Labour United

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Labour United
Leader Waldemar Witkowski
Founded June 1992
Preceded by PUS
Headquarters ul. Nowogrodzka 4, 00-513 Warsaw
Youth wing Labor United Youth Federation
Ideology Social democracy
Political position Centre-left
National affiliation United Left
European affiliation Party of European Socialists
International affiliation None
European Parliament group Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Colours Red
Sejm
0 / 460
Senate
0 / 100
European Parliament
1 / 51
County councils
26 / 6,290
Municipal councils
180 / 39,828
Website
http://www.uniapracy.org.pl/
Politics of Poland
Political parties
Elections

Labour United (Polish: Unia Pracy, UP) is a minor social-democratic[1][2] political party in Poland. It is a member of the Party of European Socialists (PES).

History

Labour United was formed in June 1992. The party contested the 1993 parliamentary elections, obtaining 7.28% of the popular vote and had 41 representatives elected to the lower house (Sejm). In the following parliamentary elections of 1997, UP received only 4.74% of votes, thereby falling short of the required 5% threshold for election to the Sejm. At the 2001 parliamentary elections, UP entered into an electoral alliance with the major Polish social-democratic party Democratic Left Alliance (SLD), and managed to get 16 of its members elected to parliament. Some of those members subsequently left UP to join the newly created Social Democracy of Poland (SDPL), a splinter group from the SLD. In May 2004, UP signed an alliance with SDPL, in which both parties agreed to jointly contest the following parliamentary elections under the SDPL banner, and to support the candidacy of Marek Borowski in the 2005 presidential election. At the 2005 parliamentary elections, SDPL gained only 3.9% of the vote, which was insufficient for the alliance to achieve parliamentary representation.

In 2006, UP joined SLD, SDPL and the liberal Democratic Party – demokraci.pl to form a centre-left electoral alliance named Left and Democrats (LiD) for the upcoming local elections. This electoral alliance was maintained for the 2007 parliamentary elections, and LiD came in third place with 13.2% of the vote, which saw 53 of its candidates elected to the Sejm. Unfortunately for UP, the party was the only one of the four component parties of the LiD alliance not to have any of its candidates elected.

In 2011 parliamentary elections its candidates joined the electoral lists of SLD. Again, none of them were elected.

They managed, however, to win one seat on the European Parliament elections in 2004, and hold it in the elections in 2009 and 2014.[3]

Election results

Sejm

Election year # of
votes
 % of
vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–
1993 1,005,004 7.3
41 / 460
Increase 41
1997 620,611 4.7
0 / 460
Decrease 41
2001 5,342,519 41
16 / 460
Increase 16
As part of the SLD-UP coalition, which won 216 seats in total.
2005 1,459,380 3.9
0 / 460
Decrease 16
In an electoral alliance with Social Democracy of Poland and Greens 2004.
2007 2,122,981 13.2
0 / 460
Steady
As part of the Left and Democrats coalition, which won 53 seats in total.

Senate

Election year # of
overall seats won
+/–
1993
0 / 100
1997
0 / 100
Steady
2001
5 / 100
As part of the SLD-UP coalition.
2005
0 / 100
Decrease 5
2007
0 / 100
Steady

Presidential

Election year Candidate 1st round 2nd round
# of overall votes  % of overall vote # of overall votes  % of overall vote
1995 Tadeusz Zieliński 631,432 3.5 (#6)
2000 Supported Aleksander Kwaśniewski 9,485,224 53.9 (#1)
2005 none
2010 Supported Grzegorz Napieralski 2,299,870 13.7 (#3)

European Parliament

Election year # of
votes
 % of
vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–
2004 569,311 9.4
1 / 54
Increase 1
As part of the SLD-UP coalition, which won 5 seats in total.
2009 908,765 12.3
1 / 50
Steady
As part of the SLD-UP coalition, which won 7 seats in total.
2014 667,319 9.4
1 / 51
Steady
As part of the SLD-UP coalition, which won 5 seats in total.
Timeline of Polish socialist/social democratic parties after 1986
Polish Socialist Party (1987– )
Polish Social Democratic Union (1990–92)
Social Democracy of the Republic of Poland (1990–99)
Democratic-Social Movement (1991–93)
Labour United (1992– )
National Party of Retirees and Pensioners (1994– )
Democratic Left Alliance (1999– )
Reason Party (2002–13)
Social Democracy of Poland (2004– )
Union of the Left (2004– )
Razem (2015–)

Leaders

Members of European Parliament

Adam Gierek (since 2004)[3]

Important former members

References

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  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. 3.0 3.1 European Parliament / MEPs: Adam Gierek.

External links