Democratic Coalition Party
Demokrata Koalíció Párt |
|
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First leader | Zoltán Új |
Last leader | István György |
Founded | 4 August 1990 |
Dissolved | 1 September 2001 |
Preceded by | Patriotic Electoral Coalition (HVK) |
Ideology | Christian socialism |
Political position | Centre-left |
The Democratic Coalition Party (Hungarian: Demokrata Koalíció Párt; DKP) was a centre-left party in Hungary between 1990 and 2001.
The DKP was founded in August 1990 as the legal successor of the Patriotic Electoral Coalition (HVK), however the party tried to distance itself from the predecessor organization. The DKP considered itself as a Christian socialist centre-left party with social democratic values. The party also placed great emphasis on the enforcement of freedom of the press, while supported the emergence of private farms but rejected the Independent Smallholders' Party's proposal on re-privatization. The first leader of the party was lawyer Zoltán Új, he was replaced by Sándor Forrai on 18 May 1991. Forrai died in office on 27 April 1992, he was succeeded by István György. In February 1993, Mihály Hesz and his supporters left the party to re-establish the HVK, however the court did not recognise that step. Hesz was excluded from the DKP officially.
The Democratic Coalition Party contested the 1994 parliamentary election with four individual candidates, who received 0.04 percent of the votes, gaining no seats. The DKP did not contest any further elections, it was dissolved on 1 September 2001.