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List of Christian democratic parties
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Christian democratic parties are political parties that seek to apply Christian principles to public policy. The underlying Christian democracy movement emerged in 19th-century Europe, largely under the influence of Catholic social teaching and Neo-Calvinist theology.[1][2] Christian democracy continues to be influential in Europe and Latin America, though in a number of countries its Christian ethos has been diluted by secularisation. In practice, Christian democracy is often considered centre-right on cultural, social and moral issues, but centre-left "with respect to economic and labor issues, civil rights, and foreign policy" as well as the environment,[3][nb 1] generally supporting a social market economy.[5] Christian democracy can be seen as either conservative, centrist, or liberal / left of, right of, or center of the mainstream political parties depending on the social and political atmosphere of a given country and the positions held by individual Christian democratic parties. In Europe, where their opponents have traditionally been secularist socialists, Christian democratic parties are moderately conservative overall, whereas in the very different cultural and political environment of Latin America they tend to lean to the left. It is the dominant centre-right political movement in Europe, but by contrast, Christian democratic parties in Latin America tend to be left-leaning.[6] Christian democracy includes elements common to several other political ideologies, including conservatism, liberalism, and social democracy. In the United States, Christian democratic parties of Europe and Latin America, deemed conservative and liberal respectively in their geopolitical regions, are both generally regarded as farther left-wing of the mainstream.[citation needed]
Alphabetical list by country
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A
[edit]- Christian-Democratic Rebirth Party[8]
- Christian Democratic Union of Armenia
- National Christian Party
B
[edit]- Croatian Democratic Union 1990[11]
- Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina[11]
- Croatian Christian Democrats
C
[edit]- Movement for Democracy
- União Caboverdeana Independente e Democratica (Cape Verdean Union for an Independent Democracy) – UCID
- Christian Democratic Party[7]
- Reform Party[7]
- Social Christian Unity Party
- Social Christian Republican Party
- Christian Democratic Alliance
- Croatian Democratic Union[13]
- Homeland Movement
- Croatian Christian Democratic Party[13]
- Croatian Sovereignists
D
[edit]- Christian Democratic Party (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
- Convention of Christian Democrats
- Democratic Social Christian Party
- Federalist Christian Democracy – Convention of Federalists for Christian Democracy
- Movement for the Liberation of the Congo
E
[edit]- Christian Democratic Party (Egypt), a Coptic party in Egypt founded in the 1950s.[16]
F
[edit]G
[edit]- Christian Democratic Union of Germany[21]
- Christian Social Union in Bavaria[21]
- Centre Party
- Family Party of Germany
- Alliance C – Christians for Germany
H
[edit]I
[edit]- Forza Italia[26]
- Popular Alternative
- Populars for Italy
- Solidary Democracy
- South Tyrolean People's Party[26]
- Union of the Centre[26]
- Us Moderates
K
[edit]L
[edit]- Lithuanian Christian Democracy Party
- Homeland Union – Lithuanian Christian Democrats[28]
- Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania[28]
- Christian Union
- National Alliance
M
[edit]N
[edit]- Alliance
- Christian Democratic Appeal[30]
- Christian Union[30]
- Farmer–Citizen Movement
- New Social Contract
- Jezus Leeft
P
[edit]- Lakas–CMD (Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats)
- Bangon Pilipinas Party
- Centrist Democratic Party of the Philippines
- Liberal Party (Philippines) (factions)
- Agreement
- Christian Democracy of the 3rd Polish Republic
- Civic Platform[34]
- Law and Justice
- Polish People's Party[34]
R
[edit]- Christian-Democratic National Peasants' Party
- National Liberal Party
- Force of the Right
- People's Movement Party[36]
S
[edit]T
[edit]U
[edit]V
[edit]Other entities
[edit]- Global – Centrist Democrat International – headquartered in Brussels
- European Union – European People's Party – Centrist Democratic regional in Europe; and the largest group in European Parliament
European Christian Political Party - Americas – Christian Democrat Organization of America – Centrist Democratic regional in the Americas, North and South
Related philosophies
[edit]- Catholic social teaching
- Communitarianism
- Distributism
- Neo-Calvinism
- Social conservatism
- Social market economy
- Political Catholicism
- Christian politics
- Christian Zionism
- Liberal conservatism
- Abolitionism
- New World Order
Indices
[edit]See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Monsma, Stephen V. (2012). Pluralism and Freedom: Faith-based Organizations in a Democratic Society. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 13. ISBN 9781442214309.
This is the Christian Democratic tradition and the structural pluralist concepts that underlie it. The Roman Catholic social teaching of subsidiarity and its related concepts, as well as the parallel neo-Calvinist concept of sphere sovereignty, play major roles in structural pluralist thought.
- ^ Witte, John (1993). Christianity and Democracy in Global Context. Westview Press. p. 9. ISBN 9780813318431.
Concurrent with this missionary movement in Africa, both Protestant and Catholic political activists helped to restore democracy to war-torn Europe and extend it overseas. Protestant political activism emerged principally in England, the Lowlands, and Scandinavia under the inspiration of both social gospel movements and neo-Calvinism. Catholic political activism emerged principally in Italy, France, and Spain under the inspiration of both Rerum Novarum and its early progeny and of neo-Thomism. Both formed political parties, which now fall under the general aegis of the Christian Democratic Party movement. Both Protestant and Catholic parties inveighed against the reductionist extremes and social failures of liberal democracies and social democracies. Liberal democracies, they believed, had sacrificed the community for the individual; social democracies had sacrificed the individual for the community. Both parties returned to a traditional Christian teaching of "social pluralism" or "subsidiarity," which stressed the dependence and participation of the individual in family, church, school, business, and other associations. Both parties stressed the responsibility of the state to respect and protect the "individual in community."
