Czech Sovereignty of Social Democracy
ČSSD – Czech Sovereignty of Social Democracy, until 29 June 2023 known as Czech Sovereignty, formerly also known as Free Bloc and Sovereignty – Jana Bobošíková Bloc, is a small left-wing nationalist Czech political party.
History
Origins
The Party of Common Sense, led by Petr Hannig, took part in the 2002 Czech [parliamentary election|2002 election] to the Chamber of [Deputies of the Czech Republic|Chamber of Deputies] three months after its foundation, winning 0.2% of the vote. This increased to 0.5% of the vote in the 2006 election.In 2009, the Party of Common Sense began cooperating with former Eurosceptic Member of the [European Parliament|MEP] Jana Bobošíková, her party Politika 21, and other independent candidates. This electoral alliance ran in the 2009 European [Parliament election in the Czech Republic|2009 European election] under the name 'Sovereignty', led by Bobošíková. The list came fifth, winning 4.3% of the vote, just short of the 5% threshold for representation. The Party of Common Sense changed its name to 'Sovereignty – Party of Common Sense', and won 3.7% in the 2010 election, again falling short of parliamentary representation. The cooperation between the two parties subsequently ended.
Founding and ''Free Bloc''
Sovereignty – Jana Bobošiková Bloc was established in 2011 in Prague, after the breakup of the Sovereignty – Party of Common Sense electoral alliance. It was described as right-wing. In January 2014, the party changed its name to Czech Sovereignty, and former Czech Social Democratic Party MP Jana Volfová became party chairwoman.The party changed its name to Free Bloc when Lubomír Volný, an MP for the Freedom and Direct Democracy party, joined Czech Sovereignty and became its parliamentary leader. Free Bloc won 1.33% of the vote in the 2021 election, falling short of parliamentary representation. The party changed its name back to Czech Sovereignty in January 2022 when it was described as far-right.