*** Welcome to piglix ***

Hungarian-German Social Democratic Party

Hungarian-German Social Democratic Party
German name Ungarisch-Deutsche Partei der Sozialdemokraten
Hungarian name Magyar és Német Szociál-Demokrata Párt
Chairman of the parliamentary group Paul Wittich
Founded 1919
Dissolved January 1, 1927 (1927-01-01)
Merged into Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers Party
Newspaper Volksstimme, Népszava
Ideology Socialism
International affiliation Labour and Socialist International
National Assembly seats (1920)
4 / 281

The Hungarian-German Social Democratic Party (German: Ungarisch-Deutsche Partei der Sozialdemokraten, Hungarian: Magyar és Német Szociál-Demokrata Párt) was a social democratic political party in Slovakia (part of Czechoslovakia at the time). It was founded in 1919 by social democrats from ethnic minority communities. The party had a German and a Hungarian section. The German and Hungarian social democrats in Slovakia had developed an antagonistic relationship with the Slovak social democrats, who had merged into the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers Party as Austria-Hungary was broken up after the First World War. Issues of contention between Hungarian/German and Slovak social democrats included views of the February Strike of 1919 and the Hungarian Soviet Republic (which the Slovak social democrats considered a threat to their new state).

Like the other Hungarian parties in Czechoslovakia at the time, the Hungarian-German Social Democratic Party opposed the very existence of the Czechoslovak Republic.

Leaders of the party included Sam Mayer, Gyula Nagy (between 1919 and 1922), Géza Borovszky (from 1922 onwards) and Jószef Földessy.

The party congress held January 18, 1920 resolved that the party would contest the 1920 Czechoslovak National Assembly election independently. The party contested the Chamber of Deputies election in the Nové Zámky 16th electoral district and the Košice 20th electoral district. However, the party contested the Senate election on a joint list with the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers Party.


...
Wikipedia

...