- ^ Vervliet, Chris (2009). Human Person. Adonis & Abbey. pp. 48–51. ISBN 978-1-912234-19-6.
- ^ Kte'pi, Bill (2009). "Belgium". In Wankel, Charles (ed.). Encyclopedia of Business in Today's World: A – C. Sage. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-4129-6427-2.
- ^ Vervliet 2009, pp. 48–51.
- ^ Szulc, Tad (1965). "Communists, Socialists, and Christian Democrats". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 360 (1): 102. doi:10.1177/000271626536000109. ISSN 0002-7162. S2CID 145198515.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Mainwaring, Scott; Scully, Timothy, eds. (2003). Christian Democracy in Latin America: Electoral Competition and Regime Conflicts. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 81. ISBN 0-8047-4598-6.
- ^ "Arminfo: New Christian Democratic Party to support Pashinyan's government". arminfo.info.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Democracy Won’t Save the Middle East’s Religious Minorities. Maged Atiya. October 24, 2019. Providence Magazine.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Archived from the original on 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Colomer, Josep M. (2008-07-25). Comparative European Politics. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-07354-2.
- ^ a b c Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b c Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2008). "Macedonia". Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived from the original on 12 June 2010.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2017). "Catalonia/Spain". Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived from the original on 12 December 2017. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
- ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram. "Parties and Elections in Europe". www.parties-and-elections.eu. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
- ^ "A Christian Democrat leadership for the UK". Financial Times. 2016-10-07. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10. Retrieved 2021-11-22.
- ^ Stanley, Tim (2016-10-05). "Theresa May has closed the liberal era. Bring on Christian democracy". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2021-11-22.
- ^ Freston, Protestant Political Parties, 53.
- ^ Longenecker, Dwight (12 May 2016). "Is It Time for a US Christian Democracy Party?". Aleteia. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
- ^ "El perfil ideológico del Partido Blanco" (in Spanish). República.com. 15 June 2014.
- ^ "Proyecto Venezuela suspende su participación en el proceso de validación". La Patilla (in European Spanish). 26 March 2017. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
List of Christian democratic parties
View on GrokipediaIdeology and Principles
Core Tenets and First-Principles Foundations
Christian democratic ideology fundamentally derives its principles from Catholic social teaching, a body of doctrine developed through papal encyclicals beginning with Rerum Novarum in 1891, which addressed the industrial age's social disruptions by affirming workers' rights to fair wages, union organization, and private property while rejecting both unbridled capitalism and class-conflict socialism.[9] This teaching posits that political and economic systems must serve the inherent dignity of the human person, viewed as created in God's image with intrinsic value independent of utility or productivity, forming the bedrock for all social ordering.[10] Empirical observations of human interdependence, as evidenced in historical responses to poverty and inequality—such as 19th-century labor exploitation rates exceeding 70% in European factories—underscore the causal necessity of structures that balance individual initiative with communal support to prevent dehumanizing atomization or state overreach.[2] Central to these foundations is subsidiarity, the principle that social and political issues should be resolved at the most local or intermediate level capable of effective action, empowering families, communities, and voluntary associations over centralized authority to foster human flourishing without eroding personal responsibility.[11] Articulated formally in Quadragesimo Anno (1931), subsidiarity counters both totalitarian consolidation, as seen in interwar regimes that suppressed local governance leading to inefficiencies and rights abuses, and excessive individualism by recognizing that higher authorities exist to assist, not supplant, lower ones. Complementing this is solidarity, which emphasizes mutual interdependence and obligation among persons as members of a shared human family, driving policies for economic justice such as progressive taxation and welfare targeted at the vulnerable, grounded in the observable reality that isolated self-interest yields societal instability, as in pre-welfare Europe's recurring famines and unrest.[12] These tenets reject ideological extremes: socialism for subordinating the person to the collective, and liberalism for prioritizing markets over moral ends, instead advocating a "social market economy" where competition serves the common good, evidenced by post-1945 West German growth rates averaging 8% annually under Christian democratic governance.[2] From first principles, Christian democracy reasons that human nature—rational, free, and teleologically oriented toward truth and community—necessitates governance that upholds natural law, derived from observable universals like the family unit's role in child-rearing outcomes (e.g., studies showing two-parent households correlate with 20-30% lower poverty rates)—over positivistic or relativistic alternatives prone to arbitrary power.[13] This causal realism prioritizes empirical verification of policies' effects on human dignity, such as subsidiarity's promotion of civic engagement, which data from European Christian democratic states link to higher voluntary association densities compared to centralized systems.[14] While primarily Catholic in origin, Protestant influences like sphere sovereignty—allocating authority to distinct societal domains (church, state, family)—reinforce these foundations in parties outside Catholic-majority regions, ensuring ideological adaptability without diluting the commitment to ordered liberty under divine moral order.[15]Distinctions from Related Ideologies
