Progressive Party of Working People Ανορθωτικό Κόμμα Εργαζόμενου Λαού Emekçi Halkın İlerici Partisi | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | ΑΚΕΛ AKEL |
General Secretary | Stefanos Stefanou[1] |
Founded | 15 August 1926 |
Headquarters | Nicosia |
Newspaper | Haravgi |
Student wing | Progressive Student Movement |
Youth wing | EDON |
Women's wing | POGO |
Labour wing | PEO |
Ideology | |
Political position | Left-wing[13] to far-left[14] |
European affiliation | Party of the European Left (observer) |
European Parliament group | The Left in the European Parliament – GUE/NGL |
International affiliation | IMCWP |
Colours | Red |
House of Representatives | 15 / 56
|
European Parliament | 1 / 6
|
Municipal Councils | 123 / 478
|
Website | |
www | |
The Progressive Party of Working People (Greek: Ανορθωτικό Κόμμα Εργαζόμενου Λαού, Anorthotikó Kómma Ergazómenou Laoú; ΑΚΕΛ or AKEL; Turkish: Emekçi Halkın İlerici Partisi) is a Marxist–Leninist[5][6][15] communist party[2][3] in Cyprus.
AKEL is one of the two major parties in Cyprus, and it supports a federal solution of the internal aspect of the Cyprus problem and it places particular emphasis on rapprochement with the Turkish Cypriots. It supported entry into the European Union with certain reservations. Initially supportive of the Annan Plan in 2004, the AKEL ultimately opposed the plan because the UN Security Council did not provide guarantees on post-reunification security.[16]
As a strong supporter of welfare benefits and nationalization, AKEL successfully put into practice several social measures to support the economic welfare of Cypriots during the Great Recession, such as increasing low pensions by 30% and strengthening the welfare benefits given to university students to €12 million per year. Overall, €1.2 billion were spent on welfare benefits during the first three years that AKEL was in power, with various improvements made in social welfare provision.[5][6] The party has been in opposition since the 2013 election. The party's candidate was defeated in the 2018 presidential election against the incumbent president. For the 2023 presidential election, the party supported independent candidate Andreas Mavroyiannis, who was also defeated.[17]
This is admittedly a rough division that focuses on the largest parties in Cyprus: left-wing AKEL on the Greek Cypriot side...
The AKEL communist party had earlier suggested it might throw its weight behind the Annan plan and help turn around the widespread antipathy of the Greek-Cypriot south. But today its leadership said it had decided to oppose the plan because the UN security council had not provided guarantees on post-reunification security.