Mayors and Independents
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Mayors and Independents Starostové a nezávislí | |
---|---|
Leader | Vít Rakušan |
Deputy Leaders | Jan Farský Petr Gazdík Stanislav Polčák |
Chamber of Deputies Leader | Jan Farský |
Senate Leader | |
Founded | 2004 |
Newspaper | STANoviny |
Think tank | |
Youth wing | |
Membership (2021) | 1,921[1] |
Ideology | Liberalism[2][3][4] |
Political position | Centre[5] to centre-right[6] |
National affiliation | Pirates and Mayors |
European Parliament group | European People's Party |
Colours | Sky blue, yellow, Atlantis green, red, white, gray |
Chamber of Deputies | 33 / 200 |
Senate | 19 / 81 |
European Parliament | 1 / 21 |
Regional councils | 91 / 675 |
Regional governors | 4 / 13 |
Local councils | 3,073 / 62,300 |
Website | |
www.starostove-nezavisli.cz | |
The Mayors and Independents (Czech: Starostové a nezávislí), abbreviated to STAN, is a liberal political party in the Czech Republic that is focused on localism[7] and subsidiarity. The party grew out of four minor parties, including Independent Mayors for the Region,[8] which allied itself with the liberal-conservative SNK European Democrats, and cooperated with the similarly liberal-conservative TOP 09 until 2016.
In the 2013 election to the Chamber of Deputies, STAN won five seats on the TOP 09 list: Jan Farský, Stanislav Polčák, , and acting leader Petr Gazdík. In the Czech Senate, STAN has four members. The party competes separately in local government elections. In the 2010 local elections, the party won 1,243 councillors, making it the sixth-largest party on local councils.[9] In the 2017 election to the Chamber of Deputies, STAN won six seats: Petr Gazdík, Jan Farský, , Vít Rakušan, (who was replaced by ) and .
The party is contesting the 2021 Czech parliamentary election as part of the coalition Pirates and Mayors with the Czech Pirate Party.
History[]
STAN grew out of NSK (Nezávislí starostové pro kraj, Independent Mayors for the Region), founded in 2004 and transformed in 2009. Led by its first Leader Petr Gazdík and Deputy Leader Stanislav Polčák elected in 2009, STAN started co-operating with the liberal-conservative TOP 09 at all political levels; with Petr Gazdík leading the TOP 09 and STAN parliamentary group. In 2013, the said co-operation was de facto curtailed to the parliamentary level, i.e. was continued only in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. In 3/2014, Petr Gazdík was succeeded in the STAN leadership by Martin Půta (Governor, Liberecký Region); and became the First Deputy Leader deputised by Stanislav Polčák. Sharing common candidates standing in the 2014 European Parliament election, STAN and TOP 09 polled 15.95% of the votes and gained four seats with one being taken by STAN Deputy Leader Stanislav Polčák. In 2016, Martin Půta was succeeded by Petr Gazdík leading STAN into the regional and Senate elections. In 2019 Vít Rakušan was elected as a new leader. In 2020 STAN won the Senate elections (with 11 seats of 27 contested).
Manifesto[]
The party's top priorities include: good stewardship, high-quality education, environmental care and heritage protection – investing in education is key to the future prosperity that, however, must be built on the principles of good stewardship (management of public funds, use of energy resources and prudential landscape interventions). In promoting the principle of subsidiarity, STAN encourages localism, decentralisation, reduced bureaucracy and corruption clampdown.[7] STAN further promotes: European integration, high-quality education, investments in science, state economy driven by the principles of a free market with the social aspect and sanctity of private property in mind, and environment protection.