Christian democracy differs from conservatism primarily in its foundational reliance on Catholic social teaching, such as the principles of subsidiarity—which delegates decision-making to the lowest effective level—and solidarity, fostering a social market economy that balances individual initiative with communal welfare responsibilities. Conservatism, by contrast, emphasizes the organic preservation of traditions, pragmatic incrementalism, and national sovereignty, often with less explicit theological grounding and a greater tolerance for market-driven policies or nationalist priorities over supranational federalism.[16] This distinction arose historically from Christian democracy's post-World War II adaptation to parliamentary pluralism and European integration, while conservatism retained ties to pre-war authoritarian elements or "one-nation" paternalism without the same confessional universalism.[16] In relation to social democracy, Christian democracy shares commitments to welfare provision and labor rights but roots these in Christian anthropology, prioritizing the traditional family as society's basic unit and resisting excessive state centralization through subsidiarity, as opposed to social democracy's secular, revisionist socialist framework that favors universal entitlements and broader government intervention.[17] For instance, Christian democratic welfare models in countries like Germany emphasize family-oriented benefits derived from papal encyclicals such as Rerum Novarum (1891), whereas social democratic systems in Scandinavia promote gender-neutral universalism without theological mandates.[17] Both ideologies expanded social spending post-1945, but Christian democracy defends private property more vigorously against collectivism, viewing economic policies as extensions of human dignity rather than class struggle resolutions.[17] Christian democracy also contrasts with liberalism by rejecting individualism and materialism as sufficient for human flourishing, instead positing persons as inherently relational beings with spiritual capacities for good and evil, thus integrating transcendent ethical norms into political life to temper market freedoms with duties to the common good.[7] Unlike liberalism's focus on structural freedoms and fulfillment through material progress, it acknowledges political limits due to human imperfection, avoiding utopian overreach.[7] Furthermore, it diverges from Christian nationalism or theocratic ideologies by embracing democratic pluralism and the inclusive pursuit of the common good, welcoming non-Christians and rejecting exclusionary dominance in favor of applying scriptural principles within secular governance frameworks.[3] This moderation positions it as a "middle way" against both anti-democratic reaction and secular radicalism, as evidenced in 19th-century European origins.[3]Historical Development
Origins in 19th-Century Catholic Social Teaching
Catholic Social Teaching emerged in the late 19th century as the Catholic Church's response to the social disruptions of industrialization, including urban poverty, labor exploitation, and the rise of atheistic socialism and individualistic liberalism in Europe.[18] These conditions, exacerbated by rapid factory growth and worker migration from rural areas, prompted Church leaders to articulate principles reconciling economic progress with human dignity and moral order, countering Marxist class warfare and laissez-faire excesses.[19] Papal interventions began earlier with documents like Gregory XVI's Mirari Vos (1832) condemning radicalism, but systematic social doctrine crystallized amid these pressures.[20] The foundational text, Pope Leo XIII's encyclical Rerum Novarum ("Of New Things"), issued on May 15, 1891, addressed the "miserable and wretched" conditions of the working classes, affirming workers' rights to organize, a living wage, and rest, while rejecting socialism's abolition of private property and the state's overreach into personal affairs.[21] Leo XIII critiqued both capitalist concentrations of wealth that treated labor as a commodity and socialist proposals that undermined family and faith-based associations, advocating instead for intermediate bodies like guilds and families to mediate between individuals and the state—a principle later termed subsidiarity.[22] The encyclical emphasized cross-class harmony through charity and justice, rooted in natural law and Christian anthropology, positioning the Church as a neutral arbiter promoting the common good over partisan ideologies.[23] These teachings provided the intellectual groundwork for Christian democracy by integrating democratic participation with Catholic ethics, fostering political movements that prioritized social welfare, family protections, and limited government intervention without endorsing secular egalitarianism or economic determinism.[15] In countries like Belgium and Germany, where Catholic minorities faced Protestant or secular dominance, Rerum Novarum inspired lay initiatives such as worker circles and agrarian leagues that evolved into parties blending electoral democracy with confessional values, distinct from both conservative monarchism and progressive radicalism.[24] By endorsing voluntary associations and rejecting revolutionary violence, the encyclical enabled Catholics to engage modern politics pragmatically, laying seeds for parties that would gain prominence in the 20th century.[25] This origin in CST underscored a realism about human imperfection, favoring incremental reforms grounded in eternal truths over utopian schemes.[26]Post-World War II Expansion and Cold War Role
Following the end of World War II in 1945, Christian democratic parties underwent significant expansion in Western Europe, emerging as key political forces amid reconstruction efforts and the ideological contest with communism. In Italy, the Democrazia Cristiana (DC), founded in 1943, achieved a decisive victory in the April 1948 parliamentary elections, securing 48.5% of the vote and forming a government under Alcide De Gasperi that excluded communist participation.[27] In West Germany, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), established in 1945 as an interconfessional successor to pre-war Catholic parties, led the coalition government after the August 1949 federal election, with Konrad Adenauer becoming chancellor and implementing the social market economy.[28] Similar patterns occurred in France, where the Mouvement Républicain Populaire (MRP) participated in early post-war coalitions, and in Belgium, the Netherlands, Austria, and Luxembourg, where reformed Catholic parties like the Christen-Democratisch en Vlaams (CVP) and Österreichische Volkspartei (ÖVP) gained prominence by 1948.[29] This growth stemmed from their appeal as a centrist alternative combining Catholic social teaching with anti-totalitarian commitments, drawing support from both Catholic and Protestant voters in Protestant-majority regions.[30] During the Cold War (1947–1991), Christian democratic parties served as a primary anti-communist bulwark in Europe, aligning with Western alliances to counter Soviet influence and domestic leftist movements. In Italy and France, where communist parties polled over 20% in immediate post-war elections, Christian democrats positioned themselves as defenders of private property and Christian values against Marxist atheism, often receiving tacit support from the Vatican and U.S. anti-communist initiatives.