Hellenic Front
Ελληνικό Μέτωπο Elliniko Metopo |
|
---|---|
Founder | Makis Voridis |
Founded | 1994 |
Dissolved | 2005 |
Merged into | LAOS |
Ideology |
Anti-communism Greek nationalism Patriotism |
Political position | Far-right |
The Hellenic Front (Greek: Ελληνικό Μέτωπο) was a Greek political party with a strongly nationalist platform, founded in 1994. Its declared raison d'être was to raise national conscience and inspire freedom, creativity, and development by reversing what it sees as dependence on foreign economies and ideas. It advocated creation of a “National Opposition Front” to build an effective and credible alternative to the current two-party system. On social matters, the party has supported populist policies such as the re-introduction of the death penalty (long abolished in Greece), specifically as a sentence for drug dealers. Makis Voridis, a lawyer, was the President of the Hellenic Front.
In local elections held in 1998, Voridis stood as a candidate for Mayor of Athens, receiving 0.58% of the vote. The party carried 0.12% of the vote in the European elections of 1999; 0.18% of the vote in the parliamentary election of 2000; and an average of 1.4% in local elections in 2002 (0.9% in Athens, 1.2% in Piraeus, 1.2% in Thessaloniki, 4.5% in Karditsa, and 2.2% in East Attica). At the parliamentary election in 2004, the Hellenic Front received 0.09% of the vote, a result which led to the end of the party.
After unsuccessfully contesting seats in the 2004 elections, they eventually merged with the Popular Orthodox Rally.