Reform Party (Akashi)

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Reform Party

ζ”Ήι€²ε…š
πŒΉπŒ½πŒΌπŒ°πŒΉπŒ³πŒΎπŒ°πŒ½πŒ³πƒ πŒ³πŒ°πŒΉπŒ»αš΄πŒΎπ‰
AbbreviationRP
Founded1965
Dissolved1993
Split fromLiberal Party
Merged intoUnited Reform Party
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right
National affiliationLight blue bloc
Colours  Teal

The Reform Party (Miranian: ζ”Ήι€²ε…š Kaishintō; Gothic: πŒΉπŒ½πŒΌπŒ°πŒΉπŒ³πŒΎπŒ°πŒ½πŒ³πƒ πŒ³πŒ°πŒΉπŒ»αš΄πŒΎπ‰ Inmaidjands Dailkjō) was a conservative liberal political party in Akashi.

Formed in 1965 by a conservative faction that split from the Liberal Party, it became one of Akashi's main centre-right parties, and a founding member of the light blue bloc. It merged into the United Reform Party in 1993.

History

Early years

The RP was founded in 1965, by conservative liberals who split from the Liberal Party. It immediately built close relations with the National Democratic Party, although a merger of the two parties could not be agreed at the time. They formed a unity list for 1966.

During the Summer of Freedom, the party deplored the violence while acknowledging the protesters' grievances and urging immediate reforms to redress them. It joined Yurikara's national unity government in 1968, its first participation in a national government.

Right battles

The collapse of the NU as a major party in 1972 opened up space for the other parties to advance. However, the right-wing faced several disadvantages: a dispersed vote due to multiple parties, the LP struggling in the role of centre-right standard-bearer, and a fierce enmity with the hardline dark blue bloc, in contrast to the stronger cooperation of the left and centre-left.

The breakthrough occurred after the "kibi-yuru war" left the progressive conservative faction in control of the CNP, repositioning it in the light blue bloc. The RP joined the centre-right coalition formed after 1982, but its unwieldy size caused rows over allocation of cabinet posts. The CNP's landslide in the "blue wave" of 1986 led it to exit the coalition but provide outside support.

During the consolidation of the light blue bloc in the 1990s, the RP was in negotiations with the new Moderate People's Party, but could not agree on a merger. Instead, it chose to merge into the United Reform Party in 1993.

Ideology

The RP was a conservative liberal party, and predominantly reformist.

It was somewhat more market-friendly than the ordoliberal LP, but still opposed to laissez-faire economics.

Election results

National Assembly

Election Party list Constituency Seats +/– Status
PR votes % STV votes %
19661 213.134 5,2%
11 / 245
Increase 11 Opposition (1966–1968)
Coalition (1968–1970)
1970 287.306 6,0% 134.227 2,8%
8 / 200
Decrease 3 Opposition
1972 310.359 6,2% 159.826 3,2%
10 / 200
Increase 2 Opposition
1974 304.704 5,9% 149.263 2,9%
8 / 200
Decrease 2 Opposition
1978 276.905 5,0% 155.760 2,8%
9 / 200
Increase 1 Opposition
1980 406.198 7,2% 472.850 8,4%
15 / 200
Increase 6 Interim
1982 403.760 7,0% 345.327 6,0%
22 / 400
Increase 6 Coalition
1986 190.395 3,2% 178.693 3,0%
11 / 400
Decrease 11 Outside support (1986–1989)
Opposition (1989–1990)
1990 245.765 3,9% 157.368 2,5%
10 / 400
Decrease 1 Opposition

1 Result for the NDP–RP unity list.

Presidency

Election Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Votes %
19651 Haruki Yukimura 480.285 12,1% Lost
1970 No candidate
1975 No candidate
1980 No candidate
1985 No candidate
1990 No candidate

1 Jointly endorsed with the Liberal Party and National Democratic Party.

Provincial assemblies

Prefectural assemblies