[30] German CDU governments under Adenauer (1949–1963) prioritized NATO membership in 1955 and rearmament, framing these as essential to containing communism while fostering economic recovery via the European Coal and Steel Community (1951).[29] Belgian and Dutch Christian democrats similarly backed supranational integration, with leaders like Robert Schuman (MRP, France) and De Gasperi driving early European unity to prevent nationalist revivals and communist expansion.[31] Their governance emphasized welfare provisions within a market framework, sustaining broad electoral coalitions that marginalized extremes until the 1960s.[32] Beyond Europe, Christian democratic formations appeared in Latin America during the 1950s–1960s as extensions of Cold War dynamics, often U.S.-backed to oppose leftist regimes; for instance, the Christian Democratic Party in Chile under Eduardo Frei Montalva governed from 1964–1970, promoting land reform and anti-communist development models.[29] However, their European core remained the expansion's epicenter, where they led or dominated coalitions in multiple nations, contributing to the ideological containment of communism through democratic stability and transatlantic partnerships.[33] This role waned with secularization and economic shifts by the late Cold War, but their post-war foundations solidified Christian democracy as a transnational network.[34]Post-Cold War Adaptations and Declines
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Christian democratic parties in Western Europe confronted a profound identity crisis, as the anti-communist imperative that had unified their voter bases and justified their centrist positioning during the Cold War evaporated. Without the existential threat of Marxism-Leninism, these parties struggled to differentiate themselves from emerging liberal and conservative competitors, leading to fragmentation and electoral erosion in nations where they had previously dominated. For instance, in Italy, the Democrazia Cristiana (DC), which had governed continuously since 1945, collapsed amid the 1992–1994 Mani Pulite corruption investigations, splintering into smaller entities and effectively ending its role as a mass party by the 1994 general election, where its successors garnered less than 12% of the vote combined.[35][36] Adaptations varied by context, with many parties pivoting toward neoliberal economic policies and deeper European integration to retain relevance amid globalization and secularization. In Germany, the Christlich Demokratische Union (CDU) leveraged reunification in 1990 under Helmut Kohl to bolster its stature, achieving 44.3% in the 1990 federal election, but subsequent leadership under Angela Merkel from 2005 emphasized pragmatic centrism over confessional roots, incorporating elements of social liberalism that diluted traditional Christian social teaching.[37] Similarly, in the Netherlands, the Christen-Democratisch Appèl (CDA) formed in 1980 as a merger to consolidate Protestant and Catholic forces, yet post-1994, it faced serial declines, dropping from 34.3% in 1989 to 12.5% by 2017, adapting through coalitions with liberals while grappling with voter shifts to populists. These shifts reflected a broader trend: by the 2000s, Christian democrats often allied with secular center-right groups, prioritizing fiscal conservatism and migration controls over welfare-state corporatism.[38] In Eastern Europe and Latin America, post-Cold War Christian democracy exhibited nascent growth but persistent weaknesses, hampered by weak institutional ties and competition from ex-communist or populist forces. Poland's Solidarity Electoral Action, a conservative-Christian democratic coalition formed in 1996, briefly won 33.8% in the 1997 Sejm election but fragmented by 2001 due to internal divisions. In Latin America, parties like Chile's Independent Democratic Union (UDI), founded in 1983, adapted by fusing Christian democratic principles with Pinochet-era neoliberalism, securing 17.4% in the 1989 congressional vote and influencing center-right governance into the 2010s, though broader regional declines tied to corruption and inequality eroded support elsewhere, as in Venezuela's Christian democratic COPEI, which fell from 34% in 1978 to under 1% by 2015. Overall, secular trends and the rise of identity-based politics contributed to challenges for Christian democratic representation in the European Parliament, with the European People's Party (EPP) holding 162 seats in 1994 and expanding to 182 by 2019; however, this growth reflects broader center-right alliances rather than strengthened core Christian democratic influence, underscoring a transition from governing pillars to junior partners.[35][39]Global Distribution and Regional Patterns
Europe
Christian democratic parties originated and achieved their greatest historical prominence in Europe, particularly in Catholic-influenced Western and Central European nations, where they responded to 19th-century industrialization, secularism, and Marxist challenges by integrating papal social teachings—such as subsidiarity and the common good—into centrist political platforms emphasizing family values, welfare states balanced with market economies, and anti-totalitarianism.[40][41] Following World War II, these parties facilitated reconstruction, contained communism, and advanced European integration, often leading grand coalitions or majority governments in countries like Germany, Italy, Austria, Belgium, and the Netherlands through the Cold War era.[30] Their success stemmed from broad voter appeal transcending strict confessional lines, though Protestant variants emerged in the Netherlands and Nordic countries.[42] In Eastern Europe, suppressed under communism, similar parties reemerged after 1989 but often merged with national-conservative movements amid weaker institutional roots.[43] The following table lists prominent active or historically dominant Christian democratic parties in Europe, focusing on those with verifiable post-war governance roles:| Country | Party Name | Founded | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Austria | Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) | 1945 | Successor to pre-war Christian Social Party; formed governments or coalitions for over 50 years post-1945, promoting social partnership and EU membership; rooted in Christian social principles.[32] |
| Belgium | Christian Democratic and Flemish (CD&V) | 1968 (Flemish split from CVP) | Dominant in Flanders with roots in 19th-century Catholic Party; held federal government roles for 41 consecutive years from 1958, emphasizing community and family policy.[44] |
| Germany | Christian Democratic Union (CDU) / Christian Social Union (CSU) | 1945 / 1945 | CDU unified Protestant and Catholic conservatives; CSU regional Bavarian counterpart; governed West Germany 1949–1966 and 1982–1998, implementing social market economy under Adenauer and Kohl.[45][40] |
