Liberalism and centrism in Finland
This article gives an overview of liberalism and centrism in Finland. It is limited to liberal and centrist parties with substantial support, mainly proved by having had a representation in parliament. The sign ⇒ means a reference to another party in that scheme. For inclusion in this scheme it is not necessary so that parties labeled themselves as a liberal party.
Liberalism was a major force in Finland since 1894. After independence the current gradually decreased. A major other force, agrarianism, choose in 1965 to develop itself into a more centrist current. The liberal character of the Finnish Center, member of LI and Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party|ELDR], is based on liberal ideas like decentralization, peasant-like freedom and progressivism. The Swedish minority party Swedish [People's Party (Finland)|Swedish People's Party] is also a member of LI, ELDR. The original liberal current is now organized in the Liberals, a very small extra-parliamentary party. At the autonomous island of Åland the Liberals for Åland are a dominant force.
The timeline
Liberal Club / Liberal Party
- 1877: Liberals formed the Liberal Club, renamed in 1880 Liberal Party
- 1882: The Liberal Party disappeared
From Young Finnish Party to Liberals
- 1894: Constitutionalist fennomans organized into the Young Finnish faction within the Finnish Party
- 1905: The Young Finnish Party secedes from the Finnish Party.
- 1918: The Republican factions of the two Finnish parties reorganise into the Progressive Party of Finland|Progressive Party]
- 1951: The Progressive Party falls apart into the Finnish People's Party and the ⇒ Free-minded League
- 1965: The People's Party and the ⇒ Free-minded League reunite into the Liberal People's Party
- 1982: The Liberal People's Party associated itself with the ⇒ Centre Party, whilst some liberal youth activists join the Greens.
- 1983: The Liberal People's Party loses all of seats in the Parliament for the first time.
- 1986: The Liberal People's Party disassociated itself from the ⇒ Centre Party
- 1991: The Liberal People's Party returns to parliament with one MP.
- 1995: The Liberal People's Party loses its only MP.
- 2000: The Liberal People's Party renames itself Liberals
- 2007: Removed from the party registry after failing to get a seat in two consecutive parliamentary elections
Swedish People's Party
- 1906: Liberal svekomans formed the present-day Swedish People's Party in Finland
- 1919: Republicans formed the Liberal Swedish Party
- 1951: Liberal Swedish Party merged with SFP
People's Party
- 1917: Progressive liberals formed the People's Party
- 1918: The People's Party merged into the ⇒ National Progressive Party
Free-minded League
- 1951: The ⇒ National Progressive Party fell apart and the Free-minded League is formed
- 1965: The League merged with the ⇒ Finnish People's Party into the ⇒ Liberal People's Party
Centre Party / Finnish Centre
Centrists- 1965: The agrarian Agrarian League reorganised itself into the Centre Party.
- 1988: The Centre Party is renamed '''Finnish Centre'''
Liberal Party – Freedom to Choose
- 2015: Liberal Party - [Freedom to Choose] is formed.
- 2023: Liberal Party publishes #LeikattavaaLöytyy shadow budget to balance the national budget.
Åland
Liberals for Åland
- 1967: Liberals organised itself into the Centrist Liberals
- 1971: The Centrist Liberals are renamed Electoral Union Liberal Assembly
- 1978: VLS and ⇒ LoS–Liberals merged into the '''Liberals for Åland'''
Centre Party
- 1967: The Rural and Archipelago Electoral Union was founded
- 1975: The LoS–Liberals seceded from the Rural and Archipelago Electoral Union
- 1976: The Rural and Archipelago Electoral Union is renamed Åland Centre
- 1978: VLS and ⇒ LoS–Liberals merged into the ⇒ Liberals for Åland
Liberal and centrist leaders
- Kansallinen Edistyspuolue: Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg
- Maalaisliitto/Keskustapuolue: Urho Kekkonen
- Keskusta: Esko Aho - Anneli Jäätteenmäki - Matti Vanhanen - Mari Kiviniemi - Juha Sipilä
- Svenska Folkpartiet: Ole Norrback - Jan-Erik Enestam - Stefan Wallin - Carl Haglund