Best Party

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Best Party
Besti flokkurinn
Founder Jón Gnarr
Chairperson Jón Gnarr
Vice-chairperson Heiða Kristín Helgadóttir
Founded 16 November 2009
Dissolved 16 June 2014
Headquarters Laugavegur 40a, Reykjavík
Membership  (2011) 1193[1]
National affiliation Bright Future
International affiliation Pirate Parties International (observer)
Colours Blue / Pink
Website
www.bestiflokkurinn.is
Politics of Iceland
Political parties
Elections

The Best Party (Icelandic: Besti flokkurinn) was an Icelandic political party founded by Jón Gnarr on 16 November 2009.[2] The party ran in the 2010 city council election in Reykjavík and won a plurality on the Reykjavík City Council, receiving 34.7% of the vote, defeating the Independence Party which received 33.6%.[3][4][5] It was a member of the International Pirate Party, but was not associated with Pirate Party Iceland.[6] Jón Gnarr announced that the party was to be dissolved after he stepped down as mayor after the upcoming local elections in May 2014. Many of the Best Party's members have joined Bright Future, although Jón himself stopped political participation.

The founder and chairman of the party was the former Mayor of Reykjavik Jón Gnarr.[7] The party was founded several months after the Icelandic parliamentary election in 2009, and competes on the national level as the Bright Future party, led by MP and Best Party Vice President Heiða Kristín Helgadóttir. Bright Future currently holds six seats in the Althing.

The party's initial success is seen as a backlash against establishment parties in the wake of Iceland's 2008-2011 financial crisis.[8]

History

The Best Party was founded in late 2009 by Jón Gnarr, an Icelandic actor, comedian and writer. Originally a joke party, it from the beginning stated that it would not honour any of its election promises.[9] It claimed all other parties are secretly corrupt, and promised to be openly corrupt. Among its original goals was to satirize common themes in Icelandic politics, partly by mimicking the standard phrases, idioms and jargon used by Icelandic politicians.

However, since its electoral success in Reykjavík in 2010, the Best Party became more serious. It began to show a genuine interest in governing, and took a left-wing stance on many issues. Although Jón Gnarr identifies himself as an anarchist, the party as a whole was closer to the centre-left.[10]

Since its founding, the Best Party developed into a full-grown political party with its own independent agenda. The theme song of the Best Party was The Best, by Tina Turner. Prior to the 2010 election, the party published a new version of the song with new, Iceland-specific lyrics. A music video was also made, featuring Ágústa Eva Erlendsdóttir.[9]

In late 2012, the party founded Bright Future with independent MP Guðmundur Steingrímsson, in order to contest the 2013 national parliamentary election. Jón Gnarr, by then Mayor of Reykjavík, and Óttarr Proppé, a Reykjavík City Councilman, were candidates for the new party in that election.[6] The Best Party’s Managing Director Heiða Kristín Helgadóttir is also the chairwoman of Bright Future.[6]

Party platform

  1. To help the households in the country: Family is the best thing in society. Governments need to meet the needs and demands of households. An ironclad shield wall needs to be raised around the households in this country. Icelandic households deserve only the best.
  2. To improve the quality of life of the Less Fortunate: We want the best of everything for this bunch and therefore offer free access to buses and swimming pools so you can travel around Reykjavik and be clean even if you're poor or there's something wrong with you.
  3. Stop corruption: We promise to stop corruption. We'll accomplish this by participating in it openly.
  4. Equality: Everyone deserves the best regardless of who they are and where they come from. We will do our best for everyone so that everyone can be together on the best team.
  5. Increase transparency: It is best to have everything aboveboard so that the general public knows what is going on. We say we support that.
  6. Effective democracy: Democracy is pretty good, but an effective democracy is best. That's why we want it.
  7. Cancel all debts: We listen to the nation and do as it wishes because the nation knows what's best for itself.
  8. Free bus rides for students and disabled people: We can offer more free things than any other party because we aren't going to follow through with it. We could say whatever we want. For example, free flights for women or free cars for people who live in rural areas. It's all the same.
  9. Free dental services for children and handicapped people: This is something that is lacking, and we definitely want to take part in promising it.
  10. Free access to swimming pools for everyone and free towels: This is something that everyone should fall for, and it's the election promise we're most proud of.
  11. Take those responsible for the economic collapse to court: Felt we had to include this.
  12. Complete equality of the sexes
  13. Listen more to women and old people: This bunch gets listened to far too little. It's as if everyone thinks they are just complaining or something. We're going to change that.[11][12][13]

Election 2010

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File:BestVideoStill.png
Still from the Best Video

The party's first endeavor in politics was to present a list of candidates for the local election in Reykjavík in 2010. Its platform included free towels in all city swimming pools, a polar bear for the city zoo, a Disneyland at Vatnsmýri park, and a drug-free national parliament (Althing) by 2020. The party won six of the 15 seats on the Reykjavík City Council.[5] and governs the city alongside the Social Democratic Alliance as the senior coalition partner.

See also

Footnotes

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  8. "Satiric political party wins council poll in Iceland", Indo-Asian News Service, May 30, 2010. (accessed 24 January 2012)
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  11. Best Party Strategy (Icelandic)
  12. Buchan, Peter John R., translator. 2010. "Platform: The Best and Brightest," Harper's Magazine, August: 20.
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links