| Italy | Christian Democracy (DC) | 1943 | Predecessor Italian People's Party (1919); controlled governments 1945–1994 with 38–48% vote shares in early decades, countering communism via centrist coalitions; dissolved amid 1990s corruption scandals.[46] |
| Netherlands | Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) | 1980 | Merger of Catholic KVP and Protestant ARP/CHU parties from pillarized system; joined 20+ coalition governments since 1980s, balancing confessional heritage with pragmatic centrism.[42] |
Americas
Christian democratic parties in the Americas originated primarily in Latin America during the 1930s and 1940s as responses to social upheavals, drawing on Catholic social teaching to advocate subsidiarity, social justice, and a middle path between capitalism and socialism.[48] These parties often affiliated with the Christian Democrat Organization of America (ODCA), founded in 1947 to coordinate regional efforts against communism and authoritarianism.[49] Influence peaked in the 1960s with electoral successes in countries like Chile and Venezuela, but many declined amid polarization, military coups, and neoliberal shifts by the 1990s.[50] In North America, such parties remain marginal, reflecting Protestant majorities and two-party dominance less conducive to confessional politics.[51] In Chile, the Christian Democratic Party (Partido Demócrata Cristiano, PDC) was founded in 1957 as a centrist force emphasizing reformist policies under Catholic principles.[52] It achieved national prominence with Eduardo Frei's 1964 presidential victory, securing 55.6% of the vote and implementing the "Revolution in Liberty" program, which included land reform and education expansion affecting over 1 million hectares redistributed by 1970.[53] The PDC governed coalitions post-Pinochet, holding the presidency from 1989 to 1990 and 1994 to 2000, but faced internal divisions and electoral erosion, polling below 10% in recent cycles.[54] In Venezuela, the Social Christian Party (COPEI) emerged in 1946 from opposition to military rule, positioning as a democratic alternative with Christian humanist roots.[55] It grew to become the second-largest party after Democratic Action (AD), winning the presidency in 1968 with Rafael Caldera's 29% vote share and again in 1978.[56] COPEI alternated power with AD until the 1990s, advocating mixed-economy policies, but collapsed amid economic crises and Hugo Chávez's rise, garnering under 1% in 2018 elections.[57] In El Salvador, the Christian Democratic Party (Partido Demócrata Cristiano, PDC) formed in 1960 among middle-class reformers opposing military dominance.[58] It briefly held power in a 1977 junta and supported José Napoleón Duarte's 1984 presidency (51.7% vote), promoting civilian rule amid civil war, but suffered from factionalism and violence, including the 1980 assassination of its leaders.[59] The PDC declined post-war, allying with right-wing fronts and polling below 5% by 2019.[60] In Mexico, the National Action Party (PAN) was established in 1939 by Catholic-inspired opponents of PRI hegemony, incorporating Christian democratic elements like personalism and anti-statism despite no formal ODCA ties.[61] It won the presidency in 2000 with Vicente Fox's 42.5% vote, ending 71 years of one-party rule, and emphasized federalism and market reforms.[50] PAN governed until 2012, but shifted toward conservatism, with Christian democratic aspects diluted in broader alliances.[62] In Argentina, the Christian Democratic Party (Partido Demócrata Cristiano) was founded in 1954, advocating social market policies but remaining marginal, never exceeding 5% national vote share due to Peronist dominance.[63] It participated in anti-Peron coalitions but lacked mass appeal, allying sporadically with centrists.[64] Smaller or defunct parties exist elsewhere, such as Costa Rica's Social Christian Unity Party (founded 1990, peaked at 27% in 1994 elections) and Colombia's brief Christian democratic experiments in the 1950s.[62] In the United States, the American Solidarity Party, rebranded from Christian Democratic Party USA in 2016, promotes distributism and pro-life stances but holds no federal seats, drawing under 0.1% in presidential bids.[65] Canada and most Caribbean nations lack notable examples, with Christian influences absorbed into conservative parties.[51]| Country | Party Name | Founded | Peak Electoral Achievement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chile | Christian Democratic Party (PDC) | 1957 | 55.6% presidential vote (1964)[53] |
| Venezuela | Social Christian Party (COPEI) | 1946 | 29% presidential vote (1968)[56] |
| El Salvador | Christian Democratic Party (PDC) | 1960 | 51.7% presidential vote (1984)[59] |
| Mexico | National Action Party (PAN) | 1939 | 42.5% presidential vote (2000)[50] |
| Argentina | Christian Democratic Party | 1954 | <5% national vote share[63] |
| United States | American Solidarity Party | 2011 | <0.1% presidential vote[65] |
Africa and Asia
In Africa, Christian democratic parties remain limited, largely confined to South Africa amid the continent's diverse religious and political landscapes, where they emphasize biblical principles, family values, and social conservatism in opposition to secular or socialist alternatives.[66][67]- African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP): Established on 9 December 1993, this conservative party advocates policies rooted in Christian ethics, including opposition to abortion and promotion of moral governance, and holds seats in the South African Parliament.[68][69]
- United Christian Democratic Party (UCDP): Formed in 1994 as a merger of smaller Christian-aligned groups, it focuses on democratic principles informed by Christian teachings and has participated in national elections, though with modest electoral success.[70]
- Christian Democratic Party (CDP): An older entity with ties to global Christian democratic networks, it prioritizes ethical governance and social welfare within a Christian framework, though it operates on a smaller scale compared to the ACDP.[67]
| Country | Party | Founded | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Philippines | Lakas–CMD (Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats) | 1991 | Centre-right party integrating Christian democracy with accommodations for Muslim communities, supporting market-oriented policies and traditional values; it has governed at national levels multiple times.[72][73] |
| Philippines | Centrist Democratic Party (CDP) | 1989 | Rooted in Christian and Muslim social teachings emphasizing human dignity and centrism, it promotes participatory democracy and has fielded candidates in congressional races.[74][75] |
Oceania and Other Regions
