor of the Samandağ district.[3][4]

Ufuk Uras, who was then the president of the party was elected to the parliament from the independents' ticket, during the 2007 general election. The party's formal lists, which hadn't fielded candidates in several key constituencies in support of the left-wing candidates standing on the independents' ticket, polled 0.15% in that poll.

In the 6th congress held on June 20, 2009, the delegates elected Alper Taş as the new leader, solely nominated as the chairmanship. Apart from the discussions on some political headlines, Party Assembly consisting of sixty people was also assigned. In this congress, the signals that the party will have a more anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist route were given.

Former chairman Ufuk Uras resigned from ÖDP on June 19, 2009, one day before the congress. During a press conference at Parliament, Uras said, “We are resigning together with the Freedom Left, who have worked in the founding of the party and held various positions at different times in the ÖDP -- from provincial and district branch administration to membership in the party council, central steering and discipline committees -- where we have been struggling since its founding for a historic meeting that overrides the existing structures.”

Ideology and affiliation

In its program, ÖDP advocates "an equal, free, exploitation-less and class-less world."[5] It aims to "end the power of the forces of capital and imperialism"[6] and "set up the power of the labor forces",[7] "towards a libertarian, self-rule-based, internationalist, pro-democratic-planning, ecologist, anti-militarist and feminist socialism."[8] The party is member of the European Anticapitalist Left and since 2007 a full member of the Party of the European Left.

Tendencies

The Libertarian Socialist Platform within the Freedom and Solidarity Party is a successor to the Dev Yol radical left-wing movement.[9] Other minor groups are New Way (USFI member), Liberation Movement (joined Socialist Democracy Party in 2002), Odak that links to THKP-C/Third Way (joined Socialist Democracy Party in 2002), Socialist Labor Movement. Libertarian Left Platform, the tendency that was supportive of Ufuk Uras left the party with Uras in June 2009 and was one of the groups that eventually established the Peoples' Democratic Party.

Election results

Year Votes Vote percentage
1999 248,553 % 0.80
2002 105,862 % 0.34
2007 52,195 % 0.15
Year Votes Vote percentage
1999 263,814 % 0.84
2004 12,026 % 0.04
2009 62,909 % 0.15

Gallery

Sources

  1. 1 2 Gunter, Michael M. (2010). Historical Dictionary of the Kurds (2nd ed.). Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Pub. Group. p. 246. ISBN 0810875071.
  2. "Tüzük" [Statutes] (PDF) (in Turkish). ÖDP. 9 April 2006. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  3. Results for Samandağ, Hürriyet
  4. National results for the ÖDP, Hürriyet
  5. Tüzük. In Turkish: "yeniden üreten eşit, özgür, sömürüsüz ve sınıfsız bir dünya arayışı insanlığın özlemidir" ["an equal, free, exploitation-less and class-less world."]
  6. Tüzük. In Turkish: "doğrultusunda, sermaye güçlerinin egemenliğini, emperyalizmin tahakkümünü ortadan kaldırarak" ["end the power of the forces of capital and imperialism"].
  7. Tüzük. In Turkish: "emek güçlerinin siyasi iktidarının kurulmasını amaçlar" ["set up the power of the labor forces"]
  8. Tüzük. In Turkish: "kapitalizmin ve onun insanlığa dayattığı bütün baskı, sömürü, şiddet ve eşitsizlik biçimlerinin ortadan kalkmasını savunur. Özgürlük ve Dayanışma Partisi, özgürlükçü, özyönetimci, enternasyonalist, demokratik planlamacı, doğa" ["towards a libertarian, self-rule-based, internationalist, pro-democratic-planning, ecologist, anti-militarist and feminist socialism."]
  9. Gunter, Michael M. (2010). Historical Dictionary of the Kurds (2nd ed.). Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Pub. Group. p. 83 and 247. ISBN 0810875071.

External links

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