People's Party of Finland (1951)

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People's Party of Finland
Suomen Kansanpuolue
Founded1951
Dissolved1965
Succeeded byLiberal People's Party
Women's wingKansanpuolueen Naiset
Youth wingLiberaalinen Nuorisoliitto [fi]
IdeologyLiberalism

The People's Party of Finland (Finnish: Suomen Kansanpuolue) was a liberal political party in Finland.

History

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The party was founded on 3 February 1951 after the National Progressive Party was disbanded. In the July 1951 elections, it won ten of the 200 seats in Parliament, an increase from the five won by the National Progressive Party in 1948.[1]

The party went on to win 13 seats in the 1954 elections, before being reduced to eight seats in the 1958 elections. The 1962 elections saw the party win 13 seats.[1] In 1965, it merged with the Liberal League to form the Liberal People's Party.

Leaders

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Election results

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Parliament of Finland
Date Votes Seats Position Size
No. % ± pp No. ±
1951 102,933 5.68 New
10 / 200
New Opposition 6th
1954 158,323 7.88 Increase 2.20
13 / 200
Increase 3 Opposition Increase 5th
1958 114,617 5.90 Decrease 1.98
8 / 200
Decrease 5 Coalition Decrease 6th
1962 146,005 6.34 Increase 0.44
13 / 200
Increase 5 Coalition Increase 5th

References

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  1. ^ a b Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p620 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7