 In Australia, the Christian Democratic Party (CDP), originally founded in 1977 as the Call to Australia Party by Fred Nile, operated as a socially conservative outfit emphasizing Christian moral teachings on issues like abortion, euthanasia, and family structures. The party secured representation in the New South Wales Legislative Council, with Nile serving from 1981 to 2023, but experienced declining support amid secularization trends. It was deregistered federally by the Australian Electoral Commission in September 2021 after obtaining fewer than 1.5% of first-preference votes in the 2019 election, and lost state registration in New South Wales by 2023.[76] The Australian Christians party, established in 2011, promotes policies rooted in biblical principles, prioritizing family integrity, religious freedoms, and ethical governance, though it does not explicitly invoke European-style Christian democratic economic frameworks like the social market economy. The party has contested federal and state elections, positioning itself as a defender of traditional Christian values against perceived cultural shifts.[77] In New Zealand, the Christian Democrat Party existed from 1995 to 1998, focusing on family-oriented and moral policies informed by Christian ethics, before rebranding as Future New Zealand and eventually merging into the United Future party in 2000.[78] Papua New Guinea's Christian Democratic Party, launched in 1997 under leaders like Kelly Naru, sought to integrate Christian principles into governance amid the country's fragmented party system, but lapsed into inactivity by 2007 without achieving sustained parliamentary influence.[79] In Fiji, the Christian Democratic Alliance (also known as Veitokani ni Lewenivanua Vakarisito), formed in 1997, represented conservative Fijian interests with a Christian orientation, contesting the 1999 election as a "third force" but dissolving components into other groups by the early 2000s.[80] Samoa's Christian Democratic Party, initiated in February 1985 by Tupuola Efi supporters, aimed to apply Christian democratic ideals in a Polynesian context but failed to secure significant electoral gains.[81] Kiribati's Christian Democrats, evolving into the Maneaban te Mauri (Protect the Maneaba) party under President Teburoro Tito, captured 14 seats in the 1998 Maneaba ni Maungatabu elections, blending Christian values with local governance priorities before fading in later cycles.International Organizations and Networks
Centrist Democrat International and Affiliates
The Centrist Democrat International (IDC-CDI), originally established in June 1961 in Santiago, Chile, as a union of Christian democratic parties, serves as a primary global network for coordinating activities among centrist and Christian democratic political entities. Initially focused on promoting solidarity, doctrinal research, and the dissemination of Christian democratic principles derived from Catholic social teaching, the organization rebranded from Christian Democrat International in 2001 to broaden its appeal beyond explicitly confessional parties while retaining emphasis on democratic values such as human dignity, subsidiarity, and social market economics.[82][83] The IDC-CDI's mission centers on defending democracy, human rights, and the rule of law against threats like authoritarianism and radical populism, with member parties engaging in joint activities to strengthen internal structures, advocate for sustainable development, and support peace initiatives.[84] Many of its approximately 90 member parties maintain Christian democratic orientations, including those in Europe, Latin America, and Africa, where they apply principles of solidarity and family-centered policies in governance.[85] Key affiliates include the Youth of the Centrist Democrat International, established to cultivate emerging leaders from member organizations through international forums and training. The IDC-CDI also maintains ties with regional alliances such as the Christian Democrat Organization of America, which unites Christian democratic parties across the Western Hemisphere, and collaborates with the European People's Party, a grouping of center-right parties in Europe that includes numerous Christian democratic formations. These networks enable shared electoral strategies, policy exchanges, and advocacy on issues like migration and economic justice, reinforcing the global footprint of Christian democratic parties despite the organization's centrist evolution.[86][87]Regional Alliances
Regional alliances of Christian democratic parties facilitate coordination on shared principles such as subsidiarity, social market economics, and family-centered policies at continental or sub-continental levels, often serving as intermediaries between national parties and global networks like the Centrist Democrat International (CDI). These organizations emerged primarily in the mid-20th century to address region-specific challenges, including anti-communist mobilization in the Americas and post-war reconstruction in Europe. Membership typically includes parties emphasizing Catholic social teaching or Protestant ethical governance, though influence varies by region due to differing religious demographics and political landscapes.[84] In the Americas, the Christian Democrat Organization of America (ODCA), founded on April 23, 1947, in Montevideo, Uruguay, by politicians from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay, stands as the preeminent regional body. Initially formed to counter leftist ideologies amid rising populism, ODCA expanded to encompass 30 member parties across 21 countries by the early 21st century, representing approximately 30% of registered voters in Latin America. It promotes democratic governance rooted in Christian humanism, focusing on issues like land reform, education, and anti-corruption, and has historically supported transitions to civilian rule in nations such as Chile under Eduardo Frei Montalva in 1964. ODCA operates as a CDI affiliate, hosting congresses to align strategies, though its effectiveness has waned with the ideological shifts of some members toward neoliberalism or progressivism.[88][50] European Christian democratic parties, concentrated in Western and Central Europe, coordinate primarily through the Group of the European People's Party (EPP) in the European Parliament, established in 1953 as the Christian Democratic Group and rebranded in 1976 to broaden appeal. This alliance, comprising parties like Germany's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Italy's historical Christian Democracy successors, dominated post-World War II coalitions and advanced supranational integration via the European Economic Community. By 2025, the EPP group holds over 180 seats, advocating for fiscal conservatism, migration controls, and value-based foreign policy, though critics note its accommodation of secular centrists has diluted explicit Christian references. Separate entities like the European Christian Political Party (ECPP), founded in 2017, exist for non-EU states but remain marginal, with fewer than 10 member organizations focused on confessional politics.