Election results[]
Chamber of Deputies[]
Year | Vote | Vote % | Seats | ± | Place | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | 873,833 | 16.70 | 5 / 200
|
New | 6th | Coalition |
Ran on TOP 09 list, which won 41 seats in total | ||||||
2013 | 596,357 | 12.00 | 4 / 200
|
1 | 8th | Opposition |
Ran on TOP 09 list, which won 26 seats in total | ||||||
2017 | 262,157 | 5.2 | 6 / 200
|
2 | 9th | Opposition |
2021 | 839,448 | 15.61 | 33 / 200
|
27 | 3rd | Coalition |
Part of Pirates and Mayors coalition, which won 37 seats in total |
Senate[]
Election | First round | Second round | Seats won | Seats overall | +/- | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Places | Votes | % | Places | ||||
2012 | 4,460 | 0.5 | 25th | - | 0 / 27 |
0 / 81 |
0 | ||
20141 | 1,613 | 7.0 | 7th | - | 0 / 27 |
0 / 81 |
0 | ||
2014 | 15,576 | 1.5 | 9th | 11,099 | 2.3 | 9th | 2 / 27 |
2 / 81 |
2 |
2016 | 43,234 | 4.9 | 7th | 25,389 | 6.0 | 6th | 3 / 27 |
5 / 81 |
3 |
20182 | 7,615 | 33.5 | 1st | 30,331 | 67.11 | 1st | 1 / 1 |
6 / 81 |
1 |
2018 | 76,817 | 7.05 | 7th | 47,317 | 11.31 | 3rd | 5 / 27 |
11 / 81 |
5 |
20193 | 4,514 | 23.53 | 2nd | 7,070 | 59.50 | 1st | 1 / 1 |
12 / 81 |
1 |
2020 | 122,948 | 12.3 | 2nd | 104,538 | 23.1 | 1st | 11 / 27 |
19 / 81 |
7 |
1 By-election in Zlín district.
2 By-election in Trutnov district.
3 By-election in Prague-9 district.
Presidential election[]
Indirect Election | Candidate | First round result | Second round result | Third round result | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | %Votes | Result | Votes | %Votes | Result | Votes | %Votes | Result | |||
2008 | Jan Švejnar | 128 | 49.10 | Runner-up | 141 | 47.19 | Runner-up | 111 | 44.05 | Lost |
Direct Election | Candidate | First round result | Second round result | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | %Votes | Result | Votes | %Votes | Result | |||
2013 | Karel Schwarzenberg | 1,204,195 | 23.40 | Runner-up | 2,241,171 | 45.20 | Lost | |
2018 | Jiří Drahoš | 1,369,601 | 26.60 | Runner-up | 2,701,206 | 48.63 | Lost |
European Parliament[]
Year | Vote | Vote % | Seats | Place |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | 53,984 | 2.3 | 0 / 22
|
8th |
2014 | Coalition with TOP 09 | 1 / 21
|
8th | |
2019 | Coalition with TOP 09 | 1 / 21
|
7th |
Regional election[]
Year | Vote1 | Vote %1 | Seats | +/- | Place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | ran only in coalitions | 1 / 675
|
10th | ||
2008 | 53,462 | 1.83 | 14 / 675
|
13 | 5th |
2012 | 28,763 | 1.09 | 38 / 675
|
24 | 5th |
2016 | 101,696 | 4.02 | 56 / 675
|
18 | 6th |
2020 | 167,459 | 6.04 | 91 / 675
|
35 | 4th |
1 Does not include coalitions
Footnotes[]
- ^ televize, Česká. "Členská základna ODS je větší než ČSSD, z mladých uskupení nejvíce roste SPD". ČT24 - Nejdůvěryhodnější zpravodajský web v ČR - Česká televize (in Czech). Retrieved 30 November 2021.
- ^ "STAN zakládá vlastní think-tank!" (in Czech). Institut moderní politiky iSTAR. 31 January 2019.
- ^ Mortkowitz, Siegfried (25 April 2021). "Babiš under fire after Commission audit published". Politico.
- ^ Zachová, Aneta (3 February 2021). "PM Babiš is slowly losing ground, opinion poll shows". Euractiv.
- ^ "TABLE-Czech billionaire's ANO party wins big in election". Reuters. 21 October 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
- ^ "Difficult Coalition Negotiations Following ANO Landslide". BMI Research. 23 October 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
- ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram (2017). "Czechia". Parties and Elections in Europe.
- ^ Peters, Ingo; Bakke, Elisabeth, eds. (2011). 20 Years since the Fall of the Berlin Wall: Transitions, State Break-Up and Democratic Politics in Central Europe and Germany. p. 241. ISBN 9783830527022.
- ^ "Volby Do Obecních zastupitelstev ČR 2010". Retrieved 24 October 2010.
External links[]
- (in Czech) Mayors and Independents official website
- Mayors and Independents
- Liberal conservative parties in the Czech Republic
- Political parties established in 2004
- Regionalist parties in the Czech Republic
- Pro-European political parties in the Czech Republic