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Liberal Party Κόμμα Φιλελευθέρων | |
---|---|
Founder | Eleftherios Venizelos |
Founded | 22 August 1910[1] (114 years ago) |
Dissolved | 1961 (63 years ago) |
Preceded by | Modernist Party (Greece) Barefoot Party (Crete) |
Merged into | Centre Union |
Ideology | Liberalism[2] Greek nationalism[4] Republicanism Venizelism[2] |
Political position | Centre[5] |
The Liberal Party (Greek: Κόμμα Φιλελευθέρων [ˈkoma filelefˈθeɾon] , literally "Party of Liberals") was a major political party in Greece during the early-to-mid 20th century. It was founded in August 1910 by Eleftherios Venizelos, winning a landslide victory in the November 1910 legislative elections. This began an era of Liberal-dominated politics, with the party winning 9 of the 12 elections between 1910 and 1933 and Venizelos serving as Prime Minister for a total of 12 years.
The party's platform was broadly modernising, liberal, social, and nationalist; a set of policies referred to as Venizelism in Greek politics. Though the party contained a social-democratic wing,[6] it became increasingly anti-communist in the 1920s. Originally ambiguous on the issue of the Greek monarchy, the party became decidedly republican following the National Schism and went on to dominate the Second Hellenic Republic. Among its most well-known members, apart from Venizelos, were Alexandros Papanastasiou, Nikolaos Plastiras, Georgios Papandreou and Konstantinos Mitsotakis.
The party struggled to gain support following the 4th of August Regime and the Second World War, before merging into the Centre Union lead by Georgios Papandreou and other former Liberal Party members. Since its founding, the party used the anchor as an electoral symbol, similar to the one Venizelos had brought with him from Crete.[7]
Venizelist liberalism and imperialism not only was connected to British liberalism and liberal approaches to imperialism, but was also a product of it. Although looking East for territory, Venizelist imperialism looked to unite the "unredeemed Greeks" living in the East under an "orientalist" pre-modern system with the Europe that was (or would be) Modern Greece - western, modern and liberal.