[89][29] In Africa and Asia, formal regional alliances remain underdeveloped, reflecting Christianity's minority status and competitive multi-party systems. African parties, such as South Africa's African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP), founded in 1993, engage bilaterally or via CDI but lack a dedicated continental forum; efforts at pan-African coordination have been sporadic, often subsumed under broader democratic unions amid ethnic and Islamist pressures. Similarly, Asian outliers like the Philippines' National Union of Christian Democrats participate in ad hoc networks but face dominance by secular or nationalist forces, with no sustained regional body emerging despite isolated attempts at alliances in the 1990s. This paucity underscores Christian democracy's adaptation challenges outside Euro-American contexts, where it relies more on national resilience than institutional federation.[66][48]Controversies and Criticisms
Ideological Secularization and Dilution
Since the late 1970s, Christian democratic parties across continental Europe have faced an ideological crisis characterized by internal dilution, as they increasingly prioritized electoral pragmatism over adherence to core Christian social teachings on issues like family, life, and subsidiarity. This shift reflected broader societal secularization, where declining church attendance—from 40% regular practice in West Germany in 1970 to under 10% by 2000—eroded the parties' traditional voter base of practicing Catholics and Protestants, prompting adaptations to appeal to non-religious centrists.[90][91] A key manifestation involved softening stances on bioethical and family matters traditionally informed by papal encyclicals such as Casti Connubii (1930) and Humanae Vitae (1968), which emphasized the indissolubility of marriage and the sanctity of life from conception to natural death. For instance, Germany's Christian Democratic Union (CDU), historically anchored in Protestant and Catholic ethics, allowed a parliamentary free vote under Chancellor Angela Merkel that legalized same-sex marriage on June 30, 2017, with 393 votes in favor despite Merkel's personal opposition and the measure's conflict with doctrinal views of marriage as a union between man and woman.[92] Similarly, in the Netherlands, the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) joined coalitions that maintained the 2002 Euthanasia Act, which permits assisted suicide for unbearable suffering without terminal illness, diverging from absolute prohibitions in Christian anthropology and contributing to over 8,000 cases annually by 2022.[93] In Italy, the Christian Democracy (DC) party grappled with secular currents from the late 1960s, including the 1970 divorce referendum and 1978 abortion law, where internal divisions weakened its defense of Catholic positions, accelerating ideological erosion amid corruption scandals that led to its dissolution in 1994. Successor groups, such as the centrist segments of Forza Italia, further diluted religious framing by emphasizing market liberalism over social doctrine.[94][95] This pattern extended beyond Europe; in Latin America, parties like Venezuela's COPEI experienced a loss of distinctiveness from the 1980s, blending Christian rhetoric with neoliberal economics that prioritized fiscal austerity over solidarity-based welfare.[48] Critics, including conservative theologians and party traditionalists, argue this secularization undermined the parties' raison d'être, fostering voter alienation to confessional splinter groups or right-wing populists who reclaim explicit Christian identity—evident in the CDA's vote share plummeting from 31% in 1989 to 5.1% in 2023 amid Dutch societal secularization.[96] Proponents counter that such adaptations preserved centrist governance in pluralistic democracies, yet empirical data on electoral declines links the erosion to ideological ambiguity, with secularization correlating to a 20-30% drop in support for CD parties in Western Europe from 1980 to 2020.[91][39]Alliances with Extremes and Political Pragmatism
In Austria, the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), a Christian democratic organization, entered a coalition government with the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), widely classified as far-right due to its nationalist and anti-immigration stances, from February 2000 to November 2005 under Chancellor Wolfgang Schüssel. This partnership enabled the ÖVP to implement welfare reforms and economic liberalization, but it provoked international backlash, including EU diplomatic sanctions against Austria in 2000 for legitimizing extremism. The alliance dissolved amid corruption scandals involving FPÖ leader Jörg Haider, yet it demonstrated pragmatic prioritization of governance stability over ideological purity. A similar ÖVP-FPÖ coalition formed in December 2017 under Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, focusing on strict migration controls and tax cuts, until its collapse in May 2019 following the Ibiza affair exposé of FPÖ vice-chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache. These coalitions reflected Christian democrats' tactical accommodation of populist elements to counter social democratic dominance and address voter concerns on cultural preservation, despite internal party debates on compromising centrist values rooted in Catholic social teaching.[97] In Germany, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) has maintained an official "firewall" against formal alliances with the Alternative for Germany (AfD), labeled far-right for its ethno-nationalist rhetoric and skepticism toward EU integration, as reaffirmed by CDU leader Friedrich Merz in October 2025. However, pragmatic exceptions emerged, such as in January 2025 when a CDU-initiated Bundestag motion tightening asylum and migration rules secured passage through AfD votes, marking the first breach of the non-cooperation pledge since the AfD's founding in 2013. This tactical support aligned with shared CDU-AfD priorities on border security and deportation accelerations, amid public discontent with 2023-2024 migration surges exceeding 300,000 annual arrivals, but drew criticism from coalition partners like the Free Democrats for eroding democratic norms. Such instances illustrate Christian democrats' selective issue-based collaboration, driven by electoral competition where AfD polled over 20% in eastern states by late 2024, compelling policy concessions without full partnership.[98][99] Broader European trends show Christian democratic parties increasingly converging with far-right groups on anti-liberal economic measures and cultural conservatism, as far-right formations often endorse market-friendly policies compatible with Christian democratic subsidiarity principles. A 2025 analysis by the European Consortium for Political Research notes that this "pact" facilitates joint opposition to progressive secularism, with Christian democrats adopting harder lines on family policy and Islam to retain voter bases eroded by populism. Critics, including academics wary of mainstreaming extremism, argue this pragmatism dilutes the post-World War II Christian democratic commitment to moderated pluralism, yet proponents cite empirical necessities: in fragmented parliaments, refusing aligned votes risks policy paralysis, as evidenced by stalled reforms in countries like Sweden where Christian Democrats indirectly rely on Sweden Democrats' tolerance for center-right governance since 2022. This approach underscores causal trade-offs between ideological consistency and effective power-sharing in multi-party systems.[100]Electoral Failures and Internal Divisions
Many Christian democratic parties in Europe have experienced marked electoral declines since the 1990s, attributable in part to secularization eroding their traditional religious voter base and competition from nationalist and populist movements.[101] In Italy, the Democrazia Cristiana, which had dominated post-war politics, saw its vote share drop to 29.7% in the 1992 general election amid widespread corruption scandals exposed by the Mani pulite investigations, leading to the party's dissolution in 1994 and fragmentation into minor successors.[102] [103] In the Netherlands, the Christen-Democratisch Appèl (CDA) fell below 10% of the vote in the March 2021 parliamentary election, a sharp contraction from its previous peaks as a coalition partner in multiple governments.[104] Similarly, Germany's CDU/CSU alliance garnered only 24.1% in the 2021 federal election, down from over 30% in prior cycles, reflecting a projected loss of up to a third of its support amid leadership transitions following Angela Merkel's tenure.[104] Internal divisions have exacerbated these setbacks, often stemming from ideological heterogeneity between conservative and centrist factions on issues such as European integration, social policies, and migration.[103] In Italy, the Democrazia Cristiana fractured in the 1980s between a center-right wing led by Arnaldo Forlani and a center-left group, weakening its cohesion and contributing to vulnerability during the corruption crises.[101] The European People's Party (EPP), encompassing many Christian democratic affiliates, has grappled with internal disputes, such as resistance to Jean-Claude Juncker's 2014 candidacy for European Commission president, highlighting tensions over federalism and candidate selection despite securing the largest bloc in that year's European Parliament elections.[101] In Austria, the ÖVP faced a corruption scandal post-Sebastian Kurz's 2017-2021 leadership, underscoring reliance on charismatic figures over unified programmatic vision and exposing rifts on governance and ethical standards.[103] Beyond Europe, Christian democratic formations in post-communist states have largely failed to establish lasting electoral viability, often due to weak institutional ties to churches and competition from ex-communist or nationalist parties, as seen in minimal gains across Central and Eastern Europe since 1989.[105] These patterns of division and decline reflect broader challenges in maintaining a distinct identity amid secular trends and the absence of Cold War-era anti-communist unity, leading to programmatic dilution and voter alienation.[101]Recent Developments (Post-2020)
Electoral Shifts in Key Countries
In Germany, the Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU) experienced a significant downturn in the 2021 federal election, securing 24.1% of the vote—its worst national result since World War II—leading to the end of its 16-year chancellorship under Angela Merkel and a shift to opposition.[106] However, the alliance rebounded in the February 2025 snap federal election, winning 28.5% of the vote and 208 seats in the Bundestag, positioning it to form the next government amid dissatisfaction with the Scholz coalition.[107] This recovery reflected voter concerns over migration and economic stagnation, though the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) also doubled its share to around 20%, highlighting competitive pressures on traditional center-right parties.[108] The Netherlands' Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) faced a historic collapse in the November 2023 general election, dropping to 5.4% of the vote and five seats from 15.1% in 2017, as anti-immigration sentiment propelled Geert Wilders' Party for Freedom (PVV) to victory with 23.5%. The CDA's decline stemmed from internal divisions and failure to address voter shifts toward populism, relegating it to a minor opposition role in a fragmented parliament. Austria's Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), a cornerstone of Christian democracy, saw its vote share fall to 26.3% in the September 2024 legislative election, down from 37.5% in 2019, finishing second behind the far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ) at 29%.[109] Despite retaining influence through potential coalition roles, the ÖVP's losses were attributed to scandals and the FPÖ's capitalization on migration and inflation issues, signaling a broader erosion of centrist dominance.[110] In Italy, fragmented Christian democratic forces, primarily represented by Forza Italia within the center-right coalition, garnered about 8.1% in the 2022 general election, contributing to the coalition's overall victory but underscoring the marginalization of pure Christian democratic platforms amid Giorgia Meloni's Brothers of Italy surge to 26%.[111] This integration into broader conservative alliances marked a pragmatic shift rather than independent resurgence. France's Les Républicains (LR) continued its post-2017 decline, with presidential candidate Valérie Pécresse obtaining just 4.8% in 2022, and the party securing around 10% in the subsequent legislative elections before further fragmentation.[112] In the 2024 snap legislative vote, LR's vote hovered below 7%, squeezed by Macron's centrists and the National Rally's rise, reflecting challenges in retaining conservative voters amid polarization.[113]| Country | Party | Pre-2020 Vote Share (Key Election) | Post-2020 Vote Share (Key Election) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | CDU/CSU | 32.9% (2017) | 24.1% (2021); 28.5% (2025)[106][107] |
| Netherlands | CDA | 15.1% (2017) | 5.4% (2023) |
| Austria | ÖVP | 37.5% (2019) | 26.3% (2024)[109] |
| Italy | Forza Italia (CD elements) | 8.7% (2018) | 8.1% (2022)[111] |
| France | LR | 10.8% (2017 legislative) | ~6.5% (2024 legislative